He didn’t know how to lift properly.
Didn’t know how to carry weight.
Didn’t know how to listen without interrupting.
And worst of all—
He didn’t know how to be nobody.
“Hey!” one worker shouted at him. “You waiting for the bricks to move themselves?”
A few laughs followed.
Daniel’s jaw tightened.
For a second, I thought he might snap.
That old version of him—the one who raised his hand, who believed anger was power—flickered right there on his face.
But then something different happened.
He bent down…
Picked up the load…
And kept going.
By noon, his hands were torn open.
Blisters. Raw skin. Dirt worked into every line of his palms.
He tried to hide it.
I noticed.
Of course I did.
A father always notices.
But I didn’t step in.
Because this lesson wasn’t about pain—
It was about truth.
During lunch break, he sat alone.
Didn’t touch his food.
Just stared at his hands like they belonged to someone else.
I walked over, slow, deliberate.
Sat beside him.
For a moment, neither of us spoke.
Then he said, quietly:
“Did you feel like this?”
I looked out at the site.
Steel beams rising.
Concrete setting.
Men moving with purpose.
“Worse,” I said. “I didn’t have anyone to ask.”
He swallowed hard.
The next few days were even harder.
Not physically.
Mentally.
Because every hour stripped away something he used to rely on.
No one cared about his old life.
No one respected his past.
No one feared his anger.
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