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Parents Left Their Teen On The Streets With $20, Now They’re Old And He’s Done Caring

by Leona Pham
October 22, 2025
in Social Issues

They say time heals all wounds, but some betrayals cut too deep for age to soften. Being kicked out as a teenager leaves a kind of scar that follows you into adulthood, one built from fear, loneliness, and survival.

For this man, that painful night from the 1990s never really left him. His parents may have moved on, but he never forgot being handed twenty dollars and left to figure life out alone. Now, as they grow older and seek connection, he’s grappling with a painful truth: Does forgiveness mean pretending the past didn’t happen?

A Redditor opened up about a childhood scar that time hasn’t softened

Parents Left Their Teen On The Streets With $20, Now They’re Old And He’s Done Caring
not the actual photo

'My parents kicked me out when I was 16 years old. After 4 days and 3 nights my dad found me and took me back home. AITAH for not really...

Hi everyone I'm having a hard time wrestling with this. When I was a kid I was a handful always arguing and talking back to them, nothing major.

My parents kicked me out of the house when I was 16. (I'm not sure why now after all these years, maybe to teach me a lesson or as a...

My dad gave me a $20 bill and drove me to the nearest public transportation hub, and then kicked me out of the car and said see ya.

I was scared and ended up living on the streets for 1 night and 2 days before my childhood friend let me stay at his house for another 2 nights...

until my dad knocked at the door and found me. He said my mom made him come get me and lets go back home.

This all happened in the mid 90’s and no cellphones or security cameras anywhere.

My parents are aging and Ive always wanted a connection with them but its never happened.

They have given me good advice and suggestions over the years, though.

I've never healed from this and feel they abandoned me when I needed them the most. AITAH for not really caring about them as they get older?

Family estrangement is one of the most misunderstood emotional experiences. According to Dr. Joshua Coleman, a psychologist and author of When Parents Hurt, “People assume reconciliation is always the moral goal, but sometimes distance is the healthiest option.”

Research supports that. A 2024 study in Psychology Today found that at least one in four adults is estranged from at least one family member, often due to emotional or physical abuse during adolescence.

The long-term effects? Chronic anxiety, trust issues, and difficulty forming secure relationships. When a child’s sense of safety is shattered, it rewires how they attach to others.

What makes this story especially painful is the false justification. Kicking out a teenager to “teach them a lesson” isn’t discipline, it’s abandonment.

Trauma expert Dr. Nicole LePera notes that “conditional love from parents teaches children that safety must be earned.” In adulthood, that often translates into emotional detachment. Not because they don’t feel, but because they’ve learned to survive without feeling too much.

From a moral standpoint, the question of “owing care” becomes complex. Many cultures emphasize filial duty, caring for aging parents regardless of the past. But mental health experts argue that boundaries are not cruel; they are self-respect. Reconnecting, if ever, should come from genuine healing, not guilt or obligation.

This man’s hesitation isn’t heartlessness; it’s the aftermath of betrayal. Compassion doesn’t mean erasing history. As Dr. LePera once said, “Healing doesn’t always end in reconciliation. Sometimes it ends in peace.”

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

These Redditors firmly supported OP, saying abandoning a child like that is unforgivable

Lucky_Creme_3977 − I'd lean towards NTA. That was pretty messed up of them, your dad in particular.

It's gonna be awkward after all this time but you could talk to them about it.

See if they both felt bad or regret it now. If they don't feel bad then neither should you.

The vindictive, petty part of me wants to say drive them to an old folks home and give them $20 and a crisp thumbs up.

SecretAgentSpyder − NTA if you were that bad there were legal, and much safer, ways to 'teach you a lesson' that don't involve you sleeping on the streets

(because you did, until a friend got you a roof over your head). You could've been kidnapped, assaulted, even murdered. F__k your parents.

CarliBoBarli − NTA. You don't kick your child out of the home. Especially the way they did this. I'm a parent.

