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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:
Ophir · 25/03/2026 09:54

I get why you’re musing on this from time to time @angsty

i think I’d be the same. Have you ever seen him even from a distance?

I’d echo seeking counselling, it’s a big thing, and there’s something about knowing where you’re from, no matter how good your stepfather was. It’s no slight on him

CelticSilver · 25/03/2026 16:52

Accept the apology you're never going to get from him and move on.

Looloolullabelle · 25/03/2026 17:05

I could have almost written the same post word for word op.

Just after I got married 14 years ago, I tracked down my bio father. I managed to find his wife on Facebook and saw that I had a younger half sister and brother who would be late teens by now.

I wrote a letter basically saying the same as you that I didn’t want or need anything and that I would respect his wishes if he didn’t want to contact me. He never did.

I’ve often wondered over the years whether he actually got my letter or not and have thought about reaching out again. I haven’t done it although curiosity does get the better of me every so often.

Everyone telling you to leave it has never been in this position so it’s easy enough for them to say leave it be, they haven’t got to live with the wondering about who he is, what’s he like, also there are also two sides to every story.

Do what feels right to you op, if you feel you want to contact him again do it, what’s the worse that’s going to happen? He’ll ignore it. As long as you can live with that, then go for it xx

Boomer55 · 25/03/2026 17:18

Leave it be. He doesn’t want to know. You had a good upbringing with a decent stepdad.

Whatisfrenchtoast · 25/03/2026 17:36

OP kindly, you need to process this for what it is and leave it well alone.
If your bio family are keen to have contact with you, by all means go for it. But he clearly does not want to and you cannot make a person care for you blood related or not.
I experienced this in reverse, and it's more painful than if they just walk from the off. The more you question it, the more you think the what ifs the harder it is to move on.
Whatever his reasons, it sounds like your mum gave you a good upbringing and your stepdad obviously loves you as his own if they never told you.

tommyhoundmum · 25/03/2026 18:09

TittyGajillions · 24/03/2026 11:57

Leave it alone.

My situation is similar over a half brother and sister. I've been waiting 50 years for permission to contact them. It will soon be too late.

You can't assume he will or does care. Some people just can't deal wth complications in their lives.

Maybe counselling to help with your anger?

FunMustard · 25/03/2026 18:14

Honestly I think you'd be setting yourself up for heartache.

I would consider writing but not sending the letter, and maybe having a few therapy sessions.

Bridgetjonesheart · 25/03/2026 18:18

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)

I am shook at the comments here on MN. Contact him as much as you like, and make his life hell if you wish. What he did was wrong, very wrong and any man with morals would not have done that. Don’t spare his feelings a second though. Sorry but, come on.

GlobalTravellerbutespeciallyBognor · 25/03/2026 18:20

I’d contact the other relatives - everyone can then make his or her own decision about being in touch or not.
They will inevitably discuss it and you will gain medical and anecdotal information.

Deerinflashlights · 25/03/2026 18:25

Bridgetjonesheart · 25/03/2026 18:18

I am shook at the comments here on MN. Contact him as much as you like, and make his life hell if you wish. What he did was wrong, very wrong and any man with morals would not have done that. Don’t spare his feelings a second though. Sorry but, come on.

But what about if he responds to that strategy in a way that impacts even more on the OPs peace than has already happened. He is unlikely to meet the OP being harsh, not that there has been any indications from the OPs posts that responding harshly is even in her nature, with anything that would bring her any form of closure.

It is difficult to see how him saying something cruel or cold or harsh to the OP or even something dismissive or just ignoring her again wouldn’t impact on her more than her finding a way to accept that her father’s behaviour was about himself. It was not ever about her and she was still deserving of all of the best things in life and while it is very sad that he didn’t have the capacity to be a father, that is on him not her.

Laura95167 · 25/03/2026 18:47

He left you. Without backward glance.

Then he ignored you. Thats the answer.

And its awful, hes a pig. But if your existence and olive branch didnt matter why would your anger?

This wont make any of it better. So leave it.

Your actual parents may have made the wrong judgement call but sound decent. Let it go. Get counselling if you need.

user1491396110 · 25/03/2026 20:01

I think you need to think about how you would feel if he died without you ever contacting him - would you regret it? Would you like to get to know your biological brothers?
Of course this is very hard without your mum knowing. Maybe she would feel great relief knowing that you know and knowing that you still feel the same way about your step dad.

I dont think your biological father gets to chose whether to face this or not, at the end of the day he did have a baby and hes lucky he hasn't had to face up to it all these years.

Dawnb19 · 25/03/2026 20:13

I think before you do anything else you should ask your mum and dad about it. Get the answers from them. For all you know your mum could have stopped him seeing you and it was that painful he blocked everything out. Years ago fathers had very little visitation rights. Especially young teenage fathers. Your letter could have gone missing as well.

angsty · 25/03/2026 20:32

Thank you everyone for your input.

@OVienna I am now not going to contact him or his sons. Your situation sounds tough and complicated too. I think I would be quite hurt by encountering such "incuriosity" about me and my life (and that of my son, that would probably make me angry) and that's one more reason to just let it go. I know enough about him and the family and the family origins to satisfy basic curiously about one's roots. As you point out, he may end up wanting something from me and I am not inclined to want to give him much, even time, of which I have precious little and keep for my "real" family members.

