AITA for being too honest telling my dad I don’t remember my mom?

For one 16-year-old, honesty came out quietly but landed heavily. During a family dinner meant to honor his late mother, he finally said something he had held inside for years: he doesn’t really remember her. No voice, no shared moments, no clear memories beyond her funeral. It wasn’t meant to hurt anyone. It was simply the truth.

But that truth changed the room. His father, who has spent years keeping his wife’s memory alive for their children, grew quiet and withdrawn. Later, his sister accused him of ruining the night. Confused and overwhelmed, the teen turned to social media, asking whether telling the truth made him heartless—or whether grief sometimes hurts no matter how gently it’s handled.

AITA for being too honest telling my dad I don’t remember my mom?

The story begins with a childhood loss that shaped the entire family dynamic

This happened a few hours ago. I (m,16) lost my mom when I was 6. After that it was just me my dad and my older sister.

My dad was a sad guy for a really long time. I remember after she died he would just cry a lot and he was always serious for months. It...

As the years passed, grief showed up differently for everyone involved

It took me a while to feel sad about her death and then I started therapy when I was 7. My dad did everything for us and put extra into...

Every year on her anniversary we make what she used to like to eat and we light a little candle for her. Usually when we do this we’ll talk about...

It was always my dad telling me stuff she used to do with me and i never said anything because...I don’t remember.

Quietly, the gap between stories and lived memory grew wider

ADVERTISEMENT

Anytime he’d tell a story of stuff we did I’d have no idea what he was talking about. But I just never said anything because I feel bad. I don’t...

If it weren’t for old pics he still has of her idk if I would remember much what she looked like. Only thing I can think clearly of was her...

The moment of honesty came during what was supposed to be a loving tradition

ADVERTISEMENT

Since it was my mom’s anniversary we had dinner earlier tonight to honor her. My dad and sister were telling their own stuff about mom so I was kinda quiet.

My dad asked me if I have any funny stories I can think of. I told him not really. I think my dad took it as I didn’t wanna open...

and I shouldn’t keep anything I’m feeling bottled up. My dad wouldn’t stop pushing to open up and finally I told him I didn’t really have anything to talk about...

ADVERTISEMENT

I only explained a little that my memories r not that good and I can’t think of any stuff I did with her so I only go by what I’ve...

The emotional fallout arrived immediately and painfully

My dad looked hurt and his eyes were little watery. He said that was ok and nothing to feel bad about but then he only sat there quiet the rest...

ADVERTISEMENT

When before we were all talking and laughing. He didn’t talk anymore at all.. After we finish eating he just went upstairs to his room.

When we were alone my sister said I was such a stupid a__hole for making him sad and I didn’t have to tell him that.

She told me I could’ve told one I already heard from them (on the spot I actually couldn’t think of any). But instead she says I ruined the dinner and...

ADVERTISEMENT

He didn’t come out the rest of the night so now I do feel really bad because I didn’t mean to make him that sad about my mom. AITA?? Can...

Grief specialists often point out that memory and loss don’t develop evenly across family members. Children who lose a parent at a very young age may not form lasting autobiographical memories, even though the emotional impact of the loss still exists. According to the American Psychological Association, memory consolidation before age seven is inconsistent, meaning the teen’s experience is common and unavoidable.

From a parent’s perspective, the realization that a child doesn’t remember a deceased spouse can feel like a second loss. Dr. Alan Wolfelt, a grief counselor and educator, explains that “grief changes over time, and new realizations can reopen sorrow in unexpected ways.” Hearing that truth doesn’t mean the parent was wrong—it means the grief has shifted shape.

ADVERTISEMENT

The sister’s reaction also fits a common pattern. Siblings often respond protectively when they see a grieving parent hurt, even if that pain wasn’t caused intentionally. Emotional overload can turn into misplaced anger, especially during anniversaries when emotions are already raw.

Experts suggest gentle follow-up conversations rather than apologies for facts that can’t be changed. Expressing care, acknowledging shared sadness, and allowing space for emotions often helps families reconnect without assigning blame.

Here’s what people had to say to OP:

Many users reassured the teen that honesty wasn’t cruelty, and no one was truly at fault

ADVERTISEMENT

Fondant-Best − NAH. Your dad is grieving and the only way to keep a piece of your mum alive is in the families collective memory.

The fact that you don’t actually remember your mum must be heartbreaking to your dad but you were a small child and you are in no way an a__hole for...

Your sister kinda sucks but I’d cut her some slack because she most likely also was very emotionally agitated about the situation.

ADVERTISEMENT

Random_User_133 − NAH- You were 6 when your mom died. Its okay if you don't remember your mom the way your dad and sister do.

I don't think that anyone is TA here. You told him the truth, and your dad was not wrong for reacting the way he did because he's still very much...

my sister said I was such a stupid a__hole for making him sad I get it why your sister said this to you. She didn't wanna see her dad sad,

ADVERTISEMENT

especially on your late mother's death anniversary. Don't take this personally. I'm sure she didn't mean it. For now, just give him some space and try to reason with him...

jesus_slept − NAH (people in this thread are either monsters or they forget that NTA would mean your dad/sister are assholes).

My wife and I were talking last night about how my daughter is starting to forget my dad. We can see it happening in real time and it is quite...

