For most of my life, I swore I’d never be like my father. I promised myself I would be kinder, softer, more expressive—the kind of man who spoke his heart, who showed affection without hesitation. I would never be the stern, distant parent whose silence filled the room more heavily than words ever could. But life, with its almost poetic irony, has a way of leading us right back to the things we once ran away from. Now, years later, I see something I never thought I’d embrace: I have become my father. And for the first time, I’m thankful for it.
My father was not the kind of man who said “I love you.” His love had no words—it had form, weight, and purpose. It looked like rice steaming on the table, like polished shoes by the door, like the school fees always paid before the deadline. It was love you could live with, though not always feel.
When I was young, I failed to recognize that. To me, he was a wall—unyielding, cold, and often harsh. He ruled our home with a heavy hand and sharp eyes that could silence an entire room. And when you made a mistake, you remembered it. Punishment came swiftly, and it was never light. I can still recall the fear—being locked inside a cabinet, placed inside the pigpen, even stuffed into a sack. I cried until my childhood voice gave out, wondering why I had to bear so much from the man who was supposed to love me most. His words—strict, impatient, sometimes cruel—cut through me long after the moment had passed. I hated him. I swore I would never turn out like him.
But time has a way of revealing what the heart once refused to see. My father was not a monster. He was a man carrying a weight few could bear. He was the only son among five siblings—the one everyone leaned on, the one expected to continue my grandmother’s small restaurant business, to keep the family afloat, to be the pillar when everyone else faltered. Failure was never an option. That kind of life leaves marks on a man. It forces him to choose strength over softness, survival over sentiment. And so he became the man he thought he needed to be: strict, serious, unbreakable.
Despite it all, he never failed to provide. We were not wealthy, but my brother and I were blessed. We studied in private schools from grade school to college—a privilege he never had. Our uniforms were always complete, our school supplies ready. He made sure our medical needs were met and all our basic necessities—and even our wants—were provided. Looking back, I realize that every peso he earned was spent ensuring that we never had to carry the same struggles he did.
As a young adult, I carried resentment like a shadow. I avoided him. I made myself believe that his values were outdated, his discipline too harsh. I was determined to be different, to love in the ways he never seemed to. But life has a way of humbling those who speak too boldly. As the years went by, and adult responsibilities took their place on my shoulders, I heard echoes of him—his voice, his rules, his advice. His words that once irritated me became quiet reminders that guided my path.
“Don’t drink. Don’t smoke. Don’t waste money. Finish what you start.”
They had been orders once. Now they’re the values that sustain me.
Today, my father is older. The man who once seemed unbreakable walks a little slower, laughs a little more. The distance between us has softened with time. We’re learning to bridge the years we lost—not through grand gestures, but in small, everyday ways. We share short conversations over meals, laugh about old memories, trade playful remarks. The silence that once separated us has turned into quiet comfort. We don’t talk about the painful years; we don’t need to. Understanding has replaced explanation.
These small talks, these bursts of laughter—they’re our way of making up for lost time. He tries, in his own subtle ways, to show affection now: a pat on my shoulder, a question about my work, a smile when I enter the room. I try, too, to return what was once missing—to listen, to laugh with him, to be present without hesitation. The years we lost cannot be reclaimed, but they can be honored by the bond we still have left.
I don’t have a child of my own yet, but when I imagine fatherhood, I think of him. I think of the choices he made, the burdens he carried, the kind of love he gave—imperfect yet unbreakable. For years, I tried to avoid his reflection in my own life. Now, I see it as a gift. Because if I end up being even half the man he was—disciplined, resilient, loyal—then I will have done something right.
When I look at him today, with his gray hair, his softened voice, and those same steady eyes, I no longer see the man who frightened me. I see the man who built me. Every harsh lesson, every small act of provision, every quiet sacrifice was his way of saying “I love you” in the only language he knew.
I am my father.
And finally, I can say that not with bitterness, but with pride and gratitude.