Tears of a Son song artwork

Clint Hartwood · Gamma Rays · Track 12

Tears of a Son

Parents and children are a tough relationship dynamic and far too often communication fails. This is an appeal to parents and their children not to lose time and face one another open and honestly, before it’s too late. Country rock ballad with deep emotion by our resident country artist, Clint Hartwood.

CountryCountry BalladCountry PopCountry Folk
Tears of a Son video thumbnail
Official Video LinksTears of a Son

Watch the Video

Tears of a Son
Tears of a SonCOMING SOON
Tears of a Son

Stream the Song

Lyrics

Always driven to do better
Always pushed to do more
Nothing ever seemed enough
Always more work and another chore
All I wanted was a little respect
All I yearned for was to be seen
But my old man couldn’t be bothered
He didn’t care and he was mean.
My little brother could do no wrong
He was treated like a golden one
While I did all the work they asked
Does he notice the tears of his son
Why don’t they listen
Do they even care?
They look right through us
Like we’re not even there
We try so damn hard
Tell us what can we do
To hear the words we long for
To hear, “Son, I’m Proud of You”
Son, I’m Proud of You
Ever since I was a young boy
My father was always on my case
I was given chores on our small farm
But never the warmth of his embrace
To me he was the best dad in the world
He was always  my greatest hero
But I was just a disappointment to him
Made to feel even less than zero
I would ask him so many questions
Then he would treat me like a bum
My questions they just angered him
Despite the tears of his son
Why don’t they listen
Do they even care?
They look right through us
Like we’re not even there
We try so damn hard
Tell us what can we do
To hear the words we long for
To hear, “Son, I’m Proud of You”
Son, I’m Proud of You
I grew up and moved far away
When I got the news cold and bleak
Rushing to him in a hospital bed
His once strong body was so weak
I hold a hand that now seems so small
Cancer made him an empty husk so frail
I ask him now why he always treated me
Like I was always doomed to fail
He looked at me… in total shock
So much confusion in his eyes
He said he was always proud of me most
And that’s the moment I realized
Sometimes it’s so hard
To say what is real
So many years wasted
Please say how we feel
With just one life to live
It’s the only one we get
So say what you mean
Don’t live in regret!
Why don’t we listen
Even though we do care
Let’s look right at both of us
So much love we can share
We try so damn hard
There’s nothing that we lose
Just say the words we long for
To say, “Son, I’m Proud of You”
Son, I’m Proud of You
Before its to late
Let your voices be clear
I’m proud of you
That’s what we long to hear
Son, I’m Proud of You
Yes Son, I’m Proud of You

Behind the Music

Composer’s Thoughts

You can probably guess that this is autobiographical with a few liberties taken for artistic license. Yes, I grew up on a small farm. Yes, the events all happened as depicted. Although the big revelation didn’t happen on a hospital bed… it happened while my father drove me home from college on a semester break. We had a strained relationship to say the least and he broke the long silence by asking, “Why do you always question me?” I was confused and asked him what he meant. For years, every time he would tell me to do something, I would ask him “why.” He took it as an insult, thinking I was challenging him, or that perhaps I thought he was stupid. Quite the contrary. I revealed to him that I asked him why, because I wanted to understand things better… from the man I respected more than anyone else. He thought I looked down on him, while to me, he was my hero. That simple misunderstanding had driven a wedge between us our entire lives. It was only a couple years later that he developed cancer from his cigarette addiction that went from his lungs and metastasized in his brain and took his life. We had wasted most of our lives because of poor communication. As a father, I make it a point to always try to communicate with my kids, so I don’t continue that pattern.

Clint’s Thoughts

Damn. This one was hard to get through. I think the dynamic of fathers and sons is always a hard one. I know it was for me as well. Just heed the words on this one, folks. Time is one thing we don’t get back. Be honest and open with the people you love.