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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to contact my biological father again after he ignored my letter?

133 replies

angsty · 24/03/2026 11:54

Regular poster in deep cover for this one! Just wondered what people's opinions were on something that I am mulling over. I will make the story as short as possible. If it looks too long to you, just scroll on! It's a family/Ancestry DNA dilemma.

I was brought up by my mother and stepfather, but they never told me he was my stepfather. I found out when I was 14 because we moved house and lots of documents were all over the place as we packed and unpacked boxes (and I was a nosy child). I never told my mother or stepfather that I knew as it seemed to me that they had gone to a lot of effort to hide this from me and I didn't want to upset them. (My stepfather is a good person who made considerable sacrifices for my lifestyle and education. My mother is one of those who cannot deal with conflict or unpleasantness of any type).

I saw the full name of my bio father on the documents (adoption papers from when I was aged 3), and that my mother had told the social workers at the time that the bio father had "left the country", so he was never contacted by them.

Anyway, when I had my own child, 17 years ago, I started thinking more about my bio father, and so I tracked down where he was. He had of course never "left the country", he was right there in the town where he had always lived. I took a long time thinking it over and I then wrote him a letter. I was mindful of the fact that he may never have known I existed, and I acknowledged that in the letter and apologised if it came as a shock. I told him that I was not looking for anything and explained that I had a good and happy upbringing, and am a financially secure, married senior professional and am not looking for money or anything like that. I ended the letter by saying that if he chose not to contact me I would respect that and would not bother him again.

He did not reply and so I just left it at that. I thought that either it was such a shock to him that I existed that he felt he could not acknowledge it, or I maybe had the wrong person.

Fast forward to a few years ago when Ancestry DNA testing became available. It was immediately obvious when I got my "matches" back that I had had the right person and family. I learned interesting things about my heritage, which were pretty unexpected and I really wanted to explore a bit. I decided that it would be justified to contact a cousin of my father (one of my matches) through Ancestry DNA, which I did.

The cousin, who lives in another country, was very nice, gave me lots of the family history etc, which was really fascinating. What I also found out was that my father HAD known about me and had been around for at least a short period at the beginning of my life. The cousin told me that my father's sisters had also known about me, So I presume their mother, my paternal grandmother, must have known too.

All this made me start to wonder whether I would be justified in contacting my father again, even after what I had said. I find that now I have some feelings of anger about his not having responded 17 years ago to my letter, and also of course to not having stayed in my life. I am also pretty sure he never contributed financially to my upbringing (I cannot be completely sure of course, but I very much doubt it. I grew up in another country and any communications with people back in the UK in the 1970s were through "trunk calls" or letters which were very obviously "from overseas" and I would have been aware of them. I was also, as I already said, very nosy, and I eavesdropped on many conversations between my parents that they would have been horrified to hear that I had heard. I never heard this man mentioned, or any talk of money coming from the UK etc, and I overheard many detailed conversations about the family finances as I was growing up).

So this is a man who made a 17-year old girl pregnant (well, he was only 18 himself) and basically just walked away with no responsibility, along with the rest of his family. And then ignored my letter decades later. And appears to be ignoring the fact that he still could contact me now. I know the cousin I contacted has spoken to my father's sister about me, and I assume she would have spoken to him to tell him that I had tracked down the family and been in contact.

(And his mother, my grandmother, appears to have been complicit in his walking away from me, which is also upsetting. I have a photo of her now and she looks so lovely, but she did that...).

So AIBU to contact him again even though I said 17 years ago that I wouldn't? What do I owe him in terms of his right to decide not to be in contact with me? Given he does not seem to have ever felt any responsibility to me in any way. He is in his eighties now and I in my sixties, if that makes any difference.

YABU you promised and so should leave the man alone
YANBU you are justified in contacting him now

(PS I am not here looking for opinions on my mother's decision not to tell me the truth about my paternity. That is a whole different story, and one which is also obviously complicated in its own right! Maybe I will post about that too one day)

OP posts:
Maddy70 · 24/03/2026 15:26

I actually think you have to consider the impact on his own family too imagine knowing that your dad/husband has another child that was kept a secret.

