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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:
lonelylou09 · 26/03/2026 07:54

You don't even know if he received your letter. I'd definitely try to contact him again. I grew up not knowing my dad. I met him briefly a few times when I was 8/9 and then all contact stopped. My mum said he didn't care and that he was abusive towards us both when I was a baby.
I had some contact with him when I was 20 something through one of my relatives but I was too young to work through all those years of questions and we lived 200 miles apart so didn't meet. I did find out he has 6 other children though so whilst excited about having siblings as an only child this caused hurt and confusion over how he hadn't been in my life.
About 12 years ago I felt ready to at least contact the children as they were older now and I thought it would be good for my son to know his family. I got in touch with my brother and he was made up. Long story short ..I now have 6 brothers and sisters..3 of whom my dad has raised all by himself and I have a ok relationship with my dad. He great but very busy and scatty.
His version of why contact stopped was completely different to my mum's. He told me she and her then boyfriend had chased him down and assaulted him after a visit as her boyfriend was jealous and that my mum hit him over the head with her motorbike helmet. Sounds crazy but I can see it happening tbh!
I don't believe all his excuses but I do believe he was so young when they had me. Mum 16, dad 18 that I can't blame them for getting it so wrong.
Give your dad a chance with some contact but don't hold your hopes too high. I bet at the very least there are other family members that would love to be on contact with you.

Pepperedpickles · 26/03/2026 07:59

I truly hate ancestry and all that comes along with it. I am an only child. My Mum has died, she was abusive and I don’t have contact with my Dad. I would hate for some distant relative to crawl out of the woodwork and get in touch with me. If I wanted to be in touch with someone, I would be.

Newyearawaits · 26/03/2026 08:02

Yanbu OP but please be prepared for another avalanche of emotions (including rejection).
As painful as it is, there are likely to be complicated reasons for your biological dad and his family for not being in contact. Sometimes loving someone means letting them go

tommyhoundmum · 26/03/2026 08:10

Deerinflashlights · 25/03/2026 18:25

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.

Edited

Exactly

Wordsmithery · 26/03/2026 09:08

OP, this is hard. I completely understand your conflict. It feels quite natural to want to know where we're from.
If you do get in touch and he responds, are you sure you can handle the outcome? Even if it's silence, or an unpleasant response? Could you contact his sister instead, and try and strike up a conversation with her? You'd be breaking no promises.
You could also talk to your mother. She has a responsibility to tell you the truth.
Good luck.

Iocanepowder · 26/03/2026 09:20

My thinking is that i’m not sure you can justify trying to contact this man to get the answers you want, if you can’t or won’t get the answers from your mum.

Blondeshavemorefun · 26/03/2026 09:30

I’m not sure how ancestry works. But assuming if you are on there and found your cousin that anyone related to that /your family would see you on there and contact you ?

angsty · 26/03/2026 10:57

Sorry this is long but I am grateful for all the thoughtful replies and have had lots to reflect on as a result of starting this thread. I wanted to just reply to a few people:

@SemiRetiredLoveGoddeess and @SparklyLeader as I said upthread, I know he is still alive and I know exactly where he lives (still at the address I sent the letter to). I don't have to go there to know that. I have Google Streetviewed the house of course but I'm not going to bother driving there, there doesn't seem much point in doing such a stalkery thing. Confronting him in person there would absolutely not be something I would ever do. And I did not and do not want to berate him or call him an "irresponsible arsehole". That was never my intention in trying to make contact and find out more about him and the family. As far as I can tell I suffered not one jot for not having him in my life, why berate him? I don't want to "get my own back".

I was just curious as to what he and the family were like, and also I had a thought he might like to meet his lovely grandson (who had recently been born at the time I wrote him the letter). Obviously in recent years I have found out a great deal about the family background (as I said, including some unexpected things!) so much of my curiosity is satisfied. But I just had this little thought recently that it will possibly soon be too late (although his father lived to 103, so who knows!) and he might like to have an idea of what became of me (I suppose I am quite proud of what I have done in life and I thought he might be too). So my motivation definitely did not include payback of any kind. (That's not to say I might not have felt angry when I met him, depending on what he was like and what his story was, but that wasn't a driving factor).

That leads into @Supersimkin7 's advice that "venting" would not be a good idea. I absolutely agree and that's not what I wanted at all. And as I said in a previous post, I did get family medical information from the cousin and there is indeed a disease in the family which has a genetic component. I tested for the gene and I don't have it.

@NorwayTruce yes, I have considered whether maybe his wife and sons do not know about me. That was something that did give me pause when I wrote the letter, what if one of them opened it and received a terrible shock. But I did write it anyway, rightly or wrongly.

I don't know anything about the circumstances in which he walked away (or was pushed away?). The cousins with whom I have communicated have not indicated anything about this (or even if they know anything) and I have not asked them, they may well feel it is not their story to tell. With regard to no effort seemingly being made that I keep in touch with him or was even aware of him as I was growing up: I tend to believe that, knowing my mother, she just wanted to take the easiest and least stressful path for her and her hatred of any form of confrontation. Just brushing everything under the carpet is her modus operandi, which has served her for 80 years. I love her dearly but I know what she is like, and telling an uncomfortable truth where a lie would seemingly suffice would not be her way. I do wonder if she had ever thinks to herself these days that I might do a DNA test and then come to her in shock and surprise at the result?

@Pepperedpickles I am actually very grateful to Ancestry and so glad I did the test. I found a whole part of me (racially and culturally) that I had no idea existed in me, and this can only enhance one's life. And I have been in contact with several of my bio father's cousins, and they are nice and interesting. I sent them pictures of myself and my son, and they were really nice about them and commented on who in the family we might look like etc, which is always fun (I suppose that was something I might have been hoping to get from my bio father but that was not to be obviously).

And through the DNA testing I also found out that my mother, although she lied to Social Services about him leaving the country, at least gave his real name. Which I am glad she did, it was at least in that moment the right thing to do and not necessary what I would have expected her to do. (He was not on the birth certificate).

@Wordsmithery I have been in contact with his cousins and that has been good, what with all the info I have gleaned about the family, and them just being nice people. Bio father's sisters have been made aware by the cousins that I have been in contact, I believe, but none have sought to reach out to me, so I'll leave it at that regarding them. (One sister even had her own Ancestry DNA test done, and she shows up at the top of my match list, so I very probably show up as close to the top on hers. So she is actively choosing not to contact me).

As I said before, I am not going to talk to my mother about it. There are very good reasons for that and why it would do me more harm than good.

@Blondeshavemorefun my closest matches on my match list (apart from my son!) are bio father's sister and his nieces. I am going to be very high on their match list too, if not at the very top. They could contact me anytime if they wanted to.

Edited for typos

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