Abandoned by the very people who brought them into this world, the story begins with a child cast aside by young parents, thrust into a turbulent foster care system that stretched from childhood into adulthood. Each message sent to their biological parents was met with rejection and pain, a harsh reminder of the love they were denied, yet their spirit refused to be broken.
In the face of cold indifference, a glimmer of hope emerged through an unexpected connection with a grandmother who embraced them with open arms. This newfound bond became a lifeline, a powerful testament to resilience and the unyielding desire to reclaim a sense of family and belonging against all odds.

AITA for publicly revealing who my biological parents are on Facebook and kind of messing things up for them?















The situation described involves complex issues surrounding attachment theory, boundary violations, and the emotional labor associated with adoption reunion. As noted by Dr. David Kirschner, a clinical psychologist specializing in adoption trauma, ‘The desire for reunion is a natural human drive, but the readiness and capacity of the biological family to meet that need is often mismatched, leading to predictable pain for the adoptee.’
The original poster (OP) experienced significant rejection when their biological parents explicitly stated they did not want contact, citing the pain of grieving the separation. This initial boundary, though painful, was clear. The OP’s subsequent decision to engage publicly on a church Facebook page represented a significant violation of that boundary. While the OP felt justified in seeking validation (‘Don’t you mean three kids?’), this action shifted the focus from a private relational dynamic to a public accountability mechanism, effectively weaponizing the community against the parents’ privacy and wishes.
The resulting upheaval—the parents’ separation and business disruption—demonstrates the explosive consequences of not respecting stated relational boundaries, regardless of how unfair those boundaries feel to the rejected party. While the OP’s emotional pain is valid, the professional recommendation is to shift focus immediately to the supportive family network (the grandmother and extended family) and engage in formal counseling to process the rejection. Future interactions with the biological parents should remain private and respectful of the reality they presented, even if that reality is painful.
THIS STORY SHOOK THE INTERNET – AND REDDITORS DIDN’T HOLD BACK.




You know, I find it interesting how many people here aren’t considering how….odd it is that literally no one in their family knew about the OP, not even the maternal grandmother.



But no, they are all “how dare they not want a relationship with that child now!” And “congrats on finding a loving family!”
Where was this loving family when two 19 year old kids felt that the best option for their child was to give them up for adoption?




You didn’t respect their right to privacy and stalked them on social media. You were told to let go, yet you kept pushing.






![[deleted] [deleted]](https://animalstrend.com/wp-content/uploads/wp-img-cache/dab68815e741901b5aa32b50799977a4.png)

This sub is normally all about giving people the information they need to make informed choices, and now here you are being judged the asshole for daring to exist publicly against the wishes of people who wish you didn’t.





> But I personally think that probably more than 50% of the time, the people I know in real life would disagree with the sub’s judgement of who’s the asshole in a given situation.

The individual is dealing with the deep emotional fallout of being rejected by their biological parents after a long search for connection. Their actions stemmed from a desire to assert their existence and force acknowledgement within the family structure they were excluded from.
Given the irreversible consequences, including the dissolution of the biological parents’ immediate family unit, was the individual justified in using a public forum to demand recognition, or did this action cross a crucial ethical line regarding privacy and the right of others to maintain established boundaries?







