A father’s love is often unconditional, but when his beloved daughter is diagnosed with sociopathy, that love is tested in ways unimaginable. From a young age, her disturbing behavior cast shadows over their relationship, yet he stood steadfast, seeking help and holding onto hope through years of struggle and therapy.
Despite the darkness of her past, she emerged as a complex woman—charming, successful, and surrounded by friendships. Her story is one of resilience and contradiction, a poignant testament to the enduring bond between a father and his daughter against all odds.

AITA for wanting my daughter’s boyfriend/soon-to-be fiance to know her dark secret before marriage?



















As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.” This situation highlights a critical boundary conflict between the father and daughter regarding the truth in the daughter’s romantic relationship.
The daughter, exhibiting classic traits of ASPD such as a lack of empathy and guilt, is operating from a highly self-preserving perspective. Her motivation is to maintain a desirable social facade and secure a stable partnership without disclosing information that could compromise her position. Her confidence that her father ‘wouldn’t dare’ interfere is a manipulation tactic, testing the established boundary of his protective instinct.
The father’s actions stem from a place of care and respect for the boyfriend, recognizing that marrying without knowledge of ASPD is an extreme risk for the partner. Ethically, the father is leaning toward full disclosure because the lack of emotional reciprocity inherent in ASPD fundamentally alters the nature of the committed relationship—it is based on performance, not shared feeling. A constructive recommendation for the future involves the father setting a firm boundary with his daughter: if she chooses not to disclose before an engagement milestone (like moving in together or proposing), he must state clearly that he will inform the boyfriend, demonstrating that his threat is a genuine boundary, not a bluff.
REDDIT USERS WERE STUNNED – YOU WON’T BELIEVE SOME OF THESE REACTIONS.






























The father is clearly torn between his deep affection for his 25-year-old daughter, who has been professionally diagnosed with Antisocial Personality Disorder (ASPD), and his strong ethical obligation to protect a kind man she is dating. His central conflict lies in respecting his daughter’s autonomy while believing he must reveal her diagnosis to her unsuspecting boyfriend before a potential marriage, contrasting his need to prevent potential long-term harm against his daughter’s insistence that he will not interfere.
Given the daughter’s known inability to feel genuine love or empathy, is the father morally justified in disclosing her ASPD diagnosis to her long-term boyfriend, thereby prioritizing the boyfriend’s right to informed consent over his daughter’s desire to maintain secrecy and the relationship?







