The Distance Between Us (Is Only About 10 Feet, But Still…)

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I heard footsteps.

Slow, hesitant, making their way down the basement stairs.

No door to knock on, no barrier to pause at—just the makeshift “Do Not Disturb” / “Beep Boop Come In” Star Wars sign sitting at the top of the steps, a flimsy attempt at setting boundaries in a house that runs on curiosity and a mild disregard for rules.

A small face appears around the stairwell, hopeful, expectant.

“Dad—”

But I’m already raising a hand. Not a wave. Not a welcome. Just the silent, universal signal of every work-from-home parent: One second.

It’s never just one second.

I see it happen in real time—the quiet disappointment, the realization that even though I’m physically right there, I’m still somehow out of reach. A nod. A retreat. Footsteps back up the stairs.

I hear a sigh. From both of us.


Unreachable, Within Reach

I don’t take this for granted. I know that. I remind myself of it constantly.

I’m here. I get to be here. I get to have lunch at the kitchen table instead of a breakroom, I get to overhear giggles from the next room, I get to be the one who picks them up from school/dance/cross country/drama club/softball.

And still.

Still, there’s this pull, this tension I can’t quite shake.

Because they don’t get the version of me that’s fully present. They get the fragmented version, the one tethered to a screen, to deadlines, to meetings that always seem to stretch a little longer than planned.

They get the physically present but mentally elsewhere dad.

And I hate that.


Somewhere in the Middle

There are moments when I try to bridge the gap.

I mute a call just long enough to whisper, “Be right there.”
I step away from the desk to watch a dance move, admire a LEGO creation, answer a deep and urgent question about boys (ugh, boys).
I make a dramatic show of shutting my laptop at the end of the day, like some grand proclamation of my availability.

And yet, the cycle repeats.

I don’t want my kids to remember a childhood of waiting within reach.

I don’t want them to grow up thinking work is the thing that made their dad too busy.

I don’t want to look back and realize I was with them, but not with them.


The Things That Will Matter

One day, when I’m old and gray (well, grayer), I won’t ask to see a spreadsheet of my productivity. I won’t want to replay old Zoom calls. I won’t be scrolling through old project files.

I’ll want my people.

And we won’t be talking about work-life balance.

We’ll talk about the moments—the tiny, unplanned, mundane moments that somehow end up meaning the most.

If I get this right—if I close the laptop enough, if I choose them over just one more email, if I break the cycle of one second—then maybe, just maybe, they won’t remember the waiting.

Maybe they’ll remember that I showed up.

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