@iamjustlurking I do know a lot about the family heritage now, they are a very interesting and rather unusual family. As I said in the OP, I have racial/cultural roots I had no idea about and that has actually been fun to research.

@Givinguponmyhair there may have been a time years ago when I could and possibly should have told my parents that I knew. It may seem odd or unsettling, but that point has passed now. Their age and circumstances and personalities and health (all together!), and my personality and mental health mean that I would likely end up with more guilt and distress than they would. And I might then, as some people have even suggested I should, find that I am angry with them (I don't consciously feel that now). I would rather not at this stage, I know what that would do to me and it would not enhance my life. I am now thinking that some stones are indeed better left unturned.

I am glad I contacted the cousin though even though someone said I shouldn't have. It answered some questions although not others, but it also gave me knowledge of my family background which I always felt I was lacking and which I am glad to have.

A few differing opinions here, from don't contact to do, but mostly don't. I won't. If anyone happened to contact me on Ancestry in the future I would reply though.

OP posts:
jigglybits · 25/03/2026 20:44

I met my father and family after having zero contact for 20 years. It was very disappointing. Won't go into detail, but he is not a good person or a good father.
It is understandable that you have all sorts of emotions and questions.
Perhaps talk it through with a counsellor to see what you want to achieve, and how you may feel about varying outcomes?
I can understand making one last stab at making contact, before it is too late for him.
Best of luck!

SemiRetiredLoveGoddeess · 25/03/2026 20:50

I will probably be framed by other MN's for this post

Presumably, you have the address of where you sent the letter to. Why don't you take a quiet very, discreet visit to the area to see if he still lives there

You could also check the Electoral Register to see who lives at that address .

I'm sorry about your situation but he obviously couldn't care less about you. Neither could his family by the sounds of it.

If it were me l would try and track him down then visit him unexpectedly.
And give him a peace of your mind on just what an irresponsible arsehole he is.

Sorry, but l believe in getting my own back. Mighty make you feel better.

OldScribbler · 25/03/2026 21:07

To be honest I’d only want to make him ashamed of his behaviour. But then you are the one he has failed as I see it. But of course these matters are complicated. As it happens I have a daughter with someone I never married but I saw her throughout her childhood and she has actually done better than any of my other children as a performer in Los Angeles.

EilonwyWithRedGoldHair · 25/03/2026 21:10

I'd be inclined to send one more letter, on the grounds that he's in his 80s now and this would be the last opportunity really.

Two letters over 27 years isn't unreasonable.

But it's also not unreasonable to not send another.

Supersimkin7 · 25/03/2026 21:21

You need to get in touch with yourself for answers first OP.

What do you want? How likely are you to get it from this man? Will he really give you the whole story?

What happens if meeting is awful and the biggest anti climax?

Do you want to vent? Not a good idea.

I’d be tempted to wait outside his house till he comes out - at least you’ll know what he looks like. And write to his cousin re genetic diseases.

jwoo23 · 25/03/2026 21:55

I know you said you wouldn’t contact him again, but times have changed and things may have changed for him too. You reaching out again may be just what he’s hoping for as he’s too scared to reach out to you. They’re all ifs and maybes of course, but my personal opinion is that you can never regret something you have done. You can only learn from your mistakes. But if you don’t take the chance to do something when you could, you’re far more likely to regret not giving it one last try!

whatcanthematterbe81 · 25/03/2026 21:57

A lot of people on this thread don’t know what it’s like to not know your parent, and it shows

Ophir · 25/03/2026 21:58

whatcanthematterbe81 · 25/03/2026 21:57

A lot of people on this thread don’t know what it’s like to not know your parent, and it shows

Agreed

NorwayTruce · 25/03/2026 22:22

My great uncle recently passed away and shortly before his demise confessed to having a child from an affair who he kept a secret from his whole family and had kept in contact with, without their knowledge. His children’s lives have been blown apart by the confession. They now know that their father wasn’t the person they thought he was all their lives.

Perhaps your father’s family also know nothing about your existence and their lives would be blown apart if he told them now that he has another child he’s never told them about.

How much do you know about the circumstances in which he and your mother parted? He may not be the only villain in the story. There must have been a reason your mother and stepfather also chose to withhold the truth from you.

bogginbluesticks · 25/03/2026 22:38

@NorwayTruce OP is not responsible for anyone else's feelings about her existence. Your uncle is to blame for the impact on his family of his secret, the child is not. Putting the burden on her not to 'blow up his family' makes it seem like she is something shameful and should hide herself away to avoid upsetting the 'real' family. Sorry but fuck that, she's equally his daughter even if he doesn't care to admit it. Lots of people on this thread are keen to 'what if' in order to shift blame to the mother who stayed and raised her. Fact is he made a child then chose to walk away, that's on him.
Edit to add I don't think she should pursue this, but to protect herself from further hurt, no one else.

SparklyLeader · 26/03/2026 00:22

After 17 years you are entitled to change your mind but you are probably going to have to 1) do it in person, and 2) find him where he lives and wait for him to leave the house and be in public before you attempt to speak with him. It was his male member, he is 100% responsible for using it, and this created an obligation and responsibility to you. Full stop. He can answer questions.