By Clairra Freddy
Dear Papa,
The walls remember.
They have absorbed the silences after storms, the tremors of slammed doors, the echoes of things we never dared to say. I used to wonder if the house could feel all the fear that lived inside it — if it could sense how I walked on eggshells, always trying not to disturb the air, always afraid of what might come next.
I write this letter not to wound, but to open something. A window, maybe. A space for honesty.
Do you remember that morning?
The light was already filtering in — gentle, golden — and yet the room was anything but warm. The air crackled, charged with rage. There was a shout. Then the sound no child should ever have to hear. And I moved — not as your daughter, but as a barrier. A trembling, unflinching shield between you and Mama. I was small, Papa. So small. But in that moment, I carried the weight of a family breaking in half.
Something inside me fractured then. Quietly, irreversibly.
After that day, I no longer saw you as the man who carried me on your shoulders, or read me bedtime stories with a voice I trusted. That version of you — soft, safe, good — felt like a memory I had to question. You became someone I feared, someone I avoided, someone whose love I tiptoed around like broken glass.
And yet, I still called you Papa.
That duality lived inside me for years. The confusion hurt more than the fear. Because even after everything… I still wanted to love you. I still wanted you to be the father I remembered, not the one who made Mama cry, or made me flinch when you raised your voice.
When I asked Mama why she never left, her answer wasn’t loud — it came with a sigh and a trembling smile. “He gave us everything,” she said. “He is still your father.”
And so I stayed silent too.
Later, I learned about the infidelity — the quiet betrayal buried beneath years of pretense. I saw it in the messages. The pictures. I saw it in her eyes when she handed me the phone. And again, the ground shifted. You, Papa — the man who told me I deserved the best, who warned me never to settle for less — had broken the very vows you told me to value.
Still, I wanted to believe there was something left to save.
But I didn’t know that trauma follows you like a shadow. That you can leave the house but still carry its rooms inside your chest. I found myself drawn to people who mirrored you — charming, then cold. Gentle, then controlling. I thought I could fix it. I thought I was supposed to. I mistook familiarity for love.
And through it all, I kept asking the same question: How do you hate someone who once kissed your bruised knees and tucked you in at night?
Papa, you taught me to fear love.
But here is the truth I never thought I’d write: I see you trying now.
You’ve gotten older. Softer in some ways. Your voice isn’t always thunder. Sometimes, it’s uncertain. Sometimes, it’s kind. You ask me how I’m doing. You reach out more than you used to. And while my guard is still up, while my heart still bears the bruises of what was — part of me notices the effort.
I see it in the way you sit quietly during conversations you would have once stormed away from. I see it when you apologize, even if the words still come slow and stiff. I see it when you ask questions about my life instead of assuming.
And I know that change is not linear. That healing is not neat. That forgiveness is not a switch I can flip overnight.
But Papa… I am trying too.
Trying to accept the complexity. Trying to hold space for both the love and the pain. Trying to believe that people can grow, even if it takes a lifetime. You are still my father. That truth carries weight. And lately, it carries hope, too.
So no, I won’t hand you this letter. But I will share it with the world — because maybe someone else needs to hear that healing is possible. That reconciliation is not forgetting — it’s remembering with gentleness instead of rage.
And maybe one day, if the stars align, you’ll read these words and see not just your mistakes, but my heart. Still guarded, yes. But not closed.
Love,
Your daughter
Kla
