Ather Abandons His Daughter For Years, Then Returns Expecting Her To “Fix” Their Relationship

Family relationships can be complicated, but some wounds run much deeper than a simple disagreement.

When someone who was supposed to protect you disappears, hurts you, and refuses to take responsibility, reconnecting years later is not always as easy as saying “that’s still your parent.”

Blood may create a connection, but it does not automatically repair the damage caused over time.

That is the painful situation this Reddit user is facing.

After years of feeling abandoned and mistreated by her father, she received an unexpected message from him wanting to rebuild their relationship.

The problem is that the memories she carries are not just about absence, but about years of emotional harm and one traumatic final encounter.

Scroll down to read why she is questioning whether protecting her own peace makes her the wrong person.

Daughter who was abandoned by her father struggles when he returns seeking forgiveness

ather Abandons His Daughter for Years, Then Returns Expecting Her to “Fix” Their Relationship
not the actual photo

'AITA for telling my dad "That horse is dead" when he asked if we could have a relationship?'

My mom and dad married young and had 6 "ladder step" kids. The longest gap in ages

between us is 27 months. My dad found a job that paid well, but he would be home for 2

weeks every 3 months or so. When he was home, he'd show some interest in us, but most

times he'd be sleeping or watching TV.

One night when he was gone for work and we were with our aunt since my mom had to

work, the whole neighborhood broke into our house and completely destroyed and stole

everything. When my mom took the cops to our neighbor's house, she pointed out every

house that helped and said what they took because she "wouldn't be the only one in

trouble." After that, we went to our aunt's and my mom called my dad, told him what

happen and asked him repeatedly to come home. He choose to stay at work. After that

night we didn't see him for about a year and a half.

When he did show up, it would be in sporadic intervals from 10 mth to 2 y apart and only

for a few minutes at a time but ALWAYS when my mom wasn't around. When I turned 14,

he started coming around more often and started spending an hour or 2 with us every

couple months. He took a special interest in us living with him and would make a point to

say it every time he saw us.

At 15 I moved in and everything went to downhill FAST. He started mentally and verbally

attacking my looks and my body. He'd talk about women often and how they should always

submit no matter what. He would give me something only to take it back. He gave me an

allowance but would be mad if I spent it. He got upset with me for not talking to him

"enough," but would give 1 word responses when I tried to start a conversation. Then

there was a situation where I found some pretty damming evidence of his mistreatment of

my mom on his computer.

I was a busy kid with little to no freetime. I was in sports, after-school clubs, student

counsel, theater and prom/homecoming committee. When homecoming came around I

asked if I could go. He agreed and was reminded almost every week of when it was. The

night of homecoming, when my date arrived to pick me up, he pulls me to the side and said

I can't go because I had to help him pack and move out of our house. Completely

blindsided because WHAT? We did not discuss moving and why would you wait until

homecoming night to say something? We went back and forth for a little bit and I offered

to come straight home afterwards instead of spending the night with my friends like I

intended. He was annoyed but agreed.

The dance was over at 9, I got home at 9:45. I was helping pack along with some cousins he

invited over, but I guess I wasn't going fast enough. He started yelling and he ended up

laying hands on me. I left immediately and called my aunt who came to get me. He started

flooding my phone with texts and calls saying how ungrateful I am, how I cost him so much

money, how bad of a person I am, etc. I didn't respond to any of it.

After about 2 months, I started reaching out to him about my clothes and belongings.

Asking if we could talk, etc. He never responded and blocked my number. I went to his

house a few months after that, but, when he opened the door and saw it was me, he

slammed the door in my face and started cussing at me through the door until I left. It has

been almost 12 years since then.. Onto a few weeks ago, I get a text from a random

number calling me by name.. Me: "who is this?. Him: It's your dad.. Me: What do you want?.

Him: I want to see about me being your dad and you being my daughter.

A wave of confusion, disbelief and finally rage washed over me all at once. I responded

"that horse is dead". He waited a few minutes and replied, "it's not dead, just on life

support, but with some work, it can get better."

I blocked him and called my mom. She said, "That's still your dad. You need to let that hurt

go and talk to him." Her response is what has me second guessing the way I handled this

situation and has me thinking that maybe I was a little too harsh. Maybe trying to explore a

relationship with him is something I should do. However, if this were a random person

doing these things, it would be cut and dry to never speak to them again, so WHY should I

give him another chance just because we are related? Why should I "do the work" on his

terms when he wasn't willing to meet me or speak to me on mine? Why do I feel like the

bad guy for making a stance for my own mental well-being ? Why is it okay for him to

mistreat everyone and only when HE'S ready, is when it will be resolved? Should I listen to

my mom instead and just talk to him anyway? AITA?

One of the hardest truths about family is that biology alone cannot repair years of emotional absence.

Many people grow up believing that parents deserve unlimited chances simply because they are parents.

Yet lasting trust is not inherited. It is built through consistent care, accountability, and emotional safety.

When those things are missing, reconnecting can feel less like healing and more like reopening an old wound.

In this story, the daughter was not rejecting a single invitation from her father.

