Hey son.
What I want for you is to stay soft.
It's really against what "men" stand for, you know. All that macho.
The world will eat a soft man alive. For breakfast. Pathetic weakling.
That's what they'll say, but I don't care. I will not harden you. I will not break you. I hold between my mama hands your giant gaping sensitive heart. I refuse to abuse it.
The softness in you. It will remain, intact. As much as it can, anyway.
Not because I made you that way, or even envisioned you that way, but because you came that way.
Really it's none of my damn business.
My job is to not destroy what you are.
You arrived in a birth that felt like the sunrise, and stayed with a light in your gut or behind your eyes, of pain and love and humanity and some weird empathy or clarity that manifests when I want to beat the crap out of people and you say something loving, pierce to the heart of compassion so fast and sure I see my own hardness like a flash across a shocked brain: He is soft. You aren't. Don't screw this up.
You barely spoke until you were 3.
You almost never cried.
You played and watched and loved and watched more and curled in close, to me, daddy, your grandma and grandfather.
You were always soft. When I say it, it sounds like an insult, in a culture like ours. "The boy is soft." But they don't see you.