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The Way We Live: The Father Who Came Home to Silence

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By: Chioma Madonna Ndukwu

The Way We Live: The Father Who Came Home to Silence

Chinedu usually left before the house understood it was morning. At half past four, the kettle would start its soft whistle, and he would stand in the kitchen drinking tea that never stayed warm long enough.

The house was still asleep, his wife turned slightly away, his daughter buried under a thin blanket that shifted every time she breathed.

He would look at them for a moment, not because he expected anything to change, but because leaving always required something small to break inside him first.

Then he would step out into the dark. By the time his daughter woke up, he was already gone.

Amara had learned not to ask questions in the mornings. Questions waited until evenings when the house felt heavier and time moved slower.

One night, when he returned after a long shift driving fuel tankers across Port Harcourt, she stood by the kitchen table holding a plate she had reheated twice.

“You missed her again today,” she said softly.

Chinedu loosened his work jacket and didn’t respond immediately. He already knew which “her” she meant.

His daughter was asleep on the couch, one arm hanging off the edge, schoolbooks scattered around her like she had fallen mid-thought and never finished the day.

“How was she?” he asked.

Amara looked at him for a moment longer than necessary.

“She was waiting at the gate for you,” she said. “Even after everyone else had left.”

That sentence followed him into silence. Later, when he carried his daughter to bed, she shifted in his arms and whispered without fully waking.

“Daddy?”

“I’m here,” he answered, lowering her gently.

Her eyes barely opened.

“Will you still be here when I wake up?”

There was a pause, not hesitation, memory. He had heard that kind of question before in another form, in another life.

“I’ll try,” he said.

And she accepted it the way children accept almost everything from the people they love.

Not fully understanding it. But trusting it anyway. That morning, like every morning, he left before sunrise.

And somewhere in that repetition, Chinedu began to understand something he never said out loud. He was not just providing for his family. He was slowly becoming a visitor in his own home.

At home, Amara carried her own exhaustion too. There were nights she sat alone after everyone had slept, staring at a man who was physically present in their lives but emotionally stretched thin by work, pressure, and the quiet expectation that he should always be fine.

Somewhere between love and survival, silence had settled in. And neither of them knew how to name it without making it worse.

That silence reminded me of my own childhood. I lost my father when I was still a toddler. I did not grow up with his voice. I grew up with his absence.

At school, when other children spoke about their fathers, I would smile, not because I understood, but because I had learned how to hide confusion well enough not to disturb anyone.

But inside, something always felt unfinished. I used to walk home and feel it more strongly in quiet moments, like my thoughts were trying to reach someone who wasn’t there to answer.

Even now, as an adult, I still find myself imagining him in ordinary moments. Not in grand ways. Just in small, human ones. What he would have said about a decision. Whether he would have laughed at something I now find funny. Whether he would have understood the person I became without him.

That absence never really leaves. It simply changes shape over time.

Around the same world Chinedu was moving through, other fathers were living variations of the same life.

In Mumbai, a father boarded an early train before his children woke up.

In São Paulo, a delivery rider counted hours instead of rest.

In Manila, a man sat at a roadside stall calculating school fees against time he no longer had.

Different places, same quiet exhaustion. And often, no space to speak about it.

One Sunday after church, an elderly man stood beneath a mango tree speaking to a small group of fathers.

“Who do you talk to when you are tired?” he asked.

A few of them laughed.

One answered quickly, almost proudly.

“We manage. That is what men do.”

The old man nodded slowly.

“That is also why many of you suffer in silence.”

Nobody argued.

Because silence, once named, becomes harder to deny.

Chinedu had never been taught how to speak about being overwhelmed. He only learned how to continue.

And like many men, he mistook endurance for strength.

But there were nights when exhaustion became something heavier than sleep could fix. Nights when he sat outside after work, staring at his hands, wondering how long a man could keep giving everything without slowly losing pieces of himself in the process.

He never said it aloud. Not to Amara, not to anyone. Because men like him were raised to believe that speaking too much about pain made it real in a way they could not afford.

And so they stayed quiet, not because they were strong, but because they did not know where else to put it.

One evening, Chinedu sat outside with his daughter while she struggled again with her bicycle. She fell, laughed, got up, tried again. He stood close enough to catch her but far enough not to take the effort away from her.

After a while, she stopped and leaned against him.

“Daddy,” she said.

“Yes?”

“Don’t go too early tomorrow.”

He looked at her for a long moment.

Then he nodded.

“I will come back,” he said.

Not as a guarantee of time.

But as a promise of return.

Later that night, as the street quieted and the world slowed down, she rested her head on his shoulder again.

“I’m happy you’re home,” she said.

And for once, Chinedu did not think about the morning waiting for him.

He stayed there.

Not as a man carrying the weight of survival.

But as a father whose presence, even briefly, made the house feel like it was not missing anything.

Moral:

Fatherhood is not only provision or endurance. It is presence, emotional honesty, and the quiet recognition that men also need care, space to speak, and people who check on them before silence becomes their only language.

My personal thoughts:

Many fathers are walking through life quietly breaking under pressures they never learned how to name, while many children are growing up trying to understand the shape of their father’s absence even when he is still physically present. And somewhere between both lives, love is either spoken, or slowly left to silence.

Comment Hook:

When was the last time you asked your father how he was really doing?

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Written by
Chioma Madonna Ndukwu

Chioma Madonna Ndukwu is a seasoned journalist, writer, educator, and communication professional with a strong passion for language, literature, media, and public engagement. She is an alumna of Nnamdi Azikiwe University, Awka, Anambra State, where she acquired a solid academic foundation that shaped her career in journalism and education. With a distinguished career spanning both academia and the media industry, Chioma Madonna Ndukwu has made significant contributions to the development of communication, literacy, and critical thinking among students and audiences alike. Her expertise in language and effective communication earned her a position as a Lecturer in English at Abia State University, where she taught and mentored students, helping them develop strong analytical, writing, and communication skills.

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