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Relationships

Mumsnet has not checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. If you need help urgently or expert advice, please see our domestic violence webguide and/or relationships webguide. Many Mumsnetters experiencing domestic abuse have found this thread helpful: Listen up, everybody

DH's "daughter" from brief fling appears on doorstep 29 years later

276 replies

gusting · 01/03/2012 12:34

My DH, who is 55 now, had a fling with a girl when he was in his 20s. It was very brief, and after it ended she said she was pregnant. Some time later my DH remembers someone coming to his parents house asking for child support for the child, but he had never seen the girl again or heard from her, and so was not prepared to entertain any suggestion of paying child support.

Anyway, last year, my DH received an email (he has a website , so that will be how she tracked him down) from a woman claiming to be my DH's daughter, and asking him to get in touch.

My DH, who is computer illiterate anyway (I deal with all his emails!) was fairly flabbergasted, to say the least, and his reaction was simply to ignore the email. He said he would think about how to respond, but basically in true male fashion filed it to the back of his head. His dad was very ill at the time and has subsequently died, so he had plenty else to think about to be honest, and we have a 2 year old DS (I am 39, by the way!).

Anyway, last night we had people round, and the doorbell rang. I was on the phone so my DH went to answer the door. I recognised the woman straight away as I had looked her up on facebook! It was this "daughter", who introduced herself. My DH was completely dumbstruck- apart from the fact we had people in the house, which was a godsend, or he would have had to ask her in, my DH is completely inept in difficult situations like that.

He told her that it was not a good time, and she asked if she could have 20 minutes of his time to "talk" to her, sometime before she left the area (she was here on holiday) tomorrow evening. He took her number, but because he was so taken aback by the whole scenario, he failed to save it in his phone.

He and I discussed things later, and he is very reluctant to speak to her. He does not want to have a relationship with her (assuming that she is indeed his daughter, which is a strong possibility as she looks a bit like him) and just wants to bury his head. He is annoyed that she just appeared at the house without warning. He says he feels nothing towards her, so doesn't think it appropiate to risk unsettling us all and causing his family possible upset by dragging up the past now.

I do see where he is coming from, and my primary goal is to protect my nice happy family unit from any upset, of course. But part of me thinks that the right thing to do by her would be for him to at least talk to her. After all, it's not her fault she was the result of a quick fling, and she has a right to find out about her dad (if he is her dad) and to get to know him. I keep thinking how curious I would be in her situation and how upset I would be if my dad refused to have anything to do with me.

I know I can convince him to talk to her if I really try- he says he will do it for me, if I want him to. But it could turn out to be a whole can of worms opened, and the effect on our family could be very negative.

Anyone got any views??

OP posts:
Finallyfinally · 01/03/2012 13:35

Good grief. And you are OK with your DH being this sort of person? Put yourself in her mother's shoes. In her shoes.

BIWI · 01/03/2012 13:36

I'm presuming this has already been reported?

BIWI · 01/03/2012 13:37

I have ...

NarkedPuffin · 01/03/2012 13:37

Don't be ashamed for having an emotional reaction. These threads provoke one even in those without personal experience.

LeBOF · 01/03/2012 13:39

Who "invented" air quotes?

kilmuir · 01/03/2012 13:40

feel sorry for HIS DAUGHTER. He owes her a chat at least. But i should think she is glad that he was out of her life once she sees what he is like!

GetOrfMoiiLand · 01/03/2012 13:40

I always think a withdrawn post looks a bit dodgy - wish you could put a reason e.g.

Message withdrawn at poster's request, by the way she wasn't drunk, offensive or call anyone a cunt.

Pseudonymity · 01/03/2012 13:41

Like some others on the thread, I've grown up without a father due to his failure of humanity. It wasn't a fling, they were married. I'm over it now after 30+ years and I don't want to meet him anymore. I grew up in incredible pain and my thoughts are for that poor woman who came to the door after already having been knocked back...the confidence that must have taken. Please give her the regard that she deserves.

