**The One-Word Panic**
My little sister wrote **“HELP”** in capital letters in the family chat.
No emojis.
No explanation.
Just that one word.
Dad saw it first. Without even grabbing his coat, he bolted out of his apartment and into the hallway. The elevator in his building had been broken for weeks, so he sprinted up **ten flights of stairs**, taking the steps two at a time.
By the eighth floor he was wheezing.
By the ninth, he was convinced his heart might actually stop.
But nothing could make him slow down—his daughter needed him.
He reached her door, drenched in sweat, chest heaving, panic written all over his face. He hammered on the door once, twice—then shoved it open because she never locked it when home.
“WHERE ARE YOU?!” he shouted.
And there she was.
Sitting on the floor, legs crossed, completely unharmed… and holding her laptop.
Dad’s eyes were wild. “What happened?! Are you okay?! What’s going on?!”
She blinked up at him.
“Oh! Um… yeah. I’m fine.”
“Then WHY did you text HELP?!”
She turned the laptop around.
On the screen was a spreadsheet for her job—thousands of rows long, numbers everywhere.
“I meant this,” she said, pointing miserably. “HELP. As in…I need help understanding this formula.”
Dad stared at the screen. Then at her. Then back at the screen again.
“You made me run ten flights… for… a spreadsheet?”
She winced. “I didn’t think you’d take it *literally*…”
He slowly lowered himself onto her couch, still panting. “I thought you were dying.”
A beat of silence passed.
Then my sister walked over and gently patted his back. “Well… now that you’re here… do you know how to fix conditional formatting?”
Dad stared at her, incredulous—then burst out laughing.
A deep, relieved, shaky laugh that made his whole chest tremble.
“I nearly had a heart attack,” he said, wiping sweat off his forehead. “But sure. Show me the stupid spreadsheet.”
My sister grinned. “Thanks, Dad.”
As he helped her, he muttered, “Next time, at least type *‘help with my homework’* or *‘help not urgent’* or SOMETHING.”
She nodded sheepishly. “Got it.”
But later that night, Dad admitted to me in a message:
> “I hope they always need me. Even for dumb things.”
And honestly?
I think that’s exactly what being a dad is.