Rohan never liked silence.
Ever since childhood, he preferred noise — television running in the background, music playing while sleeping, random videos during meals, or long pointless conversations on the phone. Silence made him uncomfortable because silence forced him to think.
And thinking was the one thing he avoided the most.
At twenty-eight, he lived alone in a small apartment in Toronto, working remotely for a software company. His life looked perfect from the outside. Good salary, modern apartment, expensive phone, latest laptop, weekends at cafés, and carefully edited social media pictures.
But every night, after putting the phone down, the same emptiness returned.
The strange part was that he never understood why.
Until the phone call came.
It was a cold Tuesday evening when his younger sister called from India.
“Papa is in the hospital.”
Those six words changed everything.
Rohan booked the next available flight to Delhi. During the fourteen-hour journey, his mind replayed years of ignored phone calls, postponed visits, and short conversations with his father.
“How’s work?”
“Good.”
“When are you visiting?”
“Soon.”
“Take care of your health.”
“Hm.”
That was usually the entire conversation.
He convinced himself he was busy building a future.
But somewhere deep inside, he knew the truth.
He had slowly become a stranger to his own family.
When he finally reached the hospital, the smell of medicines and silence in the hallway made his chest feel heavy.
His father looked smaller than he remembered.
The strong man who once carried heavy sacks in their village shop now struggled to lift his hand.
For a moment, Rohan froze at the door.
His father opened his eyes slowly and smiled weakly.
“You came.”
That was all he said.
No complaints.
No anger.
No emotional speech.
Just two simple words.
You came.
And somehow, those words hurt the most.
The doctors explained the situation carefully.
His father’s heart condition had become serious over the last year. Stress, diabetes, and years of ignoring symptoms had damaged his health badly.
Rohan felt guilt building inside him.
“How did I not know this?” he asked his mother later.
She looked down quietly.
“You stopped asking.”
The answer hit harder than anything else.
Over the next few days, Rohan stayed at the hospital continuously. For the first time in years, he sat beside his father without rushing anywhere.
No meetings.
No notifications.
No deadlines.
Just silence.
One evening, while his father slept, his mother handed him an old envelope.
“He wrote this last month,” she said softly. “He didn’t want to give it unless necessary.”
Rohan opened it slowly.
Inside was a handwritten letter.
The handwriting was shaky but clear.
“Dear Rohan,
I know life becomes busy when children grow up. I never wanted to stop your dreams.
I am proud that you worked hard and built a good life.
But sometimes your mother waits the whole day just to hear your voice.
Sometimes I sit outside the house and tell people my son lives in Canada, but honestly, I miss the boy who once followed me everywhere.
Money is important, beta.
But time is more important.One day you will realize that success feels incomplete if you have nobody close enough to share it with.
Take care of yourself.
And whenever possible, come home.
— Papa”
Rohan read the letter three times.
Then he cried for the first time in years.
Not quietly.
Not politely.
He cried like a child.
For every ignored call.
Every delayed visit.
Every “I’m busy.”
Every moment he believed there would always be more time.
His father slowly recovered over the next few weeks.
The doctors called it fortunate.
Rohan called it a second chance.
Before returning to Canada, he made several decisions.
He would call home daily.
Visit more often.
Work less overtime.
Spend less time online.
And stop treating family like something permanent that could never disappear.
Because nothing stays forever.
Six months later, his life looked different.
Not richer.
Not more luxurious.
But peaceful.
He started cooking with his mother on video calls.
Helped his father manage medicines online.
Visited India twice that year.
And slowly rebuilt relationships he had neglected for years.
One evening, while sitting alone in his apartment, he noticed something unusual.
The silence no longer bothered him.
Because for the first time in a long time, there was no guilt hiding inside it.
Moral of the Story
Many people spend their lives chasing success so aggressively that they forget the people waiting for them at home.
Money can buy comfort.
But it cannot buy lost time.
Sometimes the people who love us the most ask for the smallest things:
- A phone call
- A visit
- A conversation
- A little attention
And one day, when they are gone, those small things become the biggest regrets.
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