A teacher or boss will be happy if you equal them. But a father frowns if you don’t overtake him.

Winning by Losing: Why a Father Wants to be Overtaken

In the world we live in, everyone wants to be the best. Most people feel a little bit of envy when someone else does better than them. We are taught to be winners, to stay ahead, and to protect our place at the top. But there is one person who breaks this rule of life every single day: the father.

A father is perhaps the only person on earth who finds his greatest happiness in losing to someone else. He doesn’t want to be the fastest runner in the family; he wants to be the one who cheers the loudest when his child runs past him.

A Different Kind of Success

For most people, success is about how much they have achieved compared to others. But for a father, his own life is just a starting point for his children. He works hard, so his children have a firm ground to stand on.

If a friend or a colleague reaches the same level as us, we might feel a sense of competition. We might worry about being replaced. But a father looks at his child and hopes with all his heart to be replaced. He doesn’t mind if his child’s house is bigger, if their wisdom is deeper, or if their name is more famous. In fact, that is his only dream. He is the only man who is truly proud to say, “My child is better than I am.”

Winning by Losing: Why a Father Wants to be Overtaken

The Father’s Frown

There is something very special about a father’s expectations. Usually, if you reach the same level as your teacher or your boss, they are happy for you. But a father might look a little worried if his child only manages to catch up with him.

He doesn’t frown because he is angry. He frowns because he believes his child can do so much more. To a father, his own life’s work is like a ladder. If the child only reaches the same step as the father, the father feels the ladder wasn’t long enough. He wants his children to use his head as a stepping stone to reach the stars he could only look at from a distance.

The Ultimate Gift

When the world sees a child who has done more than their father, they see a new winner. But the father looks at that child and sees his own prayers being answered. He knows that his life was a success not because of what he did, but because of who he raised. In the end, every father wants to be outshone. He wants to be the shadow that protects his child while the child becomes the sun. He is the only person who wins the race of life by coming in second place.

***

Jan 19 2026


Mujeeb Jaihoon

Mujeeb Jaihoon, reputed Indian author, explores themes of universal love, deeply embedded in a disruptive spiritual worldview.

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Mujeeb Jaihoon

Mujeeb Jaihoon, reputed Indian author, explores themes of universal love, deeply embedded in a disruptive spiritual worldview.

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