He grew up under the heavy shadow of cold, unyielding parents whose strict religious beliefs and obsession with appearances crushed his spirit. Their relentless demand for perfection left him desperate to escape, but even freedom at eighteen came with the weight of loneliness and fear.
When life threw an unplanned pregnancy into his and his young girlfriend’s hands, they faced a world unprepared and unforgiving. Torn between guilt and hope, they chose adoption, a silent sacrifice they bore alone—never daring to reveal their truth to the very people whose judgment they dreaded most.

AITA for never telling my parents I had a son that was given up for adoption?




















As renowned developmental psychologist Dr. Gabor Maté explains, “The central wound in life is disconnection, and the central wound in addiction is disconnection from self.” While this situation does not involve addiction, the principle of disconnection from self and others due to controlling dynamics is highly relevant. The OP’s entire young adulthood was dictated by disconnection—from financial independence, from their parents’ control, and eventually, from sharing a massive life event (the adoption) out of fear of parental reprisal.
The OP acted from a place of understandable trauma response. Having experienced parents who were cold, strict, and driven by external perception, the OP correctly anticipated that the parents would likely attempt to co-opt the situation, potentially seeking to adopt the child to maintain their public image or control the child’s upbringing. Choosing adoption over potential parental intervention was a decisive act of boundary setting, prioritizing the child’s welfare over immediate familial disclosure. However, secrets of this magnitude, especially involving a third party (the child), rarely remain contained. The parents’ reaction reflects a deep sense of betrayal and a perceived deprivation of their grandparental role, regardless of the OP’s valid historical context.
The OP’s initial actions were appropriate given the extreme control and fear present at age 19. For future interactions, the recommendation is to focus communication not on justifying the secrecy, but on validating the parents’ current pain while firmly maintaining the integrity of the past decision. The OP should approach future discussions by stating clearly: ‘I understand your hurt that I did not tell you sooner. That silence was a necessary shield to protect the choice I made for my son at 19. Now that our relationship is healing, I want to integrate Ben into our lives on terms that respect both the past and the present.’
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.

















































The original poster (OP) is facing significant emotional fallout after revealing the existence of their adult son to their estranged parents, a secret maintained for nearly two decades due to a fear of their controlling nature. The central conflict lies between the OP’s decision to protect their agency and the child’s well-being by keeping the adoption secret, and the parents’ and extended family’s belief that they were unjustly denied the right to know their biological grandchild.
Given the OP’s justified fear of past parental control versus the current family consensus that the secret itself was a fundamental wrong, the core question remains: Was the decision to withhold knowledge of their son’s existence from their parents for 15 years an act of necessary self-preservation, or was it an unforgivable transgression against family ties that supersedes past trauma?







