I haven’t spoken to my father in almost two years, and it’s been a painful and complicated journey. One of the pivotal moments for me was on my wedding day. I didn’t receive any message from him—not even a simple acknowledgment. I had hoped to hear from him, and his silence cut deeply, making me realize how distant we had become.
I feel a lot of anger and sadness because it seems like we will never have the relationship I’ve always wanted. I long for a connection where he takes interest in my life and my choices, even when they differ from his own. Instead, I often feel dismissed or disregarded, especially when it comes to my boundaries. For example, whenever politics comes up, I feel disrespected because he tends to push against the limits I’ve tried to set.
There’s also a significant element of fear in our dynamic. I worry that if I attempt to rebuild our relationship, he might use his financial resources as a means of control over me and my family. This fear makes it hard for me to see a path forward that feels safe and genuine.
Right now, I’m in a space where I’m trying to determine IF or how I want to re-establish any sort of relationship with him. I want to find out if it’s possible for us to interact in a way that respects each other’s boundaries, takes a real interest in one another’s lives, and supports each other’s choices—even when we disagree. It’s a difficult and ongoing process, but I’m trying to be honest with myself about what I need and what I’m willing to work towards.
Why does look like another bot post?
It’s not. I promise. I recently made this account because my others were too identifying of me.
Therapy.
Yep, been doing that for a few years.
That’s good, not an easy thing to start or to keep up. The thing that helped me forgive the people in my life that had failed me in pretty substantial ways, was understanding them just as people, not as the specific role they were in my life. People make mistakes, and they usually aren’t taught the proper tools to handle things properly.
I logically know this, but I just can’t seem to get past it. Hence the question as the title.
A lot of the times the things we want can have hidden barbs or fangs. Distance isn’t always bad.
Yep. Distance is different than cutting him off. I have a ton of guilt. We recently had our first child and he hasn’t met his grandchild.
All you can do is extend an invitation
One of the pivotal moments for me was on my wedding day. I didn’t receive any message from him—not even a simple acknowledgment. I had hoped to hear from him, and his silence cut deeply, making me realize how distant we had become.
One year, my father said he didn’t think he could visit. I have his only grandkids. He’s retired and rich. He has connections to get cheap travel. He takes multiple out-of-country trips a year (that I’ve never been on). There is literally no reasonable explanation why he can’t visit in a year and plenty of typical reasons for him to do so. I haven’t talked to him in more than 5 years.
My anger/sadness dulls with time, but never goes away. I constantly have to remind myself that the father I want doesn’t exist and never did. It has gotten easier with time, but it’s still a scar. Just like a real scar, it gets angry from time to time, but it’s not as bad as when I first got it.
It’s taught me a lot of lessons. It taught me not to be like him. My mom once asked my wife “where did he learn to play with the kids like that? His father never did that.” When my wife told me that, I couldn’t explain it, either. I just treat my kids like I wanted to be treated when I was a kid.
I’ve gone to therapy and it helps. Maybe I should go back. As my kids grow, I’m learning new ways in which he failed me and our family. I never knew what I was missing, but now that I have to provide that for my kids, I see what he did wrong. Every year it’s something new. I imagine it’ll be that way until I die.
So, I’m sorry, but I don’t think it ever disappears (as you can tell by the energy I’m typing with). I think it fades. Take from it the lessons that you can. Don’t let the pain be fruitless. Acknowledge it, use it as guidance, “I know what not to do.”
One of the biggest things that I’ve come to realize is that despite my PO parents saying I was their priority they failed to move towards me when I needed them most. It’s their lack of attunement that hurts.
You have the same problem as a friend of mine who struggles with both her parents.
Your idea of who he is doesn’t match the reality of who he is. This leads to him constantly disappointing you because he doesn’t behave the way you hope he will.
I think the first step to moving forward (in whatever way that might be) is to adjust your idea of who he is until it more closely matches reality. From what you’ve written, he doesn’t treat you as an adult or an equal. He doesn’t care about your boundaries (because he doesn’t consider you an adult or equal). He doesn’t care to be kind and nurturing. He doesn’t care about your feelings.
Once you can accept who he actually is you can make an informed decision about whether you want to include him in your life.
Lastly, your fear about him using his wealth to control you absolutely smacks of an abusive relationship. We don’t try and control those we love.
Therapy can give you the tools to navigate your own feelings and if you decide to make a connection the tools to navigate that. Someone objective with your best interests in mind that has experience with this will be a huge asset.
Dont feel obligated by societies expectations, just act in your best interests and set boundaries. Sorry it’s such a vague response, but everyone is so different,and relationships are complex. Unloading onto a professional can really help.
