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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To think that the moment your father is used against you, you’re powerless?

224 replies

IcyLemonWasp · 15/08/2025 12:55

It feels like when someone weaponises your father, whether it’s bringing up his status, reputation, mistakes or even absence, you’re immediately backed into a corner. No matter what you say or do, it’s like you’ve already lost. Has anyone else experienced this?

OP posts:
Beamur · 15/08/2025 12:55

Nope.

dairydebris · 15/08/2025 12:56

No.

muggart · 15/08/2025 12:57

No-one has ever done this to me.

can you give more context? sounds like one of those “they only win if you let them” kind of things.

GasperyJacquesRoberts · 15/08/2025 12:58

No. My father was an unfaithful, unreliable drunk. That's on him, not me.

Idstillratherbepaddleboarding · 15/08/2025 12:58

As above, no.

redgingerbread · 15/08/2025 12:59

What?

Radiowaawaa · 15/08/2025 13:00

????

Radiowaawaa · 15/08/2025 13:01

What culture are we talking about?

Daisyvodka · 15/08/2025 13:01

You really will need to give context as surely the response is 'i am not my father'

Radiowaawaa · 15/08/2025 13:01

Also what era?

MrsSkylerWhite · 15/08/2025 13:01

Really don’t understand?

DidIdotheritething · 15/08/2025 13:01

Nope?

GoodPudding · 15/08/2025 13:01

Never experienced this, but if someone did, I think I’d just laugh, as the idea of someone using your father’s apparent failings as a way to win an argument is rdesperate…. And it’s not you who’ve lost in such a situation, it’s them for being so ridiculous!

Jitterbuggs · 15/08/2025 13:02

No. His choices are not mine and I'm not him.

arethereanyleftatall · 15/08/2025 13:02

No. But more than that, I don’t even get it.

IcyLemonWasp · 15/08/2025 13:02

muggart · 15/08/2025 12:57

No-one has ever done this to me.

can you give more context? sounds like one of those “they only win if you let them” kind of things.

It’s happened in situations where my father’s absence or history was brought up to undermine me personally, not as part of the actual discussion. It’s less about me “letting them win” and more that it changes the power dynamic instantly.

OP posts:
DeedlessIndeed · 15/08/2025 13:06

IcyLemonWasp · 15/08/2025 13:02

It’s happened in situations where my father’s absence or history was brought up to undermine me personally, not as part of the actual discussion. It’s less about me “letting them win” and more that it changes the power dynamic instantly.

This seems more like a statement about the person saying this.

What obtuse person thinks that the child of to blame for the shortcomings of the father?

It is like they don't really have any genuine reasons so have to come up with this shite.

IcyLemonWasp · 15/08/2025 13:06

Radiowaawaa · 15/08/2025 13:01

What culture are we talking about?

UK - though I imagine it could happen in other places too. In my case it’s more about personal dynamics than specific cultural practice.

OP posts:
IcyLemonWasp · 15/08/2025 13:07

Radiowaawaa · 15/08/2025 13:01

Also what era?

Present day, it’s not something from decades ago, it’s happened in recent years

OP posts:
Purplecatshopaholic · 15/08/2025 13:08

I’m none the wiser about what you mean op, sorry. But no, I am not responsible for anything my father said, or did, and so am not powerless. More detail perhaps might help?

GeneticallyModifiedGrump · 15/08/2025 13:10

Sounds more like living in Pride & Prejudice or Bridgerton than the UK in 2025 to be honest.

Mrsttcno1 · 15/08/2025 13:10

Nope, nothing a parent said or does makes you powerless- their actions are a reflection on them, not you.

Waitingfordoggo · 15/08/2025 13:10

You describe this as if it’s a common thing but I don’t relate to this at all. My dad was a really good bloke so maybe that’s why I don’t understand. Do people ‘weaponise’ mothers in the same way in your opinion OP? Or is it just fathers?

IcyLemonWasp · 15/08/2025 13:11

DeedlessIndeed · 15/08/2025 13:06

This seems more like a statement about the person saying this.

What obtuse person thinks that the child of to blame for the shortcomings of the father?

It is like they don't really have any genuine reasons so have to come up with this shite.

Exactly, it usually says more about them than about me. But in the moment, it still shifts the dynamic because they’ve moved the discussion into something deeply personal and unrelated.

OP posts:
IcyLemonWasp · 15/08/2025 13:14

Purplecatshopaholic · 15/08/2025 13:08

I’m none the wiser about what you mean op, sorry. But no, I am not responsible for anything my father said, or did, and so am not powerless. More detail perhaps might help?

I mean situations where someone uses your father’s absence, reputation, or history to attack your character, even if it’s unrelated to the topic. It’s not about taking responsibility for his actions but about how personal it suddenly feels when they go there.

OP posts: