Saturday, February 21, 2026

Touched reading it

🌺 *_A Father is Never Poor*_🌺

_Here is the full real story…._

"_Ma’am, your flight is in two hours…" the PA reminded her. *Isha* removed her glasses. Standing on the 50th floor in London, looking down, she felt an emptiness she had never felt before._

_Her father, *Sadashiv Rao*, had passed away last night in Pune. *Isha was a successful businesswoman*.  But in the last 10 years, she had not visited India even once to meet her father._

_Why?_

_Because of *“that” day*, fifteen years ago. Isha had received admission to a top university in America. The fee was 25 lakh rupees. Sadashiv Rao was a simple clerk. *Isha insisted*, “*Dad, take a loan, mortgage the house, but I have to go to America*.” Sadashiv Rao firmly refused._

“_Isha, we cannot afford it. I cannot mortgage the house. Your wedding, your brother’s future, my old age… I cannot take this risk.” Isha was furious. “You’re a coward! You’re jealous of my success. I’m ashamed to call you my father.” Saying this, she left the house._

_In anger, she found a scholarship from a trust and went to America. While leaving, she didn’t even look at her father’s face. For the next fifteen years, she proved herself, earned $ in Millions, but she never called her father even once._

*_Present*_

_Isha reached Pune. The old ancestral house was unchanged. A few people stood at the door. Sadashiv Rao’s body lay in the courtyard._

*_Isha noticed his shirt — it was the same old one she had seen 15 years ago*. She didn’t cry. She only felt a strange heaviness. The rituals finished. People left. Only Isha and her father’s old friend, lawyer Deshpande Uncle, remained. He handed Isha an old torn diary and a passbook._

“_Isha, Sada left this for you.”Isha asked sarcastically, “What will be in this? Complaints Accounts of how badly I behaved?”_

_Uncle became serious. “Read it. You’ll find answers.” Isha opened the diary and began reading. Soon, she reached the page dated fifteen years ago._

“_Today Isha left in anger. *She called me a coward*. But how do I tell her that the house she wanted me to mortgage… *I had already sold it during her engineering*. We are living in a rented place now. *If she knew, she would feel guilty. So I lied*.”_

_Isha’s hands trembled. She turned *the next page*. “Today Isha got a scholarships of 20 lakh rupees from ‘*Gyandeep Trust’*. She is very happy. *She thinks she got it because of her talent. Good*._

_She must never know that *I donated* all my PF money and sold my ancestral land *to create funds in that trust*. She will think her father did nothing for her, *she will hate me… but that’s fine*. Even if through hatred, *she will study with determination*._

*_If she knew it was my sacrifice, she would feel burdened and never fly high*.”The ground beneath Isha seemed to collapse._

*_The “scholarship”* she was proud of was actually *her father’s blood and sweat*? *The father* she had called coward and stingy, *had sold his own old age to buy her future*?_

_She continued reading. The last page was dated two days before his death. “Isha, today the doctors said *I have few days left*. You have become very big now. *Whenever I see your picture on TV, my chest swells with pride*._

_My child, *your anger may not have gone yet*, but let me tell you something… I pretended not to help you because *I didn’t want you* to be a girl who *lived off her father’s money*. *I wanted you to be a woman who stood on her own strength*._

*_You won, my child. I lost, but I lost happily*. Only one regret… Before dying, I wanted *to see you once, with my eyes full*.”_

“*_Your ‘stingy’ father.*” Isha hugged the diary to her chest. *She collapsed* to the floor, crying uncontrollably._

“*_Baba… Baba please get up… I’m sorry… I was wrong*…” Her cries echoed in the empty house. She had Millions now, she could buy any luxury in the world._

_But the one gift—*the sight of the man who burned himself to give her light* —she could never buy again. Outside, *Deshpande Uncle* wiped his tears. He *knew that for the last 15 years, Sadashivrao had survived on nothing but chutney and bhakri*, so he could secretly send money to Isha in America whenever she needed it*._

_Now Isha understood… *A father is never poor*. The Children simply lack the ability to measure his wealth. Behind a Father's “*no”,* there is often a *sacrifice the Children fail to perceive*._

*_Value them while they are here — because once they’re gone, nothing remains except regret*._

_If this story gets connected to you, it is mere coincidence. But it is a story of every household in India_