15/11/2025
Old Man's Tale of Joy!
An old man lay in the quiet of a hospital ward, the slow beeping of machines marking the passing time. The days had begun to blend together, yet there was a gentleness in him that illness could not take away. During a soft afternoon, when the room felt almost suspended in stillness, he began to speak to the patients and attendants around him.
“I have many children,” he said, and his voice trembled with a mixture of pride and memory. “Many of them have found their own path. They are living good lives now.”
One attendant, touched by his warmth and puzzled by the empty space around his bed, asked in a tender voice, “Where are the others. I see only one child sitting beside you. Will the rest come soon.”
The old man paused. A long breath left him, one that carried years of acceptance.
“They are caught in their own lives,” he said. “Work, families, the rush of days. They call me when they can. They send what little they are able to send. Life has pulled them far.”
The attendant looked toward the son who sat quietly by the bed, his hands folded, his eyes tired from sleepless nights. “And what about him,” the attendant asked. “Does he not have work.”
The old man turned his head slowly, his gaze resting on the child who stayed. His eyes glistened, not with tears, but with the weight of a father’s love that had matured into something quiet and profound.
“He works,” he said softly. “But for now he has left everything behind.
The old man’s voice lingered in the air, gentle as a prayer. He slowly reached for his son’s hand, and the young man moved closer without a word, as if he had been waiting for that moment.
“I told him not to trouble himself,” the old man continued, his fingers brushing the back of his son’s hand with the frail affection of a father who remembers every year that brought them here. “I told him that life should not stop because of me. But he only smiled and said, ‘Apa, this is not trouble. This is my time with you.’”
The ward grew quieter, as if even the walls leaned closer.
“He wakes before I do,” the old man said, his voice warming. “He arranges my medicines, he checks the water beside my bed. When I am too tired to speak, he still talks to me, telling me small stories so I will not feel alone. I did not ask him to do any of this. He simply stayed.”
The son lowered his gaze, his face touched with the quiet humility of someone who loves without needing applause. The old man looked at him the way morning light looks at the earth, soft and grateful.
“There are moments,” the old man went on, “when I wake in the night, and he is sitting right there. Not sleeping. Not complaining. Just watching over me, the way I once watched over him when he was a little boy afraid of the dark. Life has circled back in its own gentle way.”
The patients around him listened, their own hearts stirred by the simple grace of the scene. For some, it reminded them of what they once received. For others, what they once gave. For a few, what they still hoped to find.
“I do not feel alone,” the old man said. “Not for a single moment. Age has taken many things from me, but it has given me this… this closeness. This time with my son that I never knew I would receive again.”
His voice softened until it was almost a whisper.
“He calls me Apa with the same innocence he had as a child. And every time he says it, something inside me becomes young again.”
The son finally looked up, his eyes meeting his father’s. No words passed between them, yet everything was understood. A lifetime of unspoken love, gathered quietly in the space between their hands.
The old man smiled, a smile that carried no regret and no longing for what was not there. Only gratitude for what was.
“In the end,” he said, “love does not count how many come. It simply cherishes the one who stays.”
The ward remained silent, held in the gentle truth of his words. And for a moment, everyone felt something shift within themselves — a soft reminder that even in the hardest places, life still finds a way to offer its sweetest gifts.
~ Anonymous