Abandoned at sixteen with nothing but a twenty-dollar bill and a cold goodbye, a young soul was thrust into the unforgiving streets, left to navigate fear and loneliness alone. The scars of that night linger, a haunting reminder of a parent’s harsh lesson disguised as punishment, a wound that time has yet to heal.
Years have passed, yet the chasm between child and parents remains, filled with unspoken pain and unmet longing. Despite their advice and presence, the shadow of that abandonment still weighs heavy, a silent question of love and connection left unanswered.

My parents kicked me out when I was 16 years old. After 4 days and 3 nights my dad found me and took me back home. AITAH for not really caring about them as they get older?




A sixteen-year-old sits in a car while their father hands them a twenty-dollar bill. The father drives them to a public transportation hub and tells them to get out.
This moment of being left alone caused a great deal of fear and a loss of safety. Even though the child eventually went back home, the memory of being discarded by their family has lasted for decades.
Dr. Gabor Maté, an expert on childhood development and trauma, states that a loss of security from parents can cause long-term emotional damage. In this case, the parents chose to punish their child by making them homeless, which ended the foundational trust in the relationship. The father later admitted he only returned because the mother forced him to, which suggested that the child’s safety was not his own priority. This lack of genuine remorse prevented any real healing from occurring over the years.
The individual’s current lack of concern for their parents is a natural way to protect their own mental health. This behavior is a common response to childhood abandonment. It is recommended that the individual speaks with a counselor to process their past feelings. They should not feel guilty for setting firm emotional boundaries now. Any choice to help their aging parents should be based on what the individual feels comfortable with, rather than a sense of obligation to those who failed to support them.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.

So in my diary I wrote “my mom os such a bitch.

She found and read my diary a few months later and threw it at me. “You think I am a bitch?! Fine!

I was 14. She called the cops and reported me as a runaway. She said she didn’t want to get in trouble. Nowadays she says that never happened. She would never ever do that.

















The people in this thread trying to justify your dad’s behavior by questioning what you, a 16 year old child, did to deserve this are disturbing. He left you alone at a transportation hub with only $20. There’s no way he didn’t know that you could have been raped, murdered or trafficked.




The individual is dealing with lasting emotional pain caused by being abandoned during their teenage years. While they want to have a connection with their aging parents, they cannot forget the time they were left on the street with no help. This creates a conflict between their past trauma and the current expectation that they should care for their parents as they get older.
Is it right for a child to keep their distance from parents who failed to protect them in the past, or does the duty to care for aging family members outweigh old grievances?







