How Do I Forgive My Absent Father?

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 29 гру 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 169

  • @reneeantwi-boasiako3974
    @reneeantwi-boasiako3974 6 місяців тому +59

    @05:10 "It's not the kid's job to heal these relationships, it's the parent's job" 🗣🗣🗣

    • @michaelstark9939
      @michaelstark9939 5 місяців тому +1

      Not necessarily.. Sometimes the parent is gone.. In order to heal, 1 needs to forgive.. Forgiveness is for you, not the other person..

  • @kelsonplanning4298
    @kelsonplanning4298 6 місяців тому +60

    I needed this. 😭
    My dad left when I was 5. He has a good job, no addictions, just a narcissistic. He gradually lost contact with me and once he remarried and had two kids, he completely stopped contact with my brother and I. It hurts so bad. And I can feel this caller’s pain. Being let down by an adult who is supposed to be so important in your life, is the worst pain. Dr. John reminded me that it’s the parent’s job to fix the relationship. And he’s right. My dad didn’t want a relationship with me, because he could have had it all these years. I will say, knowing him has helped me know what to avoid and now I have the best man I know, my husband. He’s the best father. ❤

  • @michaelallen9099
    @michaelallen9099 6 місяців тому +135

    I was the son in this situation. My Dad was not in my life growing up. He started another family and life and I was forgotten. I grew bitter about it over the years. Fast forward to him getting cancer and on his death bed. He finally utters his first words to me. “I want to get to know you”. I responded okay. I left went home and never spoke to him again and he soon died.
    I couldn’t do it. Yes I have felt guilty about it but I had every right to decline.
    I think there is more to work with here. I would have been more receptive had my Dad made more effort sooner. I think many people, men especially, don’t mature and often don’t have the skills to be successful dads. I was a great dad. I just did the extreme opposite of what my father did.
    Two great kids and they hear I love you often. I think the son should give him a chance. Text messages and step mom reach outs are sufficient. Grab onto any offer that is sincere. My dad was just too late. I had to protect myself and I did.

    • @chez0788
      @chez0788 6 місяців тому +15

      Good man 👏

    • @davidmolina7543
      @davidmolina7543 6 місяців тому +13

      Sounds like you did wisely.

    • @JoeJohn-ww1du
      @JoeJohn-ww1du 6 місяців тому +2

      If he started another family, then it wasn't his choice to not be in your life; real deadbeats don't go create other families that they don't abandon. You should've got his side of the story, you would've been surprised. You screwed up.....

    • @amamadarkly
      @amamadarkly 6 місяців тому +10

      Dont listen to any hecklers... you guarded your heart so that you would not be destroyed on the inside like your own father likely was for a long time. That doesn't mean you were cruel to him, just accepting of the reality of what it was. He was reaping what he had sown (not much, unfortunately). Protecting your own heart gives you resources to show love and be present for your own children, you don't need to feel guilt or torture yourself with what ifs. Doing better than he had done for you is a way of honoring him in a way as well

    • @michaelallen9099
      @michaelallen9099 6 місяців тому

      @@JoeJohn-ww1du wow. One post and you got it all figured out. My dad was an evil man. There was much more to the story. He fathered over 24 children and raped several of his own daughters. I made many attempts to know him as a kid. He broke my heart when he thought I was his daughter’s boyfriend. I’m well aware of his side of the story. Just spoke with another half sibling yesterday. His second wife’s sisters mother. You are a moron for thinking you know more than I do about my own father. He was not worthy to have a relationship with me. Period!!

  • @os5634
    @os5634 6 місяців тому +57

    My dad left when I was 12 years old. He returned briefly when I was 19. After that, I did not see him till I was 35 years old. My father’s sister…my Aunt reached out to me and told me that my dad was really sick that I should call him. I was obviously angry and didn’t even understand why she was asking me to call him, but for some reason I did. when I finally called him, He sounded really weak. After I initially called him a few days later his girlfriend at the time called me and told me that my dad was really sick so I skipped work and ended up going to his house. Long story short I had to take him to the hospital that morning. He was bleeding out from his rectum, we found out that he had stage four colon cancer. For the next 10 months until he died, I actually took care of him. Still to this day I’m not sure why I took care of him, but I will tell you that it did me more good because by the time he passed away, I was no longer angry at him and I was not carrying that baggage any longer. I realize when he was sick that he wasn’t that strong man that I always thought he was as a child. He was just a regular man with a lot of problems. at the something I did not understand growing up. We never spoke about why he chose to live his life away from us …it didn’t really matter to me.He never said he was sorry for staying away. But he did say he wish he would’ve done things different in his life. I don’t know if you’re going to see this message or even read it. I chose to leave the past behind and it helped me with my future. Hope you decide to do the right thing for yourself without any regret. Life is too short to carry baggage.

