After years of serving the country, a 73-year-old veteran found himself forgotten by his own family and the world.
He took care of his daughter and two sons all by himself following his wife’s sudden passing at a young age. His children were his world, everything he ever worked for, but during the last years of his life, they weren’t around. They never paid a single visit nor called their old father. He didn’t ask much, just a simple phone call that would remind him he mattered to them. But it never happened.
Eventually, he ended in hospice, waiting for his life to end, and the feeling was a nasty one. Not because he wouldn’t live longer, but because he was forgotten and abandoned.
One day, a biker entered the hospice room of the old man, a chance encounter that changed everything.
He was looking for someone else, but he noticed the man’s purple heart placed next to the bed and decided to stay and learn more about his life.
“Thank you for your service,” the biker said, and for the first time in many years, the man felt appreciated and seen.
The two chatted for a while and the biker promised to return the following day. The man smiled, but he didn’t expect the biker to really appear again. He knew that people rarely kept their promises. But, the biker, Marcus, was different.
The following day, he returned indeed, and this time, he brought for of his friends with him. They made the man company, shared stories, laughed, and made him feel alive.
In the days that followed, the bikers stood by the man’s side, asking him if he needed anything. And yes, there was indeed something he needed them to help him with. He asked to see his lawyer and change the will he made years ago. The will that states all his money and possessions went to his children.
Instead, he only left his children letters in which he wrote, “I loved you. I raised you. But when it mattered, you weren’t here,” and left everything he had to three different charities that worked with homeless veterans forgotten by their families and the society, just like himself.
Eventually, the man passed away and his funeral was attended by his biker friends. His children were also there, too ashamed to look at the dead body of the man whose love and dedication they betrayed.
Over time, they all got involved with the charities their father supported. The three of them volunteered in order to help the veterans in need. Whether it was redemption or regret that pushed them didn’t matter. The important thing was that they became kinder, more understanding, just as their father had always wanted.
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Bored Daddy
Love and Peace