She was responding to a lifetime of abandonment, emotional abuse, and broken trust.

As a child, she experienced repeated disappearances, criticism, manipulation, and eventually physical violence.

Even after leaving his home, she made genuine attempts to reconnect by asking for her belongings and trying to talk, only to be ignored, blocked, and literally shut out at his front door.

Twelve years later, his message arrived not with an acknowledgment of that history or an apology, but with a request to resume the relationship.

It is understandable that those few words triggered confusion, anger, and grief all at once.

When someone has spent years protecting themselves from harm, self-preservation often looks like rejection to the person who caused the pain.

An important perspective is that forgiveness and reconciliation are not the same thing.

Many families unintentionally blur the distinction, encouraging adult children to “let it go” in the hope that peace will follow.

Psychologically, however, forgiveness is an internal process that may help someone release resentment for their own well-being.

Reconciliation is different because it requires the other person to demonstrate accountability, empathy, and sustained change.

Without those elements, reopening the relationship can simply recreate the same unhealthy dynamic.

The father’s statement that the relationship was “on life support” also subtly shifted responsibility onto his daughter, implying that both of them needed to “do the work,” despite the profound imbalance in their past actions.

Viewed through that lens, the daughter’s response was less about punishing her father and more about protecting herself.

Blocking his number did not erase the possibility of change; it simply acknowledged that he had not yet shown the kind of accountability that makes change believable.

Her mother’s advice likely reflects a generation that values preserving family ties, but preserving a relationship should never come at the expense of someone’s emotional safety.

Compassion for a parent and firm boundaries can exist at the same time.

Perhaps the most meaningful takeaway is that second chances are gifts, not obligations.

A parent who truly wants to rebuild a relationship begins by recognizing the pain they caused, accepting responsibility without excuses, and respecting whatever pace the other person needs.

Sometimes the healthiest choice is not asking whether someone deserves another chance, but whether reconnecting would genuinely make your life safer, healthier, and more peaceful.

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

These Redditors suspected the father returned because he wanted money, shelter, or help

koifishyfishy − NTA. He wants something. He's not calling for your benefit, only his own.

You aren't obligated to let anyone into your life, regardless of relationship. But it's

faaammmilllyy. .. Nope. Tell any flying monkeys that they're welcome to have a relationship

with them if they choose.

You are choosing not to, and they will find themselves on the list as dear old dad if they

keep pushing the issue.

Character_Goat_6147 − This is going to be blunt, but both of your parents are very abusive

and dysfunctional. Your dad is just straight up an abusive jerk, and he’s contacting you

because he wants something-money, a maid, a kidney, a babysitter for a new family, who

knows. But this is not coming from a place of love, just a place of greed.

And your mom, well, she’s telling you that abusers who are related to you should be

allowed to keep abusing you. That’s wrong, and she’s a brainwashed enabler. I’m sorry,

because she’s also an abuse victim, but she’s enabling an abuser. Bury the horse and walk

away. You will not regret it.

October1966 − He's after something. Just bury the horse.

1moreKnife2theheart − NTA - Ignore your Mom's comment. She apparently couldn't stand

up to him and allowed him to treat her & all the kids poorly throughout your life. My

question would be WHAT DOES HE WANT? ! Because, make no mistake,

he wants something from you.

Unless he's been counseling for the past 10 years, realizes & understands what he did

wrong & wants to make amends - I'd steer clear because if he hasn't then he's just going to

repeat the same old patterns.

ExpertChart7871 − He needs a kidney. He’s homeless and he needs a place to stay.

Something’s up. Tell him that the horse died 12 years ago,was buried and has now decayed.

He can call your mom if she cares so much about him.

WetMonkeyTalk − Sounds like he's after one of your organs. NTA

This group urged the poster to keep him blocked and protect their peace

Hotcrossbuns72 − Keep him blocked and let that go. It’s suspicious that he now wants to

be a dad after how he treated you. Respectfully, your mom can pound sand for wanting

you to make contact with an abusive AH.

GuardMost8477 − No no no no NOOOOO. This “man” and I use that term loosely, has

shown you time and time again who he is. Believe him.

SchoolBusDriver79 − Keep him blocked and out of your life. There’s a reason he’s trying to

start up with you again, and it’s not for your benefit. If any family member has a problem

with your lack of interest in him, tell them that they’re free to spend more of their time

with him.

PlanktonMysterious88 − You owe nothing to your sperm donor and your mom is wrong.

Tell her she can get blocked too if needed.

DangerNoodle1313 − NTA. Your feelings are valid. Your mom endured the abuse; you don't

have to. Just because he gave ypu genetic material doesn't make him your dad.

Sometimes the hardest decision isn’t whether to forgive someone, it’s whether they’ve earned another chance to be part of your life.

Many readers felt the poster owed nothing to a father who repeatedly abandoned, belittled, and hurt them before disappearing for more than a decade.

Others believed reconciliation is only possible if it begins with genuine accountability, not vague promises.

What do you think? Was blocking him the healthiest choice, or would you have at least heard him out? Share your thoughts in the comments below.