    • @kathygrosvenor4464
      @kathygrosvenor4464 6 місяців тому +8

      You are one of those rare humans with the ability to forgo personal sorrow and do the “right” thing for you. That’s compassion in action. No doubt that someone read your comment and has chosen your path. It makes this World a much better place. Thank you! 🙏🪷❤️

    • @nanchesca3950
      @nanchesca3950 6 місяців тому +3

      This brought tears to my eyes, what a selfless, honorable thing you did

    • @TroyP20
      @TroyP20 6 місяців тому +1

      This is prophetic, I’m still holding onto my father not been in my life and it actually fuels me and empowers me that pain

    • @michaelstark9939
      @michaelstark9939 5 місяців тому

      Thats amazing and im so glad that you found some measure of peace..

  • @aileenj8180
    @aileenj8180 6 місяців тому +24

    Even as a woman with three adult children, there is a young mom in my life who asks me for guidance once in a while. It truly IS an honor.
    Ask your friend's dad. Do it. ❤

  • @delightschwartz2155
    @delightschwartz2155 6 місяців тому +4

    John you're right. A few yrs back we were honored to have a new set of nextdoor neighbors who quickly became our extended family. They were wonderful people who had a couple sets of nephews and grandsons, two who were struggling to get to a good place with their stepfather and two struggling with life in general. My hubby struck up conversations with them and he quickly became Uncle Steve to them. We invited them over regularly for meals/movies and hang out time. He was able to listen to them without parental bias or pressure, he pointed out practical wisdom and strategies for understanding and starting over with a stepparent and life's first steps and missteps, etc. The original neighbors' generation are long passed on, but the time and extra insights spent with these boys were so self-rewarding, something both my hubby and those boys will always treasure, especially since we never got to have our own kids. Steve even got an amazing thank you call from the boys' mother, telling him the stepfather relationship was much improved and thanking my hubby for the support. It does take a village to sort this stuff out. Best of luck to the caller.

  • @natef1504
    @natef1504 6 місяців тому +29

    My biological dad was never in my life. He was a raging alcoholic, completely debilitated. He lived with his parents until he died at 43 years old. By the time I entered the foster system at age 6, nobody could tell me anything. I was already the man of the house. I’m 37 now and spend as much time with my child as I can. I won’t be like him.

    • @delightschwartz2155
      @delightschwartz2155 6 місяців тому +2

      You are indeed the unsung hero, because you stopped that toxic, soul-killing behavior from going to the next generation of your family. And not without some sacrifices, my intuition tells me. Salutations sir.

  • @paigenicholespeaks6172
    @paigenicholespeaks6172 6 місяців тому +23

    Parenthood is a calling that many answer to but was never called to do. We have to remember that sometimes the best thing a parent can do for us is to not be there. There are many parents that jack up their child's life because of them actually being in it.

    • @velvetplans5396
      @velvetplans5396 6 місяців тому +1

      Very true. My dad left and moved to another country with his other kids when I was 5. Never heard from him again. But now, my half siblings who went with him tell me I'm the lucky one. Now in his 60's, he is pretty much estranged from them. If he ever reaches out to me, I think I'd give him a chance. But I don't think his other kids would.

    • @tennielleweisenburger314
      @tennielleweisenburger314 5 місяців тому

      thank you. i have so many mental issues, was an alcoholic for awhile. i didnt have a job, couldn't keep a job. i even told them i wouldn't be able to give them what they have. if i had them, they wouldn't be as smart as they are. after 15 different psychiatrists/psychologists, so many meds at once, so many people telling me im not worth the air i breath, im stupid because im too lazy to study. blah blah blah. i would have ruined my children. but it didnt help that their father and family trash talked me to the kids and in front and to anyone and anything they could. i have hope one day ill have a relationship with them.
      thank you for understanding that sometimes its for the best.

  • @Italianqueen
    @Italianqueen 6 місяців тому +15

    The timing for this for me,is absolutely insane!

  • @cathy7824
    @cathy7824 6 місяців тому +13

    My mother left when I was in the 2nd grade, she split and never looked back. My dad stayed for the state check but didn't care about any of us. I dont have a relationship with either one of them, I didn't ask to be born. They failed as parents, I have no guilt for not trying to fix what they've done.

  • @Robin-uu6eg
    @Robin-uu6eg 6 місяців тому +44

    My dad was absent from my life too. He was a raging alcoholic. I tried so hard to be a part of his life, and he never wanted to be a part of mine. He died some months after threatening me. I used to feel scared that he would die and we would never reconcile because I felt guilt. And it did happen. You know what? I don't regret not reconciling. He had his chance. He had 26 years of chances.

