I hate being called a biker because my own kids won’t let me meet my grandchildren. There. I said it. Sixty-seven years old, and I finally admitted the truth that’s been eating me alive for the past decade.
My daughter told her friends I’m dead rather than admit her father rides a motorcycle. My son hasn’t spoken to me in eight years because his wife said I’m “not the kind of influence” they want around their kids.
I’ve been riding for forty-three years. Vietnam vet. Purple Heart. Thirty years as a volunteer firefighter. Coached little league for fifteen seasons. Never missed a single child support payment even when I was eating ramen three meals a day.
But none of that matters because I wear a leather vest and ride a Harley.The day my daughter got married, she told me not to come. Not because I did anything wrong. Because she was ashamed. Her future in-laws were “sophisticated people” and she didn’t want them to know her dad was a biker.
I stayed home that day. Sat in my garage and stared at my bike. The same bike I’d worked three jobs to buy so I could afford her college tuition. She doesn’t know that. She thinks I’m just some deadbeat who cares more about riding than his family.
I sold my truck to pay for her senior year. Rode my bike through two winters because it was the only vehicle I had left. Showed up to her college graduation with my beard braided and my vest on because it was literally the only warm thing I owned.She cried when she saw me. Not happy tears. Shame tears.
“Dad, why couldn’t you just dress normal for once?” she hissed at me in the parking lot. “Everyone’s staring.” I looked down at my vest. The patches I’d earned over decades. The flag I wore because I loved my country. The firefighter memorial patch for my best friend who died saving three kids from a burning building.“This is normal for me, baby girl,” I said quietly.
She hasn’t called me “daddy” since she was twelve. That’s when the other kids started making fun of her. “Your dad’s one of those scary bikers,” they said. She came home crying and asked if I could “please just be normal.”
I tried. I wore a button-up shirt to her next school event. Trimmed my beard. Left my vest at home. But it didn’t matter. The other parents had already seen me. Already decided who I was.
One mom actually pulled her kid away from me at a school carnival. Like I was going to hurt a child. Me. The guy who’d been volunteering as a crossing guard for three years at that same school.
My son was different. He understood. At least I thought he did.
He rode with me when he was younger. Said he wanted to be just like his old man. We had matching vests. Went on father-son rides. Those were the best days of my life.
Then he met Jennifer. Beautiful girl. Good family. Money. The kind of people who vacation in Europe and have cleaning ladies.
The first time I met her parents, I wore slacks and a polo shirt. No vest. No bandana. Shaved my beard down to a goatee. I tried so hard to be what they wanted.
Her father still looked at me like I’d crawled out of a dumpster. “So, you’re a biker,” he said. Not a question. An accusation.
“I ride motorcycles, yes sir. I’m also a retired firefighter and a veteran.” He nodded but his eyes said he’d already made up his mind about me.
Six months later, my son told me Jennifer’s parents were “uncomfortable” with me being at their engagement party. “It’s their house, Dad. I can’t really argue.” I told him I understood. I didn’t. But I said I did because that’s what dads do.
The wedding was worse. I was allowed to come but Jennifer’s father made it clear I was to park my bike down the street. “We’re having professional photographers. We don’t want motorcycles in any of the pictures.”
I paid for the rehearsal dinner. Eleven thousand dollars I’d saved for years. I handed my son the check and he hugged me tight. “Thanks, Dad. I love you.”
But I wasn’t in any of the family photos. They took one with me standing way off to the side. “Just in case we need it,” the photographer said.
That photo’s not on their wall. I know because I’ve seen their house on social media. My son posts pictures all the time. His wife posts pictures. Their kids post pictures.
I’ve never been inside that house.
My grandson just turned five. I’ve never held him. Never heard his voice except in videos my son accidentally leaves public before his wife makes him take them down.
I sent birthday presents. They get returned. No note. Just “return to sender.”
Last Christmas I drove past their house. I know I shouldn’t have. But I just wanted to see them. See my grandkids. I parked down the street and watched them through the window playing in the living room.
My son came outside. Walked right up to my truck. “Dad, you can’t be here. Jennifer will call the cops if she sees you.”
