Anonymous wrote:OP here. So I spoke to my bio dad and he told he thinks it’s better that we part ways. He insisted that his wife had nothing to do with it and says he just cannot be a father to me in the ways I am seeking e.g. grandfather to my future kids, vacationing together. I feel like he owes me though, because if he hadn’t had that fling with my mom, I wouldn’t have existed and now I have no family except for my mom. Anyone else ever dealt with this?
Anonymous wrote:OP here. So I spoke to my bio dad and he told he thinks it’s better that we part ways. He insisted that his wife had nothing to do with it and says he just cannot be a father to me in the ways I am seeking e.g. grandfather to my future kids, vacationing together. I feel like he owes me though, because if he hadn’t had that fling with my mom, I wouldn’t have existed and now I have no family except for my mom. Anyone else ever dealt with this?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A man clings to his wife. Not to his child who was adopted and showed no interest. If the wife is uncomfortable with the relationship then the DD needs to back up. OP and her mom can go lay flowers on the dad’s burial site then be done with this new dad relationship. If you feel a need to keep in touch with bio dad then send a Christmas card, or call once a year.
The man himself needs to say that, not the wife. It's not her place. Until then, she needs to back up.
You can’t call the rules in that wife’s house.
If someone doesn't want a relationship, it's up to them to say so. Not their meddling wife.
Her house, her rules. Period.
Anonymous wrote:My bio dad knocked up my mom but she ended up marrying another man and they raised me together. My bio dad lived across the country and I knew about him but there wasn’t a relationship. My stepdad passed last year and I reached out to my bio dad and visited him and his wife. I even stayed over at their place a few times but at the last visit, his wife sat me down to say she doesn’t think it’s healthy for me to continue contact with my bio dad especially as it seems I’m only doing so because the man who raised me passed and bio dad never had a relationship with me nor is he on my birth certificate (stepdad and my mom married before I was born). I think she feels threatened by our connection and she’ll make remarks about how my bio dad and her never wanted any children together when my bio dad wasn’t home. Bio dad doesn’t know any of this as none of this took place in front of him and I’m not supposed to share any of this with him. I’m upset and don’t know how to deal with this rejection. My mom says my relationship with my bio dad would have bothered her if my stepdad were still living but she says I’m old enough to figure things out on my own. Should I share with my bio dad what his wife said to me?
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I think she told me instead of telling bio dad because I'm the one who initiates contact. I text and call just about every day and even am planning to move to their city to have a closer relationship. She says she would be more understanding if I were a kid but I'm in my mid-30s and should be mindful of boundaries such as not assuming that I can stay at their place for a month just because I'm his bio daughter. She hints that I am the one who has been driving this relationship and that neither of them have an obligation towards me. That is what I am sad about.
Anonymous wrote:You need to take a DNA test like ancestry or 23 and me along with the man you think is your bio father. You cannot be certain he really is your bio father. In the course of only months your mom slept with 2 men, you have no idea if she slept with a third guy who is trally your bio father.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tell him and see what he does and how he reacts. Be prepared to be hurt if he chooses the wife. She is a bad person. Don’t do what she says.
I suspect that he asked her to do this. Leave him alone. He didn't want you before and he doesn't want you now.
Different poster but yes! It's different for men. They literally have no bond with a child unless the child is born and even then it's hit or miss. Your bio dad knew about you but didnt seek you out. His wife must have thought she lucked out that he didnt have any child responsibilities. People get defensive in scenarios where a spouse comes in between a child and their natural parent but based on how OP comes across, it's warranted. Stay in your lane OP!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A man clings to his wife. Not to his child who was adopted and showed no interest. If the wife is uncomfortable with the relationship then the DD needs to back up. OP and her mom can go lay flowers on the dad’s burial site then be done with this new dad relationship. If you feel a need to keep in touch with bio dad then send a Christmas card, or call once a year.
The man himself needs to say that, not the wife. It's not her place. Until then, she needs to back up.
You can’t call the rules in that wife’s house.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tell him and see what he does and how he reacts. Be prepared to be hurt if he chooses the wife. She is a bad person. Don’t do what she says.
Different poster but she’s not bad. The wife has a point.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tell him and see what he does and how he reacts. Be prepared to be hurt if he chooses the wife. She is a bad person. Don’t do what she says.
I suspect that he asked her to do this. Leave him alone. He didn't want you before and he doesn't want you now.
Different poster but yes! It's different for men. They literally have no bond with a child unless the child is born and even then it's hit or miss. Your bio dad knew about you but didnt seek you out. His wife must have thought she lucked out that he didnt have any child responsibilities. People get defensive in scenarios where a spouse comes in between a child and their natural parent but based on how OP comes across, it's warranted. Stay in your lane OP!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Tell him and see what he does and how he reacts. Be prepared to be hurt if he chooses the wife. She is a bad person. Don’t do what she says.
I suspect that he asked her to do this. Leave him alone. He didn't want you before and he doesn't want you now.
Anonymous wrote:Tell him and see what he does and how he reacts. Be prepared to be hurt if he chooses the wife. She is a bad person. Don’t do what she says.
Anonymous wrote:My bio dad knocked up my mom but she ended up marrying another man and they raised me together. My bio dad lived across the country and I knew about him but there wasn’t a relationship. My stepdad passed last year and I reached out to my bio dad and visited him and his wife. I even stayed over at their place a few times but at the last visit, his wife sat me down to say she doesn’t think it’s healthy for me to continue contact with my bio dad especially as it seems I’m only doing so because the man who raised me passed and bio dad never had a relationship with me nor is he on my birth certificate (stepdad and my mom married before I was born). I think she feels threatened by our connection and she’ll make remarks about how my bio dad and her never wanted any children together when my bio dad wasn’t home. Bio dad doesn’t know any of this as none of this took place in front of him and I’m not supposed to share any of this with him. I’m upset and don’t know how to deal with this rejection. My mom says my relationship with my bio dad would have bothered her if my stepdad were still living but she says I’m old enough to figure things out on my own. Should I share with my bio dad what his wife said to me?