    • @Elara_Luna
      @Elara_Luna 6 місяців тому +4

      As a recovering alcoholic, Im so sorry you had to deal with that. Its so hard to have a relationship withan addict. The guilt isn't yours, it's his to hold. Others aren't able to do anything for addicts other than support and encourage recovery. You can't change their minds, but you can support their mindset. If being abscent meant the possibility of change, you did the right thing

    • @emperorpalpatine9841
      @emperorpalpatine9841 6 місяців тому

      You probably found peace in knowing you tried your best and played your part in being the great daughter. That’s all you could really ever do.

    • @lmiller1413
      @lmiller1413 6 місяців тому +1

      ​@Elara_Luna thank you for your response. That was healing.

    • @GiannaRepucci-nj4dt
      @GiannaRepucci-nj4dt 6 місяців тому +1

      @@Elara_LunaGood luck on your journey of sobriety! You’re doing amazing

    • @Elara_Luna
      @Elara_Luna 6 місяців тому +1

      @@lmiller1413 just to clarify, the pain you feel isn't yours to keep, its ours as addicts, and I'm sorry you've had to go through that pain. We destroy ourselves and blindly destroy others while we do it and that not ok. Sending love to you ❤️

  • @DuffyGabi
    @DuffyGabi 6 місяців тому +19

    You don’t need to say “I love you”to someone just because that person is your parent!

  • @kylmj
    @kylmj 6 місяців тому +28

    My “father” walked out my mom when I was born. I’ve never met him. I don’t know his name. I never want to reach out and I would never want to have a relationship with him, he’s a person I would never have respect for and if he wasn’t a stable human being I’m glad he wasn’t in my life. Saved me headaches and heartbreaks.
    Plus why would you want your children to have a relationships with a man that didn’t care for his own children.

    • @penelope5500
      @penelope5500 6 місяців тому +6

      Right. Sometimes you just have to cut your losses...

    • @RoyalMetal9
      @RoyalMetal9 6 місяців тому

      What about your mother? She picked him and had seks without any commitment.
      Takes two to tango.

  • @susancuenin2137
    @susancuenin2137 6 місяців тому +14

    My ex is an absentee bio dad who recently reached out to my child so he could get to know his grandson. What a batch of crap. He’d gone no contact when my daughter was five and now she’s in her late thirty. All on the flake. He had his chances.

  • @CodeDusq1
    @CodeDusq1 6 місяців тому +17

    If it may bring some temporary sense of closure or understanding, it might be worth reconnecting. But whatever happens, it won’t fill the void or change the fundamental emptiness of existence.

  • @tamiressoares9303
    @tamiressoares9303 6 місяців тому +17

    The timing 🥲🫶🏻

    • @michaelcerafan1
      @michaelcerafan1 6 місяців тому +3

      agreed! although no amount of videos like this heal the hole in the heart from an absent dad, sure does help sometimes knowing others can relate..

  • @Diomedes99
    @Diomedes99 6 місяців тому +10

    My father refuses to talk to me or reach out to me.
    He has a whole other family.
    He wasted a lot of my time and effort to reconnect in the end, only to tell me it's better if I just leave. (After I sold everything and moved across the country to reconnect with him based on a web of lies.)
    Haven't heard from him in 6 years and do not expect to hear or see him or anyone from his side of the family again.

  • @confusedwhynot
    @confusedwhynot 6 місяців тому +9

    I struggle with this gentleman's experience. I lost my Dad when I was young to cancer. My Dad was special and loved me. My Dad and Mom were a great example of how a marriage should be. I always hoped for a marriage where two people put effort into each other and their family. Love through hardship and difficult times. I know my parents weren't perfect and they made mistakes. That being said they were perfect for me. My Mom took on the task of raising all nine of us alone after Dad died. When I got married that was the image or vision I had in my head. Someone who is willing to go through the depths of hardship and be there through it all.
    My dream or vision on marriage and love was shattered by the man I love. Our children were so emotionally abused and neglected by him. Our daughter hasn't spoken to him in almost three years. He came from a home of physical and emotional abuse. There was also serious neglect. He has been in fight or flight mode since his childhood. Our children are hurting. I'm hurting for them, for him, and for myself. He sees himself as the victim. He drinks, does drugs, and is a workaholic. For a time he didn't drink, but he would just substitute other things to fill the void. He has an addictive personality from his childhood. He honestly was never all in. In the early years it was mostly neglect and some verbal abuse. Overtime it got worse and worse. By the time he walked out I was physically and emotionally exhausted dealing with working and taking care of our family. It is way more complicated than what I am sharing here. I have come to understand that he sees himself as a victim. Life is hard and sometimes really tough things happen. Over time there was more verbal, emotional, psychological, and physical abuse. So much was happening it was a nightmare. We are all in therapy except my husband. He thinks he doesn't have a problem and thinks he can fix himself. The truth is he has married three times. He has other children that he neglected and it shows. I should have seen the red flags and ran. I will say I am grateful for being blessed with our children. We have struggles, but we stick together through hardship. I honestly think that for most women who are committed to their marriage and relationship end in divorce because their spouse is not fully committed or all in.
    The other point I will make here that I have seen as a stumbling block in any relationship is when one or both seem to think in a selfish way. The word or phrase often is, "I have to figure out my life". I for one am so tired of when people say "MY LIFE". That in my eyes is a very selfish thing to say when you are married or have children. If you want to stay single that is totally fine. Just plan on being alone and don't ever attempt to have an intimate relationship with anyone. When you get married it is no longer your life. You become one with your spouse. You choose to face all the ups and downs together. You raise your children as a team. I have watched many marriages in my area end because the husband chose himself over his spouse and children.
    In any relationship you have to make an effort to truly see the other person as a part of who you are. What happens to one happens to the other. I wish my husband understood that. I never put forth the effort to see me or our children. We were there to fulfill his needs and expectations. I could see what was happening, but when I would talk to him about things he always had an excuse or said he would work on it. The problem is that his excuse was always his justification for not being present in our relationship or with our children. Now they are all grown and he is distant with all his children. He walked out when our youngest was still in high school. He has been gone almost three years now and he hasn't done anything to build a relationship with any of them. He seriously doesn't even know his kids. He is so disconnected. I am trying to wrap my head around why he never filed for a divorce. I finally had to make the decision last year. He accused me of just wanting his money. He couldn't be more wrong.

