Growing up in the shadow of loss, she was shaped by the absence of a mother and the fierce bond with her father, becoming a girl who roared like a T-rex in a world that expected delicate whispers. Her childhood was a blend of rugged jeans and dinosaur dreams, a silent rebellion against the soft, pink world that never called to her, where she found strength in the rough hands that braided her hair awkwardly and the solitary companionship of a man who was all she had.
But when Maria and her daughter Stacy entered their lives, the fragile sanctuary her father provided was shattered by cruelty and judgment. Stacy’s harsh words cut deeper than any dinosaur’s teeth, mocking her for not fitting into the mold of what a girl “should” be, isolating her further in a world that already felt too big and unkind. In the face of relentless bullying and loneliness, she clung to the only constant she knew—her father’s love and the fierce identity she had crafted from the ashes of grief.

AITA for telling my dad that I still hold a grudge for something that happened 10 years ago?




















As renowned researcher Dr. Brené Brown explains, “Boundaries are the distance at which I can love you and me simultaneously.” In this situation, the OP’s current boundary—refusing to forgive the past comments—is an attempt to protect her sense of self after years of emotional invalidation, especially from the primary attachment figure, her father.
The core issue here is not just the bullying by Stacy, but the father’s active participation and subtle reinforcement of gender stereotypes by favoring Stacy’s femininity (“Peach”) over the OP’s identity (“Rexy”). When a parent appears to confirm negative external judgments, it causes profound attachment injury. The father’s dismissal of the OP’s persistent feelings as merely “holding a grudge” demonstrates a failure to validate the depth of that historical pain. His focus on his corrective action (leaving Maria/Stacy) as justification for immediate forgiveness ignores the emotional labor required for the OP to recover from internalized criticism.
The OP’s feelings are appropriate given the context of sustained emotional invalidation during formative years. The father’s attempt to force emotional closure is counterproductive. A constructive path forward requires the father to stop defending his past behavior and instead focus solely on validating the OP’s reality: “I understand that what I did caused you deep pain, and I respect that you need time and space to process that, regardless of my current actions.” Moving forward requires continued acknowledgment of the injury, not demanding forgiveness for it.
AFTER THIS STORY DROPPED, REDDIT WENT INTO MELTDOWN MODE – CHECK OUT WHAT PEOPLE SAID.

































The original poster (OP) is still deeply wounded by her father’s past behavior, specifically his validation of her stepsister’s bullying regarding her gender expression and his preference for the stepsister’s more traditionally feminine qualities. Despite the father eventually leaving the stepfamily and offering apologies and therapy, the OP feels his past actions permanently damaged their bond and confidence, leading to an unresolved conflict where she maintains her grievance while he demands she move on because he ended the hurtful situation.
Is the father justified in feeling the OP is holding an unjustified grudge since he took action to remove the source of the pain and apologized, or is the OP completely valid in stating that the deep emotional damage and betrayal of trust from his complicity means the relationship cannot truly heal, regardless of his subsequent actions?







