At just eighteen, standing on the cusp of adulthood and the promise of college, he faced the weight of a fractured family history. Raised by a resilient mother who braved abandonment and hardship, he now grappled with the sudden reappearance of a father who had long been absent—a man seeking redemption but shrouded in hesitation and half-truths.
The fragile hope of reconnecting with his roots was met with barriers and broken promises, leaving him caught between yearning for family and guarding his own heart. In this poignant struggle, he stands at a crossroads, learning that healing often demands more than just time—it demands courage, trust, and the strength to face the unknown.

AITA For telling my Biological dad the only way I would consider forgiving him for abandoning me is if he pays for my college and helps me with an apartment.










Dr. Terri Givens, a political scientist and author who has written on family dynamics and social structures, often emphasizes the impact of long-term parental absence on a child’s expectations. In this situation, the young man (OP) is exhibiting behaviors consistent with ‘reparative negotiation.’ After years of perceived abandonment—marked by the absence of financial support and emotional presence—OP is attempting to quantify the value of the relationship based on tangible, historical obligations.
OP’s demand that the biological father pay for college and an apartment is a direct attempt to force the father to fulfill the duties associated with parenthood before allowing him access to the emotional benefits of being a father figure. The father’s refusal and accusation of being used for money highlight a fundamental mismatch in expectations. The father likely seeks the positive aspects of the relationship (pride, connection) without accepting the historical and current responsibilities (financial support). The initial request to meet the half-sisters, immediately denied under vague excuses, further solidified OP’s view that the father’s commitment is superficial.
From a professional standpoint, OP’s actions, while emotionally charged, were a clear boundary-setting mechanism attempting to define the terms of engagement based on the father’s past failures. While demanding payment as a prerequisite can feel transactional, it reflects a reasonable desire for accountability. A more constructive approach in future interactions would be to separate the emotional pathway from the financial one, perhaps seeking legal avenues for historical support while simultaneously pursuing a low-stakes, non-committal emotional relationship, allowing the relationship to develop organically separate from financial leverage.
HERE’S HOW REDDIT BLEW UP AFTER HEARING THIS – PEOPLE COULDN’T BELIEVE IT.
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The individual is struggling with the sudden reappearance of a long-absent biological father, whose offer of a relationship is directly conditional on financial support for college. The core conflict centers on the young man’s attempt to establish the responsibilities of fatherhood, which he believes must precede emotional connection, clashing with the father’s desire for an immediate relationship without financial obligation.
Is it appropriate for an adult child to demand financial support for higher education as a prerequisite for establishing a relationship with an estranged biological parent, or does this action unfairly prioritize monetary compensation over the potential for genuine paternal connection?







