My dad 50M didn’t come to see me 22F when I was dying, how can I forgive him?
A 22-year-old woman lies in a hospital bed, antibiotic drips snaking into her arm, fresh from emergency surgery after sepsis took over her body. She almost didn’t make it. Her mom rushed her to the ER and stayed right by her side through every terrifying moment. But her dad, away on a business trip, never came.
When her mom told him how bad the bloodwork was, he only texted “I’m sorry you’re feeling so sick.” She begged him to come, but he said he was too busy with work. Now she’s out of the hospital, recovering at her mom’s house, still weak and breathless. The physical scars are healing, yet the emotional ones feel raw and fresh. She loves her dad deeply, but this one choice has shattered something inside her.

‘My dad 50M didn’t come to see me 22F when I was dying, how can I forgive him?’
It all started on a Saturday that was supposed to be ordinary—she was meant to have lunch with her mom:


Her dad was told immediately how serious it was:



Her condition worsened quickly:


Only after surgery did the full weight hit her:


The real pain came from her dad’s absence:


She’s recovering now, but the body is still fragile:




In a life-or-death crisis, she needed her father’s presence more than anything, yet he stayed away even after learning she was septic. That single decision left her feeling deeply unimportant when she was at her most vulnerable.
Many parents underestimate how quickly sepsis can become fatal. When a loved one still sounds coherent on the phone, it’s easy to fall into optimism bias and convince oneself things aren’t that dire. Relationship researcher Dr. John Gottman has long stressed that showing up physically during crises is one of the most powerful ways to demonstrate love and preserve trust (source: The Gottman Institute).
The path forward often begins with one calm, honest conversation once he’s home. Expressing the impact without blame—“When I realized I might not survive, the hardest part was feeling alone without you”—can open space for him to share his own fears, pressures, or misunderstandings.
True healing hinges on accountability. If he recognizes the pain he caused, offers a sincere apology, and commits to different priorities in the future, forgiveness tends to emerge on its own. If he deflects or minimizes, creating distance and turning to therapy can help protect her emotional well-being while she processes both the near-death trauma and this relational fracture.
Here’s how people reacted to the post:
People online poured in with empathy, tough truths, and their own raw experiences:
Many sided fully with her, saying her dad failed when it mattered most:





Some defended the possibility he truly didn’t grasp the danger:





A few were blunt about forgiveness not being mandatory:




Others shared long-lasting scars from similar letdowns:











Several urged therapy, time, and careful next steps:









She survived something terrifying, and that alone is worth celebrating. Yet the shadow of her father’s absence lingers, reminding her that love can sometimes fall short exactly when we need it most.
Have you ever faced a moment when someone close didn’t show up the way you hoped? What helped you navigate the hurt—time, conversation, distance, or something else? And how do you know when forgiveness feels possible, or when protecting your peace matters more? Let’s hear your take in the comments.
