Some wounds don’t heal on their own. They linger, deep and invisible, like a hollow spot in your chest that you don’t know how to fill. For many men, that’s what happens when their father is absent—whether he passed too soon, checked out emotionally, or just wasn’t there when it mattered. You might not talk about it, but I know the pain can feel like it’s hardwired into who you are.

I get it. Tomorrow is the anniversary of my father’s passing, and even though the years have rolled on, the weight of that loss still shows up in surprising ways.

If you’ve ever felt rejected, abandoned, or like you had to “man up” without ever being shown how you’re not alone. Some of us bury that grief because life doesn’t stop for pain. Others carry it, unknowingly dragging that weight into our relationships, our work, and our sense of self.

But here’s what I’ve learned: It doesn’t have to stay that way. Grief can evolve, and so can you.

The Silent Damage of a Father’s Absence

Jordan Peterson said this: “If the father doesn’t form a relationship with the boy or rejects him, it can feel as if the spirit of civilization has left you outside the walls, like you have little to no worth.”

That hits deep. I’ve talked to too many men—good men—who carry around this vacancy inside of them. Some had dads who passed away too young, like mine. Others had fathers who were “there” in body but not in spirit. Ghost dads. Shells of men who showed up to the house but never showed up in the ways that mattered.

When your father doesn’t teach you how to navigate the world—when he doesn’t see you—it’s easy to think you have to figure it all out alone. You walk around with this unspoken question: Am I enough? And that question, if left unanswered, will haunt you.

But brother, hear me: Your story doesn’t end here. It doesn’t have to.

3 Steps to Start Healing the Father Wound

I want to offer you three things that helped me when grief and absence threatened to take over. It’s not a quick fix—it’s a journey. But these steps can help you move toward healing.

1. Face Your Grief—Don’t Run From It

Listen, I know facing pain feels like staring down a freight train. Most of us would rather stay distracted—work harder, drink more, smoke more, play more—anything to numb that hollowness. But grief doesn’t just disappear when you ignore it. It waits.

You have to let yourself feel it. Cry if you need to. Mourn the father you lost or the one you never had. Write about it. Talk about it with someone you trust. Grief doesn’t make you weak—it means you’re human. And here’s the truth: the only way to heal it is to move through it.

2. Reconnect with God the Father

Look, no earthly father gets it all right. Some of us were blessed to have dads who tried their best. Others weren’t so lucky. But there’s one Father who doesn’t fail.

God as our heavenly Father isn’t just a throwaway Sunday school cliché. It’s a promise. He sees you when no one else does. He knows the weight you carry and the silent questions you ask. He answers the ache in your soul with love, purpose, and belonging.

Psalm 68:5 says, “He’s a father to the fatherless.” That’s not just poetry—it’s truth. Reconnecting with God as Father helped me realize that even though my earthly father is gone, I’m not abandoned. You’re not either.

3. Build Your Band of Brothers

You weren’t built to do life alone. Too many men walk around with wounds they never show anyone because they think vulnerability equals weakness. That’s a lie.

One of the best things you can do is build a community of solid men—brothers who will call you up, hold you accountable, and remind you of your worth. I call it “re-fathering.” You find men who are strong where you need to grow and let them help you heal.

Find a group of brothers who can lift you up when you’re weak. And if you’ve got the strength to carry someone else? Be that man. Build the community you didn’t have.

It’s Okay to Be Carried

Tomorrow, as I remember my father, I’m reminded of this: Sometimes, even the strongest of us must be carried. I’ve spent years being the one who holds others up, but every now and then, we need people who’ll tell us, “Hop up—we got you.”

Brother, if you’re carrying grief, if you feel abandoned or unseen, know this: You’re not alone. You’re not worthless. And you don’t have to figure it all out on your own.

Grieve. Heal. Find God as your Father. And surround yourself with men who’ll walk with you.

Because at the end of the day, that hollow place in your chest? It doesn’t have to stay empty.

If this resonated with you, don’t keep it to yourself. Reach out to a brother who might need to hear this. And if you’re walking through grief and don’t know where to start, shoot me a message. I’d love to talk.