No good can come of this and it's unfair to them too

Keepingittogetherstepbystep · 24/03/2026 15:33

There may be another option that you've not considered. Is it worth asking to see the adoption file? There might be some answers there as your biological father would have to have given consent.

Randomuser2026 · 24/03/2026 16:47

JLou08 · 24/03/2026 12:48

You don't owe him anything. However, I don't think you should contact him. His silence was a message, he is an irresponsible man who doesn't care about your feelings or wellbeing. Take that as your closure and move on. Trying to contact him again and waiting for a response is likely to just cause you more pain whilst having no impact on him.

I think sadly, this is true.

He has behaved in a truly cowardly and shameful way, and it is a deep reflection on his character.
His adult children aren’t entitled to your complicity in protecting their potentially false view of him.
If people don’t want revelations like this coming home to roost, then they shouldn’t behave like this man.

angsty · 24/03/2026 18:07

@Keepingittogetherstepbystep I have the full adoption file. My mother told them that the father of the baby had "left the country" and Social Services seem to have just taken her word for this. There is no record that he was consulted by the social worker about the adoption, despite his name being in the file.

I had always wondered whether my mother had lied about his name too and that is why they hadn't been able to find him, maybe she had made up a name etc. But when I did the Ancestry DNA I found that she had at least been truthful about that. He was not on my original birth cert though.

OP posts:
angsty · 24/03/2026 18:17

@Randomuser2026 I don't know all the circumstances, as others have pointed out, so I guess I dont know if he was really cowardly and shameful, or what pressures might have been brought to bear on him by either family. (It is evident that there was an obvious class difference between the 2 families, and this was early 1960s London, so I wondered whether that had any role to play. If so, that would have been a pretty obnoxious thing by today's standards, I know). I am absolutely not going to be contacting him again, especially after this thread. The dogs will slumber on.

OP posts:
ForAmusedHazelQuoter · 24/03/2026 18:18

angsty · 24/03/2026 18:17

@Randomuser2026 I don't know all the circumstances, as others have pointed out, so I guess I dont know if he was really cowardly and shameful, or what pressures might have been brought to bear on him by either family. (It is evident that there was an obvious class difference between the 2 families, and this was early 1960s London, so I wondered whether that had any role to play. If so, that would have been a pretty obnoxious thing by today's standards, I know). I am absolutely not going to be contacting him again, especially after this thread. The dogs will slumber on.

I think this is a good decision and counselling may help you find closure.

OVienna · 24/03/2026 19:25

angsty · 24/03/2026 18:07

@Keepingittogetherstepbystep I have the full adoption file. My mother told them that the father of the baby had "left the country" and Social Services seem to have just taken her word for this. There is no record that he was consulted by the social worker about the adoption, despite his name being in the file.

I had always wondered whether my mother had lied about his name too and that is why they hadn't been able to find him, maybe she had made up a name etc. But when I did the Ancestry DNA I found that she had at least been truthful about that. He was not on my original birth cert though.

Edited

My birth mother - remarkably - told the adoption agency my birth father's true name as well. And he didn't know I existed, so she easily could have said 'unknown.' But maybe that would also have been humiliating given her hyper religious background?!

He said he didn't know about me- so hard to know if that is really the case, I sort of suspected it wasn't totally. But I think I can say with confidence by 75 he believed that to be true.

You are in NO WAY responsible for the feelings etc of your father's current children. You are not entitled to a relationship with them if that is not their wish, but you aren't responsible for their feelings. (For the benefit of the poster who suggested you were as much as anyone else) you also have no idea what sort of relationship they may have with them or how they may feel. Or even if they may already know. Who knows, they may be hoping you'll have turned up to help care for him in his dotage and lighten the load.