  • @ryukirito2616
    @ryukirito2616 6 місяців тому +7

    That made me teary eyed. Damn.

  • @nanchesca3950
    @nanchesca3950 6 місяців тому +4

    I was estranged from my mom for 7 years because of some very hurtful actions on her part. At the same time i was doing some hard work on myself and learning to forgive myself for mistakes I've made in my life. Then i realized if i was going to forgive myself, i needed to forgive her. She was likely doing the best she could with where she was at with her own demons. I reconnected with no expectations, and it went really well. Shortly after that she got very ill and died. I'm so thankful i was able to have some kind of closure before she went

  • @ninunife5242
    @ninunife5242 6 місяців тому +7

    Sometimes there is no winning and no sense in any of what happens in people's lives. Yes, it's the father's responsibility to heal their relationship but when someone can't be a father, the children can as well mourn that loss and connect on a human level, no expectations. I did this and it brought me so much peace. Some people really can't do it and to radically accept this may be only thing left to do. My brother couldn't give that step, he's still very angry. And that's ok too.

  • @JudePi-jx7yo
    @JudePi-jx7yo 6 місяців тому +8

    Two things are true in general. No need to feel guilty. You owe him nothing. Conversely. you are both adults and if you want a relationship the past is irrelevant. You have equal responsiblty to create the relationship you want.

  • @jamesrebbechi5247
    @jamesrebbechi5247 6 місяців тому +1

    This reminds me of just how much I miss my old mate Mark, affectionately known as ‘dad’, as was my nickname to him. Although we ended up on opposite sides of the globe in and out of contact for 20 years or so with all the life stuff - geez I miss him. Brain cancer and freezing Saskatchewan winters took their toll. RIP Mark. My point is, John is right we can have many dads, sometimes you just gotta accept loss and move forward. Take your time and keep an open perspective. Rural Australia.

  • @tamiressoares9303
    @tamiressoares9303 6 місяців тому +1

    Releasing the pressure in my relationship with dad was so much amazing, his tool kit is quiet bad and the dad he had was also bad which is sad but doesn’t justify it just explain you know I’m trying and also being respectful… not only for him but also for my own peace of mind honestly

  • @chrisputnam7354
    @chrisputnam7354 6 місяців тому +14

    My father was in prison for 20 yrs not a good father by any means but still my dad will be 10 yrs this dec he’s been gone it made me an amazing father to my 4 boys love u pops

  • @ShellieTBoss
    @ShellieTBoss 6 місяців тому +8

    My dad left and I didn't see him for a year after a year it was mainly just if he wanted us for something. None of us really talk with him. I don't feel like I hold any hard feelings from him I just don't associate with him really. It would have been nice if he took care of us even while he was away. I have so much to thank my mother for. I still remember my dad telling us not to tell my mom where he lived. I later found out it's because if they knew he would need to pay child support. There were days he would show up in fancy cars meanwhile my mom couldn't afford food for us to eat.

  • @Jkolti
    @Jkolti 6 місяців тому +4

    This one hit hard for me, I went from age 18 to now(age 28) not seeing my dad, only the occasional text every couple months checking in. I had a moment similar to this one maybe 2 years ago, and decided that I wanted to try to repair the relationship, mainly through phone calls and more consistent texts, since we lived about 8 hours apart. We had last spoke on father's day of 2023, and had made plans to finally see each other on 4th of july, and he passed away a week before the 4th, and never being able to see him again sucks. He was only 54 and wasn't in the hospital, so it wasn't anything I saw coming. I know all situations are different, but from where I'm sitting, as bad of a father as my dad was, not reconciling sooner feels like the wrong move.

  • @theshellest
    @theshellest 6 місяців тому

    This was an amazing call. My parents aren't really in my life- they are more like acquaintances than parents and I never even considered asking a friends parents for guidance or wisdom. That gave me so much hope.

  • @reneeantwi-boasiako3974
    @reneeantwi-boasiako3974 6 місяців тому +2

    I think we all needed this 🥹❤️ Let's heal together 🙏🏿

  • @LP-kn3yu
    @LP-kn3yu 6 місяців тому +5

    FORGIVE YOURSELF!

  • @truthbetold6942
    @truthbetold6942 6 місяців тому +38

    The son has nothing to feel guilty about. His dad owns the guilt PERIOD. I lived through this. Parents like this cause a life time of damage to their child’s soul.

    • @marymorris6897
      @marymorris6897 6 місяців тому +1

      My husband's grandfather did this. His son grew up really messed up. Then the disfunction was carried into the third and fourth generations.

  • @needmoney666
    @needmoney666 6 місяців тому +11

    I met my bio donor a couple of times. Other than that there was never a relationship and that's how I like it. Stepdad was a better person and that's who I call Dad. By my own choice I neither want nor will ever have a relationship with bio donor. I don't hate him, don't have any feelings whatsoever for him and never will.

  • @jwalker6260
    @jwalker6260 6 місяців тому +2

    Leaving my toxic Dad behind is one of the most constructive things I ever did for myself.

  • @redcomic619
    @redcomic619 6 місяців тому +4

    Wow I could’ve made this exact call, almost word for word, except it was my mom.

  • @michellianna7386
    @michellianna7386 6 місяців тому +10

    Video title: How do i forgive my absent father?
    Me: You dont.

  • @annstewart8506
    @annstewart8506 6 місяців тому +15

    Sorry for your lack of connection with your father. My children were disowned by their father when i divorced him. He divorced himself from his kids! Stop carrying the guilt of your father. I told my children "any man can be a father, it takes a special man to be a dad".

  • @ChristianRomero-z5s
    @ChristianRomero-z5s 6 місяців тому

    Watching this kind of videos so i can continue healing my father wound to be the best man and the best social worker I can be feels great! Feels like im not alone!

  • @darlayeates510
    @darlayeates510 6 місяців тому +2

    My situation is odd. My father was around and in the home, but he was emotionally absent. I never once had a conversation with him. I would try, but all his responses were one word responses. I literally never felt seen or heard. I always fantasized that on his deathbed, we would finally have a heart to heart, but even then, he just looked right through me like he always had. It was such a puzzle to me. I never could figure him out. I never knew anyone who had a similar situation.

    • @sonomadream6717
      @sonomadream6717 6 місяців тому

      I'm so sorry... When they CAN be - but choose not to be involved. That hurts. Because even when they lack the tools, to be good parent, they still make a choice NOT to gain those tools. It so sad

    • @sharp52092
      @sharp52092 6 місяців тому

      Yeah, that's kinda mine too. We were close when I was little until I was about 4 or 5. Not so much as I got older. I don't know how to talk or connect with him. We don't have any interests, hobbies, or shows we like to watch. I don't know what to talk about besides politics. He works all the time. Now I work all the time.

  • @sharonb519
    @sharonb519 6 місяців тому +5

    I’m not crying you’re crying. 😭

  • @LambSaucxe
    @LambSaucxe 5 місяців тому

    I’m basically same situation but but 10 years earlier, and this definitely opened my mind about my situation.

  • @billalexander3425
    @billalexander3425 6 місяців тому +5

    Great advice!

  • @you.will.kn0vv
    @you.will.kn0vv 6 місяців тому

    After years of therapy and self care, I forgave my father for my own peace of mind. I cant do anything else.
    But ive reached out millions of times. I cannot force him to want me in his life. So ive accepted that he wont be in mine, and that I need to make a life for myself and my future kids thats free from abuse, absence and pain.
    I do hope he walks in and we can talk. Because deep inside i want my father to know, to understand how much i needed him. But i cant unless he walks into my life at some point.
    Unfortunately he is full of pride, he may never walk into my life. And i can accept that. But if he does, i hope he can see that ive done well for myself and the family im growing will never feel any pain that i felt as a child. I hope he can look at me and know that his horrible actions could not break me.

  • @Dieselman6.7
    @Dieselman6.7 6 місяців тому +6

    Why yall gotta make me cry at work?! This is my same situation…

  • @reneest7644
    @reneest7644 6 місяців тому +8

    It is hard. But remember, forgiveness helps you.

