By: Chioma Madonna Ndukwu
Father’s Day: The Hidden Humanity Behind Fatherhood
I lost my father when I was still a toddler, and I grew up with a silence that followed me like a shadow I never learned to name properly.

I did not know his voice, but I knew his absence the way children know hunger; quiet, persistent, and hard to explain.
At school, when other pupils spoke about their fathers, I would often smile, even when something inside me felt like it was slowly folding inward.
There were days I walked home in silence, tears held back not because they were not there, but because I had learned early how to hide what had no place to land.
My mother did her best to fill the gap, and she truly did, but a father’s absence is not always replaced by effort; some spaces respond only to presence.

I grew up building conversations in dreams, speaking to a man I never had the chance to know fully in reality. I would ask him questions I knew had no answers, yet I still asked them, because grief sometimes becomes its own language.
Even now, years later, I still miss him in ordinary moments, when laughter happens and I wish he was part of it, or when life gives me milestones I wish I could report back to him, just once.
Fatherhood, through the quiet lens of scripture, is not only authority, but shelter. “As a father has compassion on his children, so the Lord has compassion on those who fear Him” (Psalm 103:13). It is a picture of care that is steady, not loud; firm, yet tender.
Yet in reality, many fathers are men carrying responsibilities that rarely allow them softness. They are expected to be unshakable pillars, even when their own foundations are quietly trembling.
Society often assigns fathers a strict identity: provide, protect, endure, never break. Children expect presence, emotional clarity, and consistency that feels like safety. Women frequently expect stability, direction, and reassurance that everything will hold together.

But beneath those expectations are real men, fathers who are tired, uncertain, stretched thin by survival, and sometimes emotionally unequipped for the weight they carry.
American author Clarence Budington Kelland once captured a simple truth:
“My father didn’t tell me how to live. He lived, and let me watch him do it.”
In Dublin, psychologist Dr. Michael Harris once noted during a family wellbeing discussion:
“Many fathers are not emotionally absent by choice, but by inheritance, they were never taught another way to be present.”
AfricaWorld News Interviews:
In Owerri, Imo State, speaking during a field interview with AfricaWorld News, secondary school teacher Mr. Kelechi Okafor said:
“People think fatherhood is only about provision, but children remember who was emotionally there when it mattered most.”
In Eleme, Port Harcourt, Nigeria, in an AfricaWorld News street interview, tanker driver Mr. Boma Alabo shared:
“I do my best, but sometimes I wonder if my children know me more as a provider than as a father.”
There is a silent weight many fathers carry—this expectation to remain strong even when they are exhausted. Many of them were raised in environments where vulnerability was never an option, only endurance.
So they learn silence. And over time, that silence can become distance, even inside the same home.
The Bible does not only describe fathers as providers, but as guides and teachers of life. “Train up a child in the way he should go” (Proverbs 22:6) is not just instruction, it is closeness, involvement, and steady presence.
Yet many fathers were never shown how to balance strength with emotional openness. They repeat what they were given, even when their hearts long for something more expressive, more present.
American poet Robert Frost once wrote:
“Home is the place where, when you have to go there, they have to take you in.”
But for many fathers, home becomes less of a refuge and more of a responsibility they must constantly uphold, even at personal cost.

Children interpret absence in many ways—sometimes as rejection, sometimes as indifference—rarely seeing the hidden exhaustion behind it.
Women often carry the emotional interpretation of this gap, trying to hold families together in the space between what is said and what is felt.
Yet one truth remains often unspoken: fathers are also human. They also get tired. They also need reassurance. They also need room to be imperfect without losing love.
There is a quiet grief in being a father who tries but feels unseen. And there is another in being a child who loves a father they never fully got to know.
Father’s Day, then, is not only about celebration. It is also about understanding, the kind that allows fathers to be more than roles, and children to see more than absence.
My father may not have been present in my upbringing, but his absence shaped my understanding of longing, love, and emotional memory. Some relationships do not end; they simply transform into questions we learn to live with.
And maybe fatherhood, at its deepest level, is not just about being strong for others, but being human enough to be known.
A father is not only the one who provides life, but the one who participates in it with presence.

And perhaps the world becomes a little gentler when fathers are not only respected, but also understood.
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