People react in all sorts of ways to this - if you haunt the NPE/Adoptee/donor boards on FB and the podcasts, this is clear.

My observation is that if you do speak to your dad, it may be all about him.

My birth father was remarkably incurious about me or my life in a strange sort of way.

We had nothing in common either, apart from biology. Bless, but true. I feel sorry for him and regret (for a host of reasons.)

bogginbluesticks · 24/03/2026 19:40

@OVienna "You are in NO WAY responsible for the feelings etc of your father's current children. You are not entitled to a relationship with them if that is not their wish, but you aren't responsible for their feelings. (For the benefit of the poster who suggested you were as much as anyone else)".

Strong agree on that. I won't ever be the one to contact his other children but if they did find out I sure as hell wouldn't feel responsible for their reactions, their father made his choices and he's the one responsible for the fallout on both those he cares for (them) and those he doesn't (me).

CinnamonBuns67 · 24/03/2026 19:52

Leave it alone, not because you promised him but because he will continue ignoring you because he doesn't want contact with you and you deserve better than to be wasting your time with this. Concentrate on the relatives who do want to know you and be at peace with what you have found, rather than dwell on a man who did not take responsibility.

Northbynorthbest · 24/03/2026 19:52

With respect, you don't know the circumstances of him not being in your life. You say he was around/involved in the very early days. Maybe your mum cut him off and prevented him from seeing you. The fact that she has never, ever mentioned him or told you the truth would suggest this. Maybe the anger you feel at your father should be directed at your mother instead.
Personally, I think you went too far in communicating with his cousin. By not replying to your letter, your father let you know he wasn't interested in contact. You should have respected his wishes as you said you would.
It's your mother you should be talking to.

shouldicontactthisperson · 24/03/2026 19:59

This must be really difficult for you, and I don’t think it’s as easy as some of the “leave it alone” type replies you’ve had here. From what you’ve posted, I think chances are he doesn’t want to establish contact, which must be upsetting.

A small part of me would always wonder if he actually got the letter - sure it may have arrived at the correct address, but could it have been opened by someone else and discarded, perhaps suspicious of your motives or worried about their inheritance? Maybe I’m extrapolating too much.

My username - I actually changed it to this recently to ask advice here on whether I should contact a relative who doesn’t know about me, but never managed to pluck up the courage to post! In my case it’s a first cousin - his grandfather had a secret child (my parent). His/my grandfather died 40 years ago and I thought about contacting him, but then couldn’t decide how to contact him in case a letter was intercepted or email went to a spam folder!

Good luck, whatever you decide x

Bigcat25 · 24/03/2026 20:21

You have every right to contact him. You don't owe him anything, including a commitment to not contact him. You're contact would be extremely sporadic, and not harrassing. Everyone deserves to know where they come from.

LittleMyLabyrinth · 24/03/2026 20:25

I understand why you want closure. But whatever the reasons, you may just have to accept that some people aren't cut out to be parents and that's that.

Goldengirl123 · 24/03/2026 20:33

I would contact the wider family

ExOptimist · 24/03/2026 21:31

angsty · 24/03/2026 18:17

@Randomuser2026 I don't know all the circumstances, as others have pointed out, so I guess I dont know if he was really cowardly and shameful, or what pressures might have been brought to bear on him by either family. (It is evident that there was an obvious class difference between the 2 families, and this was early 1960s London, so I wondered whether that had any role to play. If so, that would have been a pretty obnoxious thing by today's standards, I know). I am absolutely not going to be contacting him again, especially after this thread. The dogs will slumber on.

The difference in class would definitely have been an issue at that time. A middle class family would not want to be "dragged down" by both the shame of a child born outside marriage and the associations with a working class family too.

