A son's journey from fear to understanding. A father's love hidden in silence.For thirty years, Ujjwal Ganesh saw his father as a giant.A six-foot policeman whose presence could silence a room. A lawgiver whose rules governed every corner of childhood. A man who arrived like a festival and departed like a season - leaving behind gifts, expectations, and a silence so vast it became the language of their home.But giants are not meant to be understood. They are meant to be feared, obeyed, survived.Then Ujjwal became a father himself.Living alone in a Delhi flat, eating meals in silence, missing his daughters through a phone screen - he began to recognize a familiar pattern. The same distance. The same sacrifice. The same love that doesn't know how to speak.The Day I Saw My Father is a memoir about what happens when we stop seeing our parents as myths and start seeing them as people.It is the story of: A childhood shaped by absence and authorityA year in a hostel that left wounds no one could seeA hospital corridor where a father's hand finally reached for his sonA crosswalk in Patna where a man realized he had become his father-and finally understood what that meantMoving between past and present, between a village in Bihar and a lonely flat in Delhi, this memoir explores the silent language of sacrifice, the weight of generational patterns, and the long road from fear to gratitude.This is not a story about blame. It is a story about seeing.For every son who grew up in his father's shadow. For every daughter who watched from the margins. For every parent who wonders if their children will ever understand. For everyone who has loved someone they could not reach-and reached for someone they could not understand.The Day I Saw My Father asks the question that haunts every family: How do we learn to see the people who raised us - before it's too late?