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Fatherhood

What Kind of Father Will You Be Remembered As?

At some point every father asks himself a version of the same question. Not out loud usually. Just in a quiet moment, maybe late at night when the house has gone still and everyone else is asleep.

Am I doing this right?

I have asked myself that more times than I can count. The honest answer has not always been yes. There were stretches where I was physically present but mentally somewhere else entirely. Providing without connecting. Going through the motions without any real intention behind them. Showing up in body but clocking out in spirit.

A poem I wrote recently keeps pulling me back. It starts at the end. The clock has wound down. The minutes have run out. And the only thing left is what the people you loved most actually carry with them once you are gone. Not what you gave them. What you were to them.

That is a different question. And it deserves an honest answer.

What Will They Actually Say About You

When you are no longer here, your kids are not going to stand around talking about the school fees you paid or the holidays you funded. Those things matter in practical terms but they are not what gets remembered at the emotional level.

They will talk about who you were. How you treated their mother when you thought no one was watching. The way you handled pressure and whether it made them feel safe or anxious. Whether you were honest with them even when honesty was uncomfortable. Whether they ever felt like a priority or an afterthought.

Whether they knew without a doubt that they were loved.

That question has a way of cutting through all the noise. Every excuse, every justification, every story you tell yourself about being a decent father. It strips all of that back and leaves something simple and unavoidable.

The Father They Carry Into Adulthood

Kids do not remember the things you bought them with anywhere near the clarity of the moments you gave them your full attention. They remember the Saturday morning you sat down and actually listened without glancing at your phone. The time you showed up to something that mattered to them even when you were tired. The conversation where you admitted you got something wrong.

They also remember the gaps. The emotional distance. The distraction that was always there even when you were technically in the room. The absence that nobody names out loud but everyone in the family knows is real.

How a father shows up shapes how his kids love, handle conflict, and see themselves. That is not pressure. It is just the truth. The father you are becomes part of who they are.

The Story You Are Writing Right Now

Here is what I keep coming back to. Every day is a page in that story. Every conversation, every reaction, every moment where you chose presence over distraction. All of it is being written whether you are paying attention or not.

Most men drift through fatherhood on autopilot. They provide, they protect, they show up physically, and they call it enough. But enough is a low bar when the people watching you closest are learning how to be human beings from what they observe.

Your kids are not looking for a perfect father. Nobody has one. What they need is a present one. A real one. A father who lets them see him as a full human being rather than just an authority figure or an ATM.

You Still Have Time to Write It Differently

If you are reading this, the clock is still running for you. The story is not finished. There are still pages left.

That means there is still time to have the conversations you have been avoiding. To say the things that matter out loud instead of assuming they already know. To show up in the ways that actually count rather than the ways that are just easy.

One day the clock runs out for all of us. That is not morbid. That is just true. And the only question that matters then is whether the people who needed you most knew they had you.

Be that father. Not eventually. Not when things calm down. Now, today, with whatever time and energy you have available.

Start there. The rest will follow.

Zsolt Zsemba

Zsolt Zsemba has worn many different hats. He has been an entrepreneur, and businessman for over 30 years. Living abroad has given him many amazing experiences in life and also sparked his imagination for writing. After moving to Canada from Hungary at the age of 10 and working in a family business for a large part of his life. The switch from manufacturing to writing came surprisingly easily for him. His passion for writing began at age 12, mostly writing poetry and short stories. In 1999, the chance came to write scripts. Zsolt took some time off from his family business to write in Jakarta Indonesia for MD Entertainment. Having written dozens of soap operas and made for TV movies, in 2003 Zsolt returned to the family business once more. In 2018, he had the chance to head back to Asia once again. He took on the challenge to be the COO for MD Pictures and get back into the entertainment business. The entertainment business opened up the desire to write once more and the words began to flow onto the pages again. He decided to rewrite a book he began years ago. Organ House was reborn and is a fiction suspense novel while Scars is a young adult drama focused on life’s challenges. After the first two books, his desire to write not only became more challenging but enjoyable as well. After having several books completed he was convinced to publish them for your enjoyment. Zsolt does not tend to stay in one specific genre but tends to lean towards strong female leads and horror. Though he also has a few human interest books, he tends to write about whatever brews in his brain for a while.

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