
When I walked in the door and saw that note on the table, my heart dropped. âGood-bye!â written in my wifeâs handwriting. I started calling her like crazy â no answer. Then I remembered the little security cam Iâd installed months ago above the front door (she did not know about it). Since I travel so much, it gives me peace of mind.
I opened the app, rewound it to two hours ago, and what I saw brought me to tears.
My wife and our kids were sitting on the living room floor, gathered around a calendar. My wife was crying softly. I turned up the volume on my phone to hear what was happening.
âI know, babies, I know,â she was saying to the kids, wiping her eyes. âDaddy comes home today, but he has to leave again next week. We have to be strong for him. We canât make him feel guilty for working.â
She grabbed the notepad and a marker. âLetâs practice, okay? Letâs practice saying it so we donât cry when he leaves next time.â
She wrote âGood-bye!â in big, bold letters on the paper and placed it on the table.
âReady?â she asked, her voice trembling. âOne, two, three⌠Good-bye, Daddy!â
But the kids didnât say it. They just hugged her. And my wifeâmy strong, resilient wifeâburied her face in her hands and sobbed. âI canât do it,â she whispered. âI hate that word. I hate that heâs always gone. I just want him home.â
The video showed them hugging for a long time. Then, my wife took a deep breath, slapped her cheeks, and stood up.
âOkay! No more sadness!â she declared, though her eyes were still red. âDaddy is coming home today. Letâs go to the store and get the ingredients for his favorite lasagna. We are going to celebrate him being here!â
They rushed out the door in a hurry to beat the traffic, leaving the âpractice noteâ on the tableâthe note that had nearly stopped my heart.
I sat on the couch, watching the empty room on my phone screen, tears streaming down my face. I realized then that my âprovidingâ for them was costing us everything that actually mattered. The money wasnât worth the heartbreak of my absence.
Just then, the front door handle turned. My wife and kids walked in, grocery bags in hand, laughing.
When she saw me, she dropped the bags and smiled. âYouâre early!â
I didnât say a word. I just walked over, pulled her and the kids into the tightest hug of my life, and whispered, âNo more traveling. Iâm finding a local job. No more goodbyes.â