I’ve invested quite heavily in therapy, both individual and group in the past couple of years.
Agreed, and the only answer that will stick long term. OP, I have very similar issues with my father. Therapy is the only thing that has helped me.
This reminds my of my sister. Tons of therapy over our father and still no progress, well because the problem isn’t her. I told her to understand he Is never going to grow up so treat him like what he Is. Worthless. I was super angry for month’s after my last visit but I realized I wasn’t just disappointed in him. I was angry cause never had the parent I needed. I told her I’ll see him again in casket cause my life doesn’t improve with him in it. She told me to go to therapy but I don’t want peace, I want a useful parent. It’s bs my mom did everything she could and he has the balls to pretend he is in the same game. I’ll hold on to this till I die. Why? Cause I never want to be like him. Meanwhile like op, my sister is afraid of our fathers wrath. He actually pointed a loaded gun at me once. I told her that’s more reason to run. No money is worth trading my family’s wellbeing.
Ask yourself: why do you want to have a good relationship with a person that doesnt seem to respect you at all? Just because of the blood in your veins, childhood trauma (probably caused by him), social pressure or is there a “valid” reason?
Ask yourself if having the relationship you are imagining is worth you putting in 10 or 100 times the amount of work he will, while still not being respected as a person.
Don’t feel bad that you established boundaries with your father. As for the complicated feelings you’re having, I can definitely empathize, albeit for different reasons.
Do you have a close friend, or therapist you can talk to to help you work through these feelings? Honestly, he may never be ready to give you the relationship you want. And that’s something you may have to work through on your own to come to terms with it.
It’s totally valid for you to feel angry, and hurt by his actions. I wish I had better advice. Everyone deserves a father that’s present in their life. <3
I’m really sorry that you’re going through this. Everyone’s situation is different but I also have a strained relationship with my father that has lead to the tough decision for me to go low contact with him and give up on having a relationship for the foreseeable future.
I don’t know if this will help you but it helped me so feel free to take/leave as you like. I think the first thing you need to do if you haven’t already is figure out what you want the boundaries of your relationship to be and the conditions for re-engagement to help prevent him from hurting you again. Could be something simple like no financial assistance or expensive gifts, acknowledgement that the silence at your wedding hurt you, that kind of thing.
If he agrees to these then you can cautiously establish a relationship while making sure you enforce your boundaries. If he doesn’t co-operate or dismisses your needs, then it’s going to be very hard to have a relationship with him, you will get hurt. In that case I think your best option is to accept that you can’t have the type of relationship with him that you want, and allow yourself to grieve that loss.
As a disclaimer, I’m not a professional. Professional advice really helped me but this was still a multi year painful journey for me. Good luck and I really hope you can move forward and find peace with the situation however it turns out and don’t be afraid to lean on your support networks.
Thanks for your empathy and understanding.
I try to talk about this in therapy but I still seem stuck. I wake up in the middle of the night angry, sad, and crying.
Even trying to set boundaries and communicate them to him leads me to rage and sadness. For years I didn’t recognize that when I’ve spent any time with him it usually takes several days to come back to being fully regulated. I could probably recover faster now that I’ve been to therapy, but I’m frozen in fear that he’ll try to use his wealth to try to control me and the decisions I make for my family.
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Why would you want to fix it if he constantly pushes your boundaries purposely?
I’m not OP, but I have similar issues. I ask myself this CONSTANTLY. There’s a part of me that is a hole that a proper, good father could fill. Obviously, I don’t have that and he never will, but I still crave it. Imagine being hungry and there’s the best food on the other side of the window and you can never have any. You’re still hungry and there’s a part of you that is pressing against that window, even though another part of you knows you can’t get into the store.
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Thanks for sharing your story.
Why would you want to fix it if he constantly pushes your boundaries purposely?
Because he’s my father and, naturally, I want a relationship where he will be a part of my life.
If he didn’t contact you on your wedding, was he invited?
Yes, he was invited.
You hear sayings like “family is everything” all throughout your life, but it’s only partially true. There is an unspoken assumption that there is love within the family and to not let little things pull you apart.
That is not what you have here. He does not care about you in the way you do about him. As another commenter said, trying to have him live up to an ideal you have in your head will never work. He’s a square peg that you are trying to put into a round hole and every time you do it hurts and causes you emotional distress. He doesn’t feel that. It’s asymmetric.
So you have to ask yourself why you are holding on to him as a father if he is not willing to be one. It’s unfortunate but you may have to accept the reality that you don’t have one.
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You don’t really give enough detail to give specific advice. All I can say is I left it too late to reconnect with mine and it’s one of my biggest regrets.