When I was around eight years old, I accidentally knocked over the TV in our living room. It was one of those big, heavy ones — and when it hit the floor, the screen shattered into a spiderweb of broken glass. I stood there frozen, heart pounding, knowing exactly how much trouble I was in.
All afternoon, I sat staring at the wreckage, replaying the sound of the crash in my head, dreading the moment my dad would walk through the door. When he finally did, I ran up to him before he could even take off his shoes. Tears filled my eyes as I stammered, “Dad, I broke the TV! It was an accident, I swear!”
He stopped and looked at me — then looked at the shattered screen. I expected shouting, maybe punishment. But instead, he quietly walked closer, knelt down, and looked me right in the eyes. After a long pause, he said softly, “Are you okay?”
I nodded through my tears, completely confused. He smiled faintly and said, “Good. Because TVs can be replaced… but you can’t.”
At that moment, I realized something I’ve carried with me ever since — love isn’t measured by how someone reacts when everything is fine. It’s measured by how they treat you when things go wrong.
That day, my dad didn’t just forgive me.
He taught me what real love and patience look like.