Travelfairy · 24/03/2026 21:41

HuckleberryJam · 24/03/2026 12:01

Can you be 100% sure he received and read the letter?
If not you could try again

This would be my question. Maybe send a registered letter this time

iamjustlurking · 24/03/2026 21:42

You have every right to contact him again
You may have not been a planned conception but you're here and you deserve to know your heritage.
I appreciate ultimately if he chooses not to acknowledge you then I would think I would have to accept that as you cant force a relationship l.
Im your shoes id have to try reach out again

Netcurtainnelly · 24/03/2026 22:03

Did he get your lette, do you know for sure.

Arran2024 · 24/03/2026 22:16

You are not being unreasonable in being upset by what happened and wanting some kind of resolution. But trying to get blood out of a stone won't work either.

I adopted two children and I know from conversations with other adopters and shows like Long Lost Family how strongly some people feel about connecting with their biological parents. My two are adults now and not remotely interested - but I understand if you feel differently.

Two thoughts - first, dont listen to the thoughts of people who have no experience of this, and second, find a therapist to work through your feelings (even that can be difficult as you may find that the therapist has strong views!).

Many adopted children have tried to reconnect and been rebuffed. It isn't all the happy stories from Long Lost Family, but that is the "dream" people are sold. You might find reading some adoption related literature around rejection by birth parent might help.

OVienna · 25/03/2026 08:51

Some additional thoughts for you OP:

For me, it was the not knowing that was the thing - I wanted to know as much about myself and my circumstances as others knew. I found it maddening that people were keeping information about me to themselves, as if it were their proprietary information.

I got my adoption records (which lucky for me were not sealed post 18 in the US state where I was born). I have not yet ordered my OBC as not sure the info will be any different.

I did Ancestry and lo and behold my birth father had too as he was also adopted.

We had a conversation - we did speak for a long time but by the end of it I was ready for it to close. It was enough.

Because he was adopted and looking, I have actually been in the role of both the person seeking family and the person "sought". So, I have a perspective on how overwhelming it can feel when you don't feel you can meet the expectations of the person hoping to connect with someone.

We kept up email contact for a bit - he really wanted the full-on relationship as he and his wife never had their own children. It was too much - my father who raised me is my 'real' father and I ended up feeling bad I had nothing of real substance to offer my birth father. Because we had nothing in common the only topic of conversation was being related and what our 'relationship' would be on that basis. It was very, very stressful in a way I found surprising and still find very hard to process/describe.

Your birth father may not change his mind but it's worth bearing in mind the guilt you could feel if he wants more than you can offer.

ChirpyTealFox · 25/03/2026 09:14

Personally there's no way in hell I would try contacting my father again if he had ignored my letter. You gave him the opportunity to be in your life and he chose to not bother. He's the one losing out

Deerinflashlights · 25/03/2026 09:19

I have a version of this in my life.

My family abandoned me in response to abuse in the family. I suspect my presence impacts how they view themselves. In my case it is about abuse, in your case it is about abandonment but the outcomes have similarities.

From experience when you are a mirror for where a person has done something wrong or what might be a failure in their life it is sometimes too confronting for some people.

ReverseReverse · 25/03/2026 09:31

SaltyandSweet · 24/03/2026 12:23

I think it would be unfair to pursue this. You’ve chosen to respect the decision not to tell you about your bio dad by not confronting your mother or stepfather who have deliberately lied to you for years but you feel justified to delve into your bio father’s life and make assumptions based on nothing. If you want to know more, you need to start with your mum and stepfather

This.

Givinguponmyhair · 25/03/2026 09:42

You're interested in the opaqueness and silence coming from your birth father, but there's a hell of a lot of blurriness and dare I say it deceit within the family you grew up in.

I have a very similar back story to you and I find it quite unsettling that

  • they never told you about being adopted
  • you never told your "stepfather" that you know the secret
  • you cant speak to your mother openly about what actually happened
thanks2 · 25/03/2026 09:45

My friend traced his birth mother and unfortunately discovered he was a product of rape. It really traumatised him because he then questioned if half of his dna was from a violent man what did that mean about himself. He also didn’t feel he could build a relationship with his birth mother as his presence reminded her of a difficult part of her life.