[hides thread]

BIWI · 01/03/2012 13:41

GOML - Sad for your story

ChickensHaveNoLips · 01/03/2012 13:42

GetOrf, you were very eloquent in explaining things from the other side. I thought it was an excellent, and restrained, post.

GetOrfMoiiLand · 01/03/2012 13:44

Thanks everyone.

Hugs also to wakeuproseamary and pseudonimity

BearlyThere · 01/03/2012 13:45

I'm guessing goml was the dd once ?

CuriousMama · 01/03/2012 13:45

Yes GOML, people will think you're all sweary and that Wink

CuriousMama · 01/03/2012 13:46

yes Bearly have a scroll up ^^^ before sweary GOML has them deleted.

GetOrfMoiiLand · 01/03/2012 13:47

lol at sweary GOML

All you fuckers are right. Grin

NarkedPuffin · 01/03/2012 13:48

I think it might be time to intrioduce some geography.

HairyGrotter · 01/03/2012 13:49

My daughter is growing up without contact from her father (his choice), I would be spitting fucking feathers if I were your DH's DAUGHTER's mother.

His actions are utterly abhorrent and how you can even look him in the eye without wanting to poke it right the fuck out, makes you just as pathetic.

Makes my skin crawl.

BIWI · 01/03/2012 13:50

I hope this is a troll/journo/TV programme researcher, actually. The thought that someone would actually behave like this is just too horrible to contemplate.

NarkedPuffin · 01/03/2012 13:50

Angola is a country in southern Africa bordered by Namibia on the south, the Democratic Republic of the Congo on the north, and Zambia on the east.

Lotkinsgonecurly · 01/03/2012 13:50

I haven't seen GOML's original post as has been deleted but without going into too many details. I've been the daughter here and have had no contact with a father. If she's emailed then called it seems as if she's been perfectly responsible and restrained in trying to get contact with your DH. I do think he needs to grow a pair and talk to her. Why won't he? Embarrasment, shame that he hasn't recognised her earlier?

All she's asked for is 20 minutes to talk to him. I don't understand why she wasn't invited in or DH go out with her to a local cafe or something.

Camerondiazepam · 01/03/2012 13:52

My sister's story is very similar to that of your H's daughter. It breaks my heart to think of her being desperate enough to turn up on her father's doorstep, especially if she'd tried to get in touch in other ways before.

She deserves better.

birdofthenorth · 01/03/2012 13:53

I'm shocked by your Dh's attitude. He was awful to inore her existance and shirk his responsbilities when she was a child, but to ignore her now, when she can ask nothing but for answers from him, is really terrible, too.

Plus, like it or not, she's your DS's big sister.

maytheoddsbeeverinyourfavour · 01/03/2012 13:55

I actually can see this from your point of view and your DH's, though that's not to say I don't have immense sympathy for the poor woman

I had friends in a similar situation and it was awful for all involved. I can totally see why everyone on here is calling your DH selfish and nasty, but with my friend he really was a lovely guy, he just found it so upsetting to deal with he just totally disconnected from his estranged dc. His wife was so shocked because to her and their dc's he was the perfect husband and father, and yes she was worried that he was capable of doing the same thing to their dc's, years later they did divorce and he continued to be a great dad including to one of the dc who wasn't biologically his

I'm not in any way excusing his actions, even now we all find it so hard to believe he was capable of that, but in his head he thought he was doing the best thing for everyone it was like a weird form of denial Sad

I hope your DH does take the time to at least talk to her, I think that is the very least he could do

GetOrfMoiiLand · 01/03/2012 13:56

Yes, that is a very, very sad image - that of a young woman plucking up enormous courage from somewhere to go and knock on her father's door. Her heart must have been in her mouth. And he sends her away with a flea in her ear. Sad

For clarification yes I in the position of the dd as well, I didn't call the OP a motherfucker or anything heinous.

BIWI · 01/03/2012 14:01

Yeah right ...

Grin

Your bum looks big in that, by the way

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