I assume that, at 18, my daughter sees me as she might see a cracked iPhone that needs updating: occasionally useful, a bit scruffy looking, prone to making weird noises, and always interrupting her with unnecessary notifications. Not slick or exciting or anything you’d show off to your friends. Just there.
To be clear, my daughter is very kind to me. We get on well. She hardly ever rolls her eyes when I walk into a room. The sense that I might be a slightly ridiculous pity-figure exists almost entirely in my own head.
She’s got a busy and interesting life: I just want to be likeable enough for her to put the odd hour aside sometimes. I don’t want to become one of those dads who answers the phone to their adult daughter later in life and has nothing to say other than “I’ll just get your mum.”
I worry that she might find me a bit annoying. I wouldn’t blame her – I find me a bit annoying. I’m always zoning out, forgetting stuff, gawping silently into space, snoring, burping, expressing opinions on matters I know little about or shouting at the television.
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When she was little, we’d go to the cinema and then out for something to eat, and I felt as if I could reliably deliver the highlight of her day. She would find my funny voices and impersonations entertaining. I made up bedtime stories that could make her howl with laughter. Now she is at university doing a psychology degree. She knows stuff. She’s got loads of mates, her own life in a faraway city, and far more interesting preoccupations than her old man.