    • @yamigurl822
      @yamigurl822 6 місяців тому +4

      Forgiveness is not for everyone. Sometimes no amount of forgiveness can undo the trauma they caused you.

    • @JoeJohn-ww1du
      @JoeJohn-ww1du 6 місяців тому

      ​@yamigurl822 |ady, you need to get professional help. And you moreso than anyone else needs to forgive your mom and dad for screwing up your childhood; because your words shows definite borderline insanity

  • @azimuthbusinesscenter
    @azimuthbusinesscenter 6 місяців тому +4

    he threatened to leave, he threatened to stay. Everything is a threat, unless he pays

  • @yamigurl822
    @yamigurl822 6 місяців тому +3

    It’s never the children’s job to fix the relationship between them and their parents

  • @randyadams1312
    @randyadams1312 6 місяців тому +4

    His father wants nothing to do with his son, but wants to make his son the bad guy and himself the victim. My abusive and alcoholic narcissistic dad does the same thing

  • @symonegreen7493
    @symonegreen7493 2 місяці тому

    This is me right now i want to forgive my dad so badly so i can heal .

  • @chrisc2417
    @chrisc2417 5 місяців тому

    My parents are experts at guilt trips. Emotional blackmail. I’m learning to not let it get to me.

  • @drmasroberts
    @drmasroberts 6 місяців тому

    Sometimes even bad examples can be helpful. My parents and my wife’s parents had very bad, loveless marriages. In both cases it was mostly because our mothers were bitter, angry, and selfish---but our fathers hung in for the kids. When I was young I synpathised with my mother's complaints, but as I grew older I saw how false she was, blaming him for everything and putting contradictory demands on him. My dad and my wife’s dad were imperfect in other ways, but they were strong and held their families together. My wife and I decided we weren’t going to make each other miserable like our parents, so we had a happy marriage. Sometimes even bad examples can be helpful.

  • @people3865
    @people3865 6 місяців тому

    My dad left when I was 3, met him when I was 20. I literally don't even think about him unless I see a video like this.
    Just move on people. Stop holding onto this hate and anger. It really isn't worth it.
    Having kids is hard, I have kids. I understand, even if I disagree.

  • @yamigurl822
    @yamigurl822 6 місяців тому +1

    Saying you gotta take care of them and feel bad for them just cuz they’re old now is like not seeing the fact that when you needed to be taken care of they didn’t have that same heart for you . they didn’t take care of you when you needed it, so why am I supposed to feel bad just cuz they got old and need taken care of

  • @FreeSpirit47
    @FreeSpirit47 6 місяців тому +1

    I would tell Cole, your dad made his choices, alcohol & depression won out over his child. Children grow into adulthood, there are no do overs when a parent chooses to be absent during the child's milestones. Then, the child becomes an adolescent, then, hopefully, an adult. Being there is so important, being available, tuned in is so important. Children need their mothers & fathers.
    Although 3 of my 4 children choose to not be in contact, I know I gave my all to them to help them have the skills to go into the world as adults. All 4 are happy, healthy adults. Educated, kindhearted, in the careers of their choosing.
    The one adult child who chooses to let me be a part of her life, doesn't understand her siblings any more than I do. I focus on her, lavish my love on her, give her my time. Focusing on who I do have instead of what I don't.

  • @tomnohmy1273
    @tomnohmy1273 6 місяців тому +3

    I made mistakes as a divorced dad, didn't handle it right. Thx God my adult son's are in my life today.i wish Dr J would have more grace for parents who messed up I guess it's a call in show not a therapy session.

    • @Miss-yr4jl
      @Miss-yr4jl 6 місяців тому

      I think he wasn’t advising much grace be lent because the caller’s father, from the sounds of it, really hasn’t made any effort to show he is worthy of such grace

  • @mikethemechanic7395
    @mikethemechanic7395 6 місяців тому +4

    Grew up with a Dad who never spent time with me as a child. It’s traumatized me. I was told at 15 to get a job if I wanted money. I had to get out at 18 also. I will never forgive my dad. When I had kids 11 years ago. I made sure he had limited access. Also I spend all of my time with my kids. I make sure I post pics of our vacations and every event so my dad will see it. It took till I was 40 to not hate my dad. I am neutral with him now. At 49 my dad is 78. He knows I will not be there for him when he gets in bad health. I told him this. When I told my dad why I hated him. He never apologized. He gave me a speech about growing up poor. And his Dad would beat him and he was a drunk. My dad told me. He made sure we never had to lift a finger and had private schools. Told my Dad. That had nothing to do with you never spending time with me. I will never be like you. I tell my kids how much of a dirtbag my Dad was..

    • @mildajasaite871
      @mildajasaite871 6 місяців тому +1

      If you don't mind me asking - if your parents were divorced? Or not divorced just that he never bothered to spend quality time with you?

    • @mikethemechanic7395
      @mikethemechanic7395 6 місяців тому +4

      @@mildajasaite871 Not divorced. Dad never spent time with me at all.

    • @mildajasaite871
      @mildajasaite871 6 місяців тому +2

      @@mikethemechanic7395 thank you. I am asking just because so many people loves to smack women down for leaving for "no reason" because divorce traumatize kids, when looks like the reality is that the only family worth saving is the one where both parents are invested in their children. Plenty of people like you coming from background of really terrible parenting feeling effects of it till today

  • @RoyalMetal9
    @RoyalMetal9 6 місяців тому +1

    These kids moms need to be accountable for their part in these situations.

    • @mildajasaite871
      @mildajasaite871 6 місяців тому

      Oh here you go, father abondoned child - it's her fault!!!!

    • @JoeJohn-ww1du
      @JoeJohn-ww1du 6 місяців тому +1

      Absolutely, but that's not politically correct to say. But it is very, very true. Most of these mothers either used the courts to kick dad out of their kids lives, or they got with a guy they knew was a bad guy, and still made the wrong decision to create kids with him. But you no, no accountability on moms part...

    • @RoyalMetal9
      @RoyalMetal9 6 місяців тому +1

      @@mildajasaite871
      Oh here you go. Mom picked the wrong guy. Gets pregnant. He leaves because she’s so pissy at him all the time. He stays out of kids life because dealing with the mom is hell. Or she just refuses to allow visitation. Drags everything through court.
      But she still blames him.
      Tells the kid all its life its father is a pos.
      Surprised when kid has behaviour issues. Blames the dad more.
      But her picking him, taking her clothes off, getting pregnant and then being impossible to deal with is never her fault.
      Got it.

    • @mildajasaite871
      @mildajasaite871 6 місяців тому +2

      @@RoyalMetal9 the guy picked mum as much as mum picked the guy. The story you wrote here is your imagination, not the story of the kid. Also, mum being pissy isn't reason good enough to leave child. Everything is your responsibility. Mental gymnastics you did here to avoid that responsibiliy is as funny as it is insane

    • @mildajasaite871
      @mildajasaite871 6 місяців тому +1

      @@JoeJohn-ww1du because guy absolutely is not responsible for the life he is creating... i mean an adult man is not responsible for the consequences of his actions. Amazing conclusions - it is her fault she gave this kid life.

  • @stefyvalenzuela5016
    @stefyvalenzuela5016 6 місяців тому

    WHAT IF, instead of believing that is a bad thing to be abandoned by our Dad, we think that it was the most blessing gift from them to us? I do really believe that my father's absence was the best for me, after all, he's a narcissist.

  • @ActiveVirtue
    @ActiveVirtue 6 місяців тому +5

    It’s not the job of a child to build a bridge to their father.

    • @JoeJohn-ww1du
      @JoeJohn-ww1du 6 місяців тому

      If they're a full grown adult it is...

  • @shellyn802
    @shellyn802 6 місяців тому +2

    This is my story… I finally did reach out and my dad died 3 months later. Make the call.

  • @JEANNEHUNTER-q5t
    @JEANNEHUNTER-q5t 6 місяців тому

    And still there are no compulsory courses and exams on how to be a good parent. Some churches provide workshops, and people get counseling when things are going wrong already. The neglect and abuse of children is just heart-rending.

  • @yamigurl822
    @yamigurl822 6 місяців тому

    We should never feel guilty for the poor choices our parents made. We should never feel like we have to forgive someone who purposely chose to not be a good parent

  • @stefyvalenzuela5016
    @stefyvalenzuela5016 6 місяців тому

    I can't feel any guilt for not talking to my dad, but I'm not gonna force myself either. He didn't force himself to be with us, why would I?

  • @michaelcerafan1
    @michaelcerafan1 6 місяців тому +2

    shoutout to the fathers that never raised us

  • @yamigurl822
    @yamigurl822 6 місяців тому

    I’ve tried forgiveness and it didn’t help only made things worse. Forgiveness is not always the answer. Sometimes the answer is mourning the death of your parents even if they aren’t dead yet

  • @donaldshotts4429
    @donaldshotts4429 6 місяців тому +2

    Sometimes you would send me a birthday card with a $5 bill
    I never understood you then
    and I guess I never will

  • @funicon3689
    @funicon3689 6 місяців тому +1

    i wouldve loved to have a dad take me to baseball games every few weeks or whatever

  • @ryansack5198
    @ryansack5198 6 місяців тому

    All I’ll say is people are complicated. Very few people are all good or all bad.

  • @distorbia20
    @distorbia20 6 місяців тому +1

    Reach out to your dad. You don’t want live with the guilt you are feeling. Do it for you not your dad. At least have that final conversation if needed. Since you feeling some guilt I would say reach out to

  • @9liveslisa
    @9liveslisa 6 місяців тому

    Some fathers just don't get it. You were the child and he was the parent that wasn't there. It was not your responsibility to step up to the plate. My dad did the same thing. He didn't have a clue how to be a father. He thought he worked and was a provider and that was enough. It isn't enough. When me and my siblings were young and my parents were going through a nasty divorce, he apparently was angry we never called him. WHAT? We were also going through the nasty divorce with them. We didn't want to upset our mother or we'd have to face her wrath. It had nothing to do with not wanting to call him! And just before he died, he told me he had never seen my stepmother drunk. WHAT? That woman bought Scotch by the case and would fall off her chair in the dining room at dinner. I didn't argue with him, I just let him have his delusions. He was clueless and in denial and he was never going to change. Some people should never have children. My mother was the same way. The two of them wanted a large family when they got married. Both of them never should have had children. If you want to have a relationship with your absent father, have it and be kind to each other. But don't expect him to change. Just accept him as he is. You have to let go of the idea that he'll be the father you wanted him to be. Let all that go.

  • @alwaysyouramanda
    @alwaysyouramanda 6 місяців тому +1

    PA I don’t. Reached out to try and get his gma’s phone number and got a sob story followed with “I’ll send you money when I can” Sir? I haven’t seen you in 18 years. 😂😂😂 didn’t you owe like 72k when I was 10? Keep your money.

    • @alwaysyouramanda
      @alwaysyouramanda 6 місяців тому

      I was 2 when he left and 3 when cops broke into the house pointing guns at us over a bad check he apparently wrote ($20 is $20 to the government! And worth traumatized kids over) 😅😅😅 [cue unhealthy Jinx obsession]

    • @reneeantwi-boasiako3974
      @reneeantwi-boasiako3974 6 місяців тому

      I'm so sorry 🙏🏿 ❤

  • @yamigurl822
    @yamigurl822 6 місяців тому

    No respect is due to someone who didn’t respect me

  • @katie0303
    @katie0303 6 місяців тому

    There seems to be lots of estrangements these days. Family is important. Try to patch things up.

  • @NIGHTMARE.ONLINE
    @NIGHTMARE.ONLINE 6 місяців тому +1

    My dad had to be a shitty father so that I could be a good father to my children. Or so I like to think.

  • @rgkafk5djsk291
    @rgkafk5djsk291 6 місяців тому +1

    Hey Dr John ,how do you know that the mother didn't stopped his father from seeing his son?

    • @JoeJohn-ww1du
      @JoeJohn-ww1du 6 місяців тому +1

      Now that's a wise question.

    • @Olena.P.
      @Olena.P. 6 місяців тому

      If that was the case, the father could easily say so. Son is all grown up. Parents can even share cheating drama concerning the the other parent with their adult kids, because they can finally digest them. So why not clear up your name if it's not your guilt and you have no relationship with the mother for many years.

    • @rgkafk5djsk291
      @rgkafk5djsk291 6 місяців тому

      @@Olena.P. Maybe he doesnt want to cause problem between the Son and mOM?

    • @JoeJohn-ww1du
      @JoeJohn-ww1du 6 місяців тому

      @@Olena.P. it's almost never as simple as that

  • @davidmolina7543
    @davidmolina7543 6 місяців тому +3

    This was painful to hear.

  • @ryansack5198
    @ryansack5198 6 місяців тому +1

    I disagree with dr John. Take him for what he is. He’s your dad. If you’re thinking you’ll regret not making things right before he dies then chances are you will.

    • @flashthecorgi2053
      @flashthecorgi2053 6 місяців тому

      That’s literally what John said, you clearly did not listen! 🤦‍♀️

  • @ashleymarie6585
    @ashleymarie6585 6 місяців тому +1

    Why do they re uploading the same videos all the time

  • @johnnyceagles
    @johnnyceagles 6 місяців тому

    You realize how much better you have it than billions of people who have lived before you and are living now. Also if you find true forgiveness you will realize how bad it is for you to not forgive. "Absent father"? Come on, look around the world for 2 seconds

  • @sunset9729
    @sunset9729 4 місяці тому

    Some of this could be PAS.
    Just saying

  • @yvonnezaragoza-garcia1398
    @yvonnezaragoza-garcia1398 6 місяців тому +3

    People need to understand that it's OK not to make a mends with a father who was absent and didn't care about you growing up. My father physically abused my mother, and he was an alcoholic. When he died, I didn't go to his funeral. I have a family of my own, and I was there for my children.

    • @JoeJohn-ww1du
      @JoeJohn-ww1du 6 місяців тому

      What about a non existent, abusive mother? Is it okay to not make mends with her?

    • @randomusername3873
      @randomusername3873 6 місяців тому

      ​@@JoeJohn-ww1duobviously