ADVERTISEMENT

Your dad probably just realized that your mom isn't as 'alive' as he thought since one of her children doesn't have any personal emotional memories of her.

It's going to take him some time to grieve that new loss. Hope that makes sense - it's a weird concept to explain.

SaturnFirefly − NAH. I don't think anyone bis in the wrong here. You don't remember anything about your mum, which is a bit sad, but not your fault

ADVERTISEMENT

and not something that shouldn't be spoken about. Your dad is understandably sad because he did know your mum and he misses her, and anniversaries are though.

Perhaps you saying you don't remember anything made him think about how young you were when she died, and of the experiences you have missed with her, and of the...

ADVERTISEMENT

And I think that your sister was probably also sad and didn't want to see your dad upset, and while it was a bit unfair of her to take it...

you shouldn't let this make you feel bad. If I were you I would talk to your dad and sister and say you are sorry that this upset them.

I wouldn't apologize for not remembering, but if hearing stories about your mum is something you actually enjoy, tell them that.

ADVERTISEMENT

Tell them that you like how happy it makes them to speak about mum and that you appreciate hearing about her and being able to know more about her since...

EclecticSpree − NAH, though your sister was kind of thoughtless. Your father sounds like he put all of his effort into making sure that you

and your sister would be okay and didn’t do enough work on his own emotional healing. That’s not unusual in these situations.

ADVERTISEMENT

But it’s not your fault that you don’t really remember your mom, and being honest about that was important, because your dad needed to know that he couldn’t lean on...

t’s a lot of pressure to put on you and it’s been relieved now, which is good. You are not responsible for your father’s emotions.

You’re not responsible for your sister’s emotions. You are not responsible to be the keeper of your mother’s memory for the rest of your life.

ADVERTISEMENT

CoastalCerulean − NAH you’re not an a__hole at all. It’s unfortunate that the truth hurt your dad (and it sounds like your sister too), but it’s the the reality of...

Your sister is a jerk and wrong for saying that to you, but it really sounds like she’s both hurting and protective of your dad, I can’t call her an...

Others directly defended the teen and criticized the sister’s response

sjh19 − NTA It's not your fault you don't remember. Your sister didn't have to say that to you though.

ProudBoomer − NTA. You didn't hurt your dad, and your sister is way off base. She's been gone for more of your life than she was around.

You were only 6. Your Dad wasn't hurt by your words, he was hurt because memories of her are not as clear for you as they are for him, and...

He's hurting because you didn't get to have a Mom, not because you made a mistake. Tell your sister to get out of your face, and that you'll keep telling...

littleghost0 − NTA memory is a sucky thing, and your dad gets that, even if it hurts. your sister doesnt understand that however, and she should apologize

[Reddit User] − NTA, your dad took your mothers death hard and it does sound like he could use some grief counseling.

Its not your fault that you don't remember your mother, you were still only a young child when she passed, and you didn't get a chance to make long-lasting memories...

Your sister reacted poorly, you shouldn't have to tip-toe around your father like that, and you didn't ruin the dinner at all.

Some shared personal stories to add perspective and empathy

kap4050 − You are NTA. But I came here hoping to give you a little perspective. I lost my wife about a year and a half ago to cancer.

We had two little boys aged 14 months and 4 years old when she died. My youngest will never know her. And that makes me sad in itself. As I...

I am sad because I know that he will never remember how wonderful she truly was. How wonderful of a mother she was. He was just too young.

But then I think of my oldest. He still has memories of her. But I know one day, those will fade. And he’ll remember stories as opposed to her. I...

It truly will break my heart. I know it’s inevitable. Perhaps your dad feels the same. If you can find some time to sit with him and just be with...

No-Instruction-3782 − NAH You tried hard and just couldn't think of anything to contribute. You were so young when your mum passed.

It is likely your dad knows that you may not have strong memories, but it's probably hard for him to face that fact. Your dad is just very sad, and...

rejressw − NTA. Grief is complicated, and there could be a number of things that made him sad in that moment, but it wasn't you. You didn't say anything wrong,...

themistakeisme − NAH you don't remember your mum, it's sad but you were young. Your dad is just realising that you have no memories of her. He is sad you...

Grumpysmiler − NTA OP you are far from being the A here. What were you supposed to do, make something up? "Remember that time she drank a glass of water?...

Of course it would make your dad sad that you don't remember her but it's not something you could have kept a secret.

I'm in a similar situation my dad passed when I was 4. My mum and older sister remember him, I don't. I have an absence in my life, while they...

You can't make yourself remember or control how your grief differs from theirs, and there is nothing to feel guilty about here.

Maybe you can talk with your dad and tell him how you feel about the fact you can't share things with them in the same way, so that he knows...

It's hard seeing a parent upset and maybe this caused your sister to lash out at you, but it isnt your fault and everyone has to be open about this...

This moment wasn’t about cruelty or carelessness—it was about reality colliding with grief. A son spoke honestly about his memory, a father faced a painful truth, and emotions spilled over in the process. Many readers agreed that no one truly failed here. Sometimes grief hurts simply because it exists. If you were in this family’s place, would you choose honesty, or silence to protect someone you love?

Share this post

Related Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *