AITA for saying to everyone my father discarded me, and only cares about his new family?

A 32-year-old man says his father discarded him and focused entirely on his new family. After losing his mother in a childhood accident, he was raised by his maternal grandmother while his father recovered and struggled financially. Years later, when he discovered his father had been traveling and enjoying life with his wife and younger children, the contrast reopened old wounds.

He began telling relatives that his father left him behind and only cared about his new household. The accusation eventually reached his father, who pushed back and claimed his son had chosen distance years earlier. With both sides of the family divided and emotions running high, the man turned to a social network to ask whether he was wrong for expressing how deeply excluded he feels.

‘AITA for saying to everyone my father discarded me, and only cares about his new family?’

A childhood shaped by loss and separation.

When I (32M) was 5 years old, me, my mom and my father were hit by a red runner. The accident was bad, leading to my mom's death, and my...

While my father was in the hospital, and even after, I stayed with my maternal grandmother. I lived with her until I was 15, because my father couldn't afford me.

He remarried when I was 11, he asked me again to live with him, but I was used to live with gramma, and had everything I needed.

But when I was 15 my gramma had a stoke... after that my aunt thought it was best for my gramma to go live with her, so she could take...

They already had baby, and soon after I moved had another. It was difficult for me, because I was used to live with gramma, but now I had to share...

My aunt and gramma also had to give me an allowance since my father wouldn't give me any money. I left for college and gramma and aunt paid for it,...

Inheritance, money, and a growing distance.

When I was 21 my gramma died, leaving me a considerable amount. A few years later, my father came to me asking to borrow a lot of money. He said...

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They spend their entire pay checks, never saved for emergencies or vacations. So I doubted he could ever pay me. So I refused. After that he stopped talking to me...

Some time ago, I saw a post from a family member from my father's side, and they were travelling abroad. So I got curious and started to dig, and found...

Things he never did with me. Honestly, it hurts. Because he ignored me most of my life, never gave me anything. But his other kids get showered with gifts, tips,...

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Speaking out led to confrontation and divided opinions.

I started to say this to some relatives from his side, how my father discarded me, left me to my gramma to raise saying he couldn't afford me,

but can afford his new family, how he never gave me anything, but with his other kids, they get everything, while he pretends I don't exist. I think someone told...

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That I'm a ungrateful for everything he tried to do... but as I can see he didn't do anything. He ended saying I was the one who chose to not...

But I disagree, he's the one that stopped contacting me because of money. People from my father side of the family said I'm out of step when I complained.

But my mom's side said my father just never cared for me, and for me to let go. But AITA for feeling hurt that he excluded me completely?

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EDIT: Thanks reddit, it seams like the majority of you are on my side. I've read the comments saying I'm wrong, and saying I'm money hungry. I'm not, it's just...

As for the assholes attacking my gramma. F**K YOU. I won't even dignify your comments with a reply. She was wonderful, raised me, and loved me all my life. She...

In this situation, grief, financial hardship, and shifting custody arrangements appear to have shaped both father and son in very different ways. The son experienced separation as abandonment, especially when financial support came primarily from his grandmother and aunt. From his perspective, tangible contributions like allowances, college payments, and vacations represent proof of care.

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On the other hand, several commenters point out that the father reportedly asked him to move in multiple times and maintained regular contact during those years. If accurate, this complicates the narrative of total rejection. Financial instability during early adulthood is common, and circumstances can change significantly over time.

What feels like favoritism now may reflect improved stability rather than deliberate exclusion. The broader issue seems less about vacations and more about unresolved grief and unmet emotional expectations. Without direct, honest communication, assumptions harden into resentment. Both parties may feel rejected, each interpreting the past through their own lens of hurt.

See what others had to share with OP:

Many commenters believed the poster overlooked his father’s efforts.

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DaxxyDreams − Judging by your comments, it’s sounds like you only chose to live with the people who had money to spend on you.

Your dad asked you many times to live with him, but he apparently could not “afford” you. He called you every day while you lived with grandma. That’s not someone...

YOU discarded him because there was no financial benefit to you. Now that you see dad going on vacations and buying stuff for his kids, now you care?

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You only care what dad can pay for, and you are only upset that you weren’t vacationing with them and getting new things. Go cry a river somewhere else. YTA.

MateusMat − INFO: What did you mean with "he asked me **again** to live with him" Did he ask you to live with him prior to marring?

Also when you say he never called you after you refused money, how often did he called you and how often did you called him? EDIT: YTA OP.

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You dad kept contact with you apparently, and you were the one pushing him away. Now I'm wondering why he wanted to borrow money from you. Did something happen?

Dry-Personality-9123 − YTA, I see your commend you write, he asked several time if you want to live with him. And your grandma refused. And he called you every day...

You never called him. He wanted a relationship you refused and done nothing to establish a relationship. And now you complain? Edit: forget a word

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bunsburner1 − YTA and your original post is missing a lot of key information. Your dad asked you to live with him multiple times before he got a new wife...

You're the one who turned him down. He might not have been well off, but obviously still wanted to make it work. He didn't discard you, you (and your grandma)...

Your dad contacted you daily while you were living with your grandma. You never once made any effort to maintain contact with him. Apparently unaware that you too can initiate...

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Doesnt sound like you really care about him at all. All your complaints are about money, and not getting enough from him. Doesn't help that it sounds like your mother's...

IvanNemoy − Sorry OP, but after reading your comments, you're the a__hole. Yes, you lost your mother young but he did not cut you out.

You were with your grandmother first out of necessity, then out of choice. Your comments make it clear that he continuously tried to and wanted to bring you home, but...

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Your post and comments have one overriding line, your material comfort and the wealth you got through your grandmother and aunt was more important than any family connection with your...

The ask from him might have been a jerk thing to do but he clearly ended up doing alright after the fact so your assumption about it being for reckless...

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Your ongoing complaint about the lack of money spent on you, now that he is recovered and solvent shows that again, your focus is simply on the material. The line...

but as I can see he didn't do anything."* You admit he tried for *years* to get you into your life, but you saw that it meant small house, fewer...

You rejected his every attempt to be the father he could be. You can't say someone didn't do anything when you do not allow them to do it. YTA.

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Others asked for clarification or presented more balanced perspectives.

UnfairShip7774 − Timeline: You are currently 32 - age 5-11 you live with gramma because of a car accident and dad can't afford you (probably because of your mom's death,

and hospital bills -age 11 your dad remarried and asks you to come live with him again and his new wife.

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You refuse and stay with grandma - somewhere between age 11-15 your dad and step mom had a baby (accidental or on purpose, no idea),

age 15 your gramma has a stroke and you go to live with your dad, step mom, and unknown aged half-sibling - age 15-16 shortly after you moved in a...

Gramma and aunt are giving you an allowance because your father is not (people have kids all the time accidentally or on purpose when they don't have the financial means...

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and an allowance is NOT mandatory so there is a possibility your dad and step mom were struggling financially) - age 18/19 you leave for college and your aunt/Gramma pays...

Your dad does not pay. You do not state why - age 21 your gramma dies and leaves you an inheritance.

You mention nothing of your father.- a few years later (unspecified) dad comes to ask you for money and you say no. You don't speak again because he never reaches...

and I'm assuming you don't either - some time ago (again unspecified) you find out that he is going on a trip and has been with that half of the...

Was it before or after he asked you for money? Have you spoken with him about your feelings? A lot can happen in a year let alone a few and...

It sounds like your dad was experiencing financial hardship until recently and he may have been doing his best. Just don't assume he did all this to spite you or...

We are reddit and we have your perspective to work from but there are two sides to every story. Some are black and white, and some situations are just different...

Dry-Personality-9123 − YTA, I your commend you write, he asked several time if you want to live with him. And your grandma refused.

And he called you every day and in college every week. You never called him. He wanted a relationship you refused and done nothing to establish a relationship. And now...

Practical-Big7550 − YTA. You're an adult now, and were an adult when your father stopped contacting you in regards to you not wanting to lend him money.

Before that your dad wanted custody, but you wanted to stay with your grandmother. Either one of two things happened at this point.

Your father thought it was best not to disturb the life that you currently had with your grandmother, or your father didn't want you.

Since he actually asked your to come and live with him, I'm going to lean towards the former. You don't mention if he kept in touch during the period you...

Then he took you in, when you had no where to go. I don't blame your father, about the allowance, they aren't a requirement.

It's nice that your aunt and grandmother gave you an allowance. You don't mention that your father treated you any different from your siblings, or that he denied you things...

Since he didn't give you an allowance, I'm guessing money was tight, so he probably couldn't afford college. After all it's hard to save that up on a single parent's...

So no complaints otherwise about your childhood. You showed your father that you didn't want to be there when he needed help, as an adult. So now he is doing...

A few responses carried a sharper tone while reflecting frustration.

fand0me − YTA. It really just seems like your dad was respecting your wishes. He was the one initiatiting contact, you were the one saying no. I don't see examples...

By the time the money thing happened, you were an adult. It also sounds like you insulted him on top of saying no. Life is a two way street. You...

Maybe he's in a better position now financially. That usually happens as people get older. It also sounds like your grandma poisoned your opinion of him.

forte6320 − YTA after reading through the comments, dad did indeed try to have a relationship with you but you wanted to stay where the money was, with grandma. Shallow...

This story reveals how childhood loss, financial strain, and long-standing misunderstandings can shape adult relationships. One side sees abandonment and unequal treatment, while the other may see repeated attempts at connection that were declined. The pain remains real, even if interpretations differ.

Do material contributions define parental care, or does emotional effort matter more? At what point does personal responsibility begin in repairing fractured relationships? And when years of hurt build up, is speaking out healing or harmful?

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