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I was at the diner last week, sitting across from an old buddy from the trades. The coffee was terrible, like always. The booth vinyl was cracked and taped over with duct tape. And for twenty minutes, we just sat there, not saying much of anything.
Then he started talking about his son who died in Afghanistan. Fifteen years ago. Never told anyone the whole story before, not even his wife. But there in that quiet booth, with nowhere else to be and no phones buzzing, it all came out.
That’s when it hit me. Every guy I know over 65 has stories like this. Stories that live in some locked room inside them. Not secrets exactly, just things that never found the right moment to be said.
The stories we carry but never tell
My father died when I was forty-three. We never had the conversation I wanted to have. He never told me about his time in Korea, what it was like losing his own father at fourteen, or why he drank himself to sleep most nights.
I’ve got my own collection of untold stories. The kid who got electrocuted on my job site because I didn’t double-check his work. The marriage that almost ended when I was thirty-five. The panic attacks I had after retiring, when I didn’t know who I was without a toolbox.
These aren’t secrets. If someone asked, I’d probably tell them. But nobody asks. And even when they do, they don’t really ask. They ask while scrolling through their phone, or with one eye on the TV, or in passing while they’re heading somewhere else.
The thing about these stories is they need space. They need the kind of quiet that makes people uncomfortable now. No background music, no notifications, no quick glances at the time.
You can’t tell a real story in the three minutes between commercial breaks.
Why silence makes the difference
Grew up in a house where men didn’t talk about feelings. My old man came home from work, ate dinner, watched TV, went to bed. That was communication in our house.
Took me sixty years to realize that silence comes in different flavors. There’s the heavy silence of things unsaid, which is what I grew up with. Then there’s the open silence of genuine listening, which I’m just learning about now.
Last month, my grandson asked me what it was like when his grandmother died. We were in my garage, just the two of us, organizing tools. No agenda, no rush. I told him things I hadn’t even told myself.
About how I stood in the hospital parking lot for an hour because I couldn’t make myself drive home to an empty house. About finding her grocery list on the counter three days later and crying for the first time since I was twelve. About how I still set two coffee cups out some mornings before I remember.
He didn’t say much. Just kept sorting screwdrivers and listening. That’s all it took.
The competition we’re losing
Try having a real conversation with anyone under fifty. Hell, try having one with anyone over fifty. First thing they do is pull out their phone to check something. Or they’re telling you a story while typing an email. Or that little notification sound goes off and their eyes drift to the screen.
You can see the exact moment they stop listening. Their face goes blank, they start nodding at the wrong times, throwing in “uh-huhs” that don’t match what you’re saying.
So you stop. You wrap up whatever you were saying with “anyway, that’s that” or something equally empty. The moment’s gone. The story stays untold.
I’m not competing with a screen for the right to be heard. I’ve got too much pride for that, and honestly, too little time left.
What these stories cost us when they stay buried
My father never said “I love you” to me. Not once in forty-three years. I swore I’d be different with my boys, but man, those words felt like broken glass in my mouth the first few times.
The stories we don’t tell become walls between us and everyone else. They become the reason we can’t sleep at three in the morning. They become the weight we carry that makes us snap at our grandkids for no reason.
I know guys who are walking around with forty years of untold grief, unshared joy, unspoken love. They think they’re being strong. What they’re really being is alone.
Had a friend drop dead of a heart attack last year. At his funeral, his son said he wished he’d known his dad better. They lived in the same town for thirty years. Saw each other every Sunday. But they never really talked.
That’s what kills me. All these men with all these stories, and they’ll take them to the grave because nobody ever created the right kind of quiet for them to come out.
Creating space for what matters
Started something with a few guys from the old crew. We meet up Saturday mornings at the diner. No agenda, no phones on the table, no rush to get anywhere.
First few weeks were awkward as hell. We talked about football, complained about our knees, the usual stuff. But somewhere around week four, things shifted. Someone mentioned their brother dying. Someone else talked about getting laid off at fifty-eight. Real stuff started coming out.
It’s not therapy or whatever. We’re not sitting in a circle sharing feelings. We’re just a bunch of old guys drinking bad coffee and finally saying things out loud.
My oldest son started coming by on Sunday afternoons. We sit in the garage, work on small projects, don’t say much at first. But in that quiet, working with our hands, stories start coming. His and mine.
He told me last week he never knew I was scared when he was born. Thirty-eight years it took for that conversation to happen.
Bottom line
Every man over 65 has stories that matter. Stories about love we couldn’t express, pain we couldn’t share, fear we couldn’t admit. Not secrets, just truths that need the right kind of quiet to emerge.
We’re not going to compete with screens for attention. We’re not going to squeeze our lives into the gaps between notifications. But if you create the space, turn off the noise, and actually listen, you might hear something that changes how you see the old guy across from you.
Maybe even how you see yourself.
The story’s there. It’s always been there. It just needs the right silence to finally be told.
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