At 35, she stands at the crossroads of a fractured past and an uncertain future, grappling with the impending loss of a father whose shadow loomed large and dark over her childhood. His end-stage lung cancer brings no comfort, no sense of deserved sorrow—only the raw, tangled memories of abuse and fear that shaped her earliest years.
The scars he left ran deep, carving out years of depression, anxiety, and shattered relationships. Yet through relentless struggle and painful healing, she found a fragile peace by severing ties with him. Now, as his final chapter unfolds, she faces the complex emotions of a daughter forced to reconcile love, pain, and the ghosts of a broken family.

AITA for telling my father who has end stage cancer that he was a horrible and abusive father.













As noted by psychologist Dr. Harriet Lerner, author of ‘The Dance of Anger,’ ‘Forgiveness is a gift you give yourself, not a gift you give to the other person.’ This situation highlights the tension between seeking external acknowledgment of harm (which the father could not provide, even terminally ill) and achieving internal resolution.
The user’s actions were driven by unprocessed trauma and the final, painful trigger of hearing family members praise the father as a ‘good person’ to his face. This invalidation, especially near the end, likely spurred a final confrontation, a desperate attempt to ensure the narrative of abuse was spoken aloud in a space where others were actively denying it. The user’s motivation was rooted in self-preservation and truth-telling, not malice, even if the timing and setting were highly volatile.
The reaction of the aunt and uncle represents a common phenomenon: enabling behavior and the desire to maintain family harmony by suppressing difficult truths, often referred to as ‘toxic positivity’ when applied to abuse survivors. Their condemnation of the user suggests they prioritized the comfort of the dying man and their own narrative over the user’s decades of suffering.
The user’s action of speaking their truth was an appropriate boundary enforcement in a moment where their reality was being actively erased. However, the resulting feeling of emptiness suggests that external validation was sought when internal acceptance would have been more sustainable. A constructive recommendation for the future is to prioritize private processing—perhaps journaling or speaking with a trusted therapist—before high-stakes confrontations, especially when the other party is incapable of change or meaningful apology.
THE COMMENTS SECTION WENT WILD – REDDIT HAD *A LOT* TO SAY ABOUT THIS ONE.








Being sick, having cancer, being about to die does not make him a good person, your father was horrible and it doesn’t matter that he has cancer.




The individual is grappling with the complex emotions arising from confronting an abusive parent in their final moments, a situation complicated by the surrounding family members’ idealized narrative of the deceased. The core conflict lies between the need for personal validation and accountability for past trauma versus the societal and familial expectation of unconditional forgiveness at the time of death.
Given the intense emotional fallout and the conflicting pressures from relatives who whitewashed the father’s legacy, was the public confrontation over the hospice bed a necessary act of self-closure, or did it ultimately hinder the process of finding internal peace?







