Yesterday marked my 58th birthday. A day that should have been filled with laughter, cake, and celebrationābut instead, it unfolded as a quiet reckoning. A moment where joy and sorrow sat side by side, each demanding to be felt.
Hereās what I discovered:
- Iām getting older. The beard is greyer, the wrinkles are deeper, and the mirror doesnāt lie.
- Iām three years away from my next colonoscopyāa reminder that time marches on, whether weāre ready or not.
- I may never hear from my daughter again.
That last one cuts the deepest.
As a gay dad, this story is heartbreakingly familiar. Too many of us come out later in life, hoping for understanding, only to be met with silence. Some children canāt reconcile who we are with who they thought we were. And so, they disappear. No calls. No texts. No birthday wishes. Just absence.
Iāve felt this ache before. After my son died, there was a pain in my gut that never fully left. It resurfaces on days like thisābirthdays, anniversaries, holidays. But this year felt different. There was hope. A fragile, flickering hope that maybe, just maybe, Iād get a message. A simple āHappy Birthday, Dad.ā But as the hours passed, that hope dimmed. And the silence grew louder.
Itās hard to celebrate when your heart is heavy. The people around you may not understand the weight you carry. They see the balloons, the smiles, the toastābut they donāt see the grief tucked behind your eyes. And even if they do, they may not know how to help. Because thereās no magic wand for this kind of pain. No quick fix. Just the quiet truth that some wounds donāt healāthey just become part of you.
I think about other parentsāthose whose children are missing, or taken hostage in places like Israel and Gaza. The not-knowing. The unbearable uncertainty. The way joy feels like betrayal when your heart is still searching. You want to celebrate, but you also want to honor the ache. And sometimes, you donāt know how to do either.
This year, I honored my son by purchasing a bracelet. Itās simple, but sacred. I wear it on days that were special to him, and to me. Itās a symbol of remembrance, of love, of connection that transcends absence. Maybe itās time I do the same for my daughter. A quiet signal to those who know me: when you see this bracelet, know that Iām reflecting. Know that Iām celebrating and grieving, all at once.
Maybe I should speak these feelings aloud more often. Maybe I shouldnāt have to. I donāt know. But I do know this: Iāve started channeling my love toward those who are present. My partnerās children. My chosen family. The people who show up. Because love doesnāt disappearāit just finds new places to land.
I write these posts because I care. Because there are gay dads out there who feel this same ache. Who celebrate in silence. Who grieve in the shadows. And I want you to knowāyouāre not alone.
We are still worthy of joy. Still capable of love. Still deserving of celebration.
Even when the silence is deafening.
