I remember one day I wanted my dad to play a video game with me, but he was busy. I got really frustrated and started running back and forth around the living room. My dad looked at me and asked, โAre you trying to start a fire with your feet or just trying to annoy me?โ
I stopped dead in my tracks, half-angry, half-amused. โI just wanted to play one game, Dad! Just one!โ I huffed, flopping onto the couch like it was the end of the world.
He didnโt even look up from the bills he was sorting through. โWeโll play later, okay?โ he said.
But โlaterโ always came too late or not at all. And when youโre ten, โlaterโ feels like a broken promise.
Dad wasnโt a bad guy. He worked hardโtoo hard, if Iโm being honest. Heโd leave before sunrise and sometimes come back so tired heโd fall asleep on the couch in his work clothes. Heโd always say he was doing it for the family, and maybe he was. But all I wanted was an hour, a few rounds of Super Kart Racers, something.
That day, I went to my room and slammed the doorโnot out of anger, but out of that helpless, sad kind of frustration. I turned the volume on the game all the way up so he could hear the theme song from the other room. Petty, yeah. But I wanted him to feel something.
Hours passed, and it got quiet. I donโt know when I fell asleep, but I woke up the next morning with the game controller still in my hands. My door was open a crack, and I saw a plate of toast and a glass of orange juice on the floor outside my room. No note. Just breakfast, like a peace offering.
This became a pattern. Iโd ask. Heโd promise later. Later wouldnโt come. Iโd sulk. Heโd leave toast and juice.
By the time I turned twelve, I stopped asking. We coexisted, like roommates more than anything. I got into other thingsโbasketball at school, drawing, even started learning the guitar from YouTube. Dad still worked the same hours. Still came home exhausted. We spoke less and less.
Then one Thursday, something odd happened.
I came home from school, and the house smelled like burnt toast. The fire alarm was chirping low in the background. In the kitchen, Dad stood by the toaster, looking guilty.
โWhat… are you doing?โ I asked, setting my bag down.
He shrugged. โTried to make that toast you like. The one with cinnamon and sugar?โ
I blinked. โOkayโฆ why?โ
He looked nervous. Actually nervous. โThought we could hang out tonight.โ
My first instinct was suspicion. โDid Mom tell you to do this?โ
He laughed. โShe mightโve… but I wanted to.โ
โIs everything okay?โ
He rubbed the back of his neck. โJust figured Iโve been missing a few things. Maybe too many.โ
So that night, we played video games for the first time in years. He was terrible at itโkept steering the wrong direction and accidentally tossing bananas at himself. But he laughed. And so did I.
And that one night turned into something regular. Thursdays became โGame Night.โ He even bought snacks. Sometimes, heโd show up with nachos or a bag of spicy chips I liked. Other times, heโd just microwave popcorn and bring two sodas.
But then, life being what it is, things shifted again.
My mom got laid off, and Dad had to pick up extra shifts. Game Night became less consistent. Then it vanished altogether. At first, heโd apologize, saying he was โjust slammed this week.โ Then he stopped saying anything.
By the time I was sixteen, we barely spoke again.
Only this time, I didnโt sulk. I had my own lifeโfriends, a part-time job at the movie theater, college on the horizon. I got used to the distance.
But deep down, part of me still wished we couldโve kept those Thursdays going. Just something simple, something ours.
My senior year of high school, I had to do a project for English class about โA Moment That Changed Me.โ I didnโt even think about it muchโI wrote about that first Game Night with Dad. The one with the burnt toast. I even drew a silly cartoon of him holding the controller upside down.
I didnโt expect the teacher to read it out loud. But she did. And for some reason, hearing my own words echo in that quiet classroom stirred something in me.
After class, a girl named Leila came up to me and said, โThat story? That hit me hard. My dad and I havenโt talked in months. I think Iโm gonna text him.โ
It stuck with me. That maybe a small moment in my life could ripple into someone elseโs.
That weekend, I tried to do the same. I asked Dad if he wanted to go for a driveโjust the two of us. He seemed surprised, but he said yes.
We ended up at a burger place off the highway, the kind with sticky booths and milkshakes that are way too sweet. We sat there, talking about nothing and everything. Sports. Work. Life.
At one point, I asked him why he worked so much back then.
He took a sip of his milkshake, sighed, and said, โI didnโt know any better. I thought I had to prove something. That providing was the only way to show love.โ
I nodded. โI think I just wanted you to show up.โ
He looked at me, eyes glassy. โIโm sorry I didnโt.โ
That was the first time I ever saw him cry.
We didnโt fix everything that night. But we started something new.
Fast forward a few years. I was in college, studying media arts. Dad had slowed down, taken a less demanding role at work. Mom started her own catering business. Things felt… steadier.
Then, one summer, I came home to find my old game console cleaned up and set up in the living room.
โWhatโs this?โ I asked.
Dad grinned. โThought you might want to teach me how to actually beat you now.โ
I laughed. โYouโre at least a decade too late for that.โ
He shrugged. โNever hurts to try.โ
That summer became one of the best of my life. We had Game Nights again. Not every week, but enough. Weโd play, talk about the news, argue over which chip flavor was superior.
And then, a twist I didnโt see coming.
One night, Dad said, โIโve been meaning to tell you something. Sit down.โ
My stomach dropped.
He told me he had a small heart issue. Nothing too serious, but it scared him enough to change his lifestyle. He had started walking every morning, cutting back on junk food, even joined a local menโs yoga group.
He said, โIโm trying to stick around. I donโt want to miss anything else.โ
I didnโt realize how much Iโd needed to hear that.
Time moved on. I graduated. Got a job editing videos for a content agency. Moved into a tiny apartment. Life got fast again. But now, I called him. Heโd text me memesโterrible dad ones, but I appreciated them. We didnโt need Thursday nights anymore because weโd found something steadier.
Then came a twist that really changed everything.
I got invited to speak at a local youth event about storytelling. My professor had recommended me. I almost turned it down, but something pushed me to do it.
At the event, I shared the storyโburnt toast, Game Night, the distance and the return.
Afterward, a woman approached me, crying. She said her teenage son barely spoke to her, and she was going to try one more timeโmaybe over video games.
A few weeks later, she emailed me a photo of them, both holding controllers, smiling.
Thatโs when it hit me. These stories we liveโthey donโt just shape us. They can shape others. Even the messy, unfinished ones.
One day, I asked Dad if he remembered that first nightโthe one with the burnt toast and the banana peels.
He smiled. โOf course. I remember thinking, โMan, I really suck at this.โ But also… I remember thinking I hadnโt seen you laugh like that in a long time.โ
That stuck with me.
Years later, when he retired, we threw him a party. Instead of a speech, I made a short videoโa montage of our Game Nights, old photos, voiceovers of the story.
He cried again. So did I.
And when people asked me why I did it, I said, โBecause it all started with burnt toast and a video game.โ
The lesson? Time isnโt just something we pass. Itโs something we spend. And the people we loveโespecially the quiet onesโsometimes need a little invitation back into our lives.
So, if you’re waiting for someone to make the first move… maybe donโt. Maybe be the first to show up.
Thanks for reading. If this story reminded you of someone in your life, maybe reach out to them. And if it meant something to you, give it a like and share it. You never know whose story it might change next.