“I’m your father,” I said. My voice cracked. “Those are my grandchildren.”
“I know, Dad. I know. But you have to understand. She grew up differently. She doesn’t understand our lifestyle.” Our lifestyle. Like riding a bike makes me part of some cult.
“I delivered babies in burning buildings,” I said. “I carried a marine’s body parts in a bag for three miles in Vietnam. I worked eighty-hour weeks so you could go to college. That’s my lifestyle.”
He looked away. “I’m sorry. I have to go.” That was two years ago. Haven’t seen him since.
My daughter called me three months ago. First time in years. I thought maybe she’d had a change of heart. Maybe she missed her old man.
“Dad, I need a favor.”
My heart jumped. “Anything, baby girl. Anything.”
“My car broke down and the repair is $3,000. My husband lost his job and we’re really struggling.” I had $4,000 in my savings. Money I’d been putting away for emergencies. “I’ll transfer it today,” I told her. “Do you need more?”
“No, that’s perfect. Thanks, Dad.”
“Can I see you? Maybe we could get coffee?” Silence. “I’m really busy, Dad. But I appreciate this. I really do.”
She never said I love you. The money transferred. She sent a thumbs-up emoji.
That was it.
People think bikers are these tough guys who don’t feel anything. Who don’t cry. Who don’t break. They’re wrong.
I cry every single night. I’m broken in ways I can’t explain.
I see other grandpas at the diner with their grandkids. I see fathers teaching their sons to ride bikes in the park. I see families together and I wonder what I did so wrong that mine can’t even look at me.
I never hit my kids. Never drank. Never cheated. I worked myself to the bone for them. Sacrificed everything.
But I wore the wrong jacket. Rode the wrong vehicle. Looked the wrong way.
And that was enough for them to erase me.
My brothers in the club, they’re my real family now. They show up when I need help. They call to check on me. They remember my birthday.
Last month I had a heart attack. Small one. Spent two days in the hospital. Fifteen brothers showed up. Brought food. Sat with me. Made sure I wasn’t alone.
My kids didn’t know. Still don’t. Because they blocked my number years ago.
The doctors said I need to reduce stress. “Do you have family support?” the cardiologist asked. I lied. Said yes. Easier than explaining I have two kids and four grandkids who pretend I don’t exist.
I’m writing this because I’m tired. Not physically, though my body’s worn out too. I’m tired of pretending it doesn’t hurt. Tired of acting like I’m okay with being erased.
I’m tired of being treated like a criminal because I ride a motorcycle.
I’ve helped stranded motorists more times than I can count. Pulled over for every single kid selling lemonade. Stopped when I see someone who needs help. Given my jacket to a homeless vet sleeping under a bridge. Bought groceries for a single mom whose card got declined.
I’ve done more good than most “respectable” people in suits ever will.
But I’m the one who gets followed in stores. Denied service at restaurants. Asked to leave family events. Treated like trash by my own children.
If you’re reading this and you’re a biker, you know exactly what I’m talking about. You’ve lived it too. We all have.
We’re the first ones people call when they need help moving. Need a ride. Need money. Need someone to fix something. But we’re not good enough to sit at their dinner tables.
I don’t know how much time I have left. The doctors weren’t optimistic about my heart. Said I need surgery I can’t afford.
But before I go, I wanted to say this: I’m proud I’m a biker. I’m proud of my brothers. I’m proud of the life I lived and the people I helped.
I’m not proud my kids are ashamed of me. But that’s their burden to carry, not mine.
To every biker who’s been rejected by their family: You’re not alone. You’re not crazy for feeling hurt. You’re not wrong for wanting your kids to love you for who you are.
And to my kids, if you ever read this: I forgive you. I love you. I always will.
But I’m done apologizing for being a biker.
I’m done apologizing for being me.
I’ll die in my leather vest. I’ll be buried with my brothers around me. And when I’m gone, maybe you’ll realize that the scary biker you were ashamed of was just a dad who loved you more than his own life.
Maybe you’ll realize too late that I was never the one you should have been ashamed of.
I hope you figure it out before your own kids do the same thing to you.
Because being erased by your own children is a pain I wouldn’t wish on anyone.
Not even the people who did it to me.