My oldest child is 16 and when she was in Jr high, this happened to one of her peers

and she was very worried because nobody could locate him for days. His dad should have been arrested.

Now she's a jr in highschool and my middle daughter in Jr high and I've heard a couple more stories like yours.

You were just a kid and this makes my heart hurt for your teenage self. Like legit you're older than me yet my mom heart aches for you.

Neither_Mention2424 − Nta at all. I haven't spoken to my dad for almost 30 years now. Some people just don't belong in our lives, even if they're family.

He's approaching 90 now and for the last few years, he has been ramping up the effort to contact me, but I'm holding firm.

I'm not giving him closure when he refused to give me a father. I know he was capable because he was a decent father to my siblings.

You owe these people nothing. They couldn't keep their child safe when they had the resources to do so.

I won't go off on one but believe me, theres a rant there. That being said, try and imagine how you would feel if they died tomorrow.

Would you feel regret you didnt do more? If you wanted to help them for your own peace in the future then do it for you, not for them.

ohsotypicallyanne − NTA The people in this thread trying to justify your dad’s behavior by questioning what you, a 16 year old child, did to deserve this are disturbing.

He left you alone at a transportation hub with only $20. There’s no way he didn’t know that you could have been raped, murdered or trafficked.

I’m sorry OP, but I suspect that the only reason he picked you up is because you were staying with a friend and they were worried about their reputation.

It doesn’t matter what you did, there is no excuse for abandoning a child that way.

If your behavior was truly that disturbing even calling the cops and trying to get you sent to juvenile detention

or something would have been better than leaving you in the street.

It doesn’t sound like your parents ever tried to discuss what happened; they just expect you to sweep it under the rug.

You don’t owe care to the people that neglected you and didn’t even have the decency to acknowledge their mistakes in the last 30 years.

RedStilettoDickStomp − NTA. I'm 42 now and my mom is in a nursing home with moderate to advanced dementia and although she never did anything close to this,

she was emotionally neglectful and manipulative and sometimes cruel. If she was a better, kinder, more loving mother she wouldn't be where she is.

I do take care of things that Medicaid/Medicare doesn't cover. I visit her a few times a month, but I won't allow myself to do more.

If this happened to me, I would have gone no contact during college and especially after graduating.

This group shared personal stories of being kicked out as teens

BrookeBaranoff − My mom kicked me out. She had decided to homeschool me, just came to class and pulled me out while school was at field trip.

(As a C student I wasn’t eligible.) So in my diary I wrote “my mom os such a b__ch.

She took me out of school without letting me get anyones phone numbers and said friends are a waste of time.”

She found and read my diary a few months later and threw it at me. “You think I am a b__ch?! Fine! Get the f__k out of my house!”

I was 14. She called the cops and reported me as a runaway.

She said she didn’t want to get in trouble. Nowadays she says that never happened. She would never ever do that.

Trvlng_Drew − Same sort of thing happened to me, same age, I was an a__hole etc.

When they came looking for me I hid and kept moving, they panicked but I managed to evade them.

I did finish school and when into the army and college etc. I didn’t see them for years, but my sister brokered a meeting and we started seeing each other...

They both apologised and thought it would never go so far it was just meant to shock me into behaving and I’d be home in a couple of days.

It took time but we got along and when they aged I was overseas again and came home for their last day and funerals. Did I ever forgive them?

Maybe, but never trusted them again, my birth parents abandoned me when I was 2, so I have one or two trust issues for the rest of my life.

Am I at peace over it, yeah can’t keep dragging a big stone around your neck over the past.

Should you get involved again, can’t say, I feel better about the mess after I did and long term I’m ok.

Good luck with your decision, but generally I do the hard thing. NTA

ororomorrison − I was put out of my grandmother’s house at 12 to teach me a lesson

because I said “my dad said I shouldn’t have to beg for a place to lay my head among family.”

I was a good kid by all standards but was being bullied by my cousins for my mom having mental illness and no adults were defending me.

My dad was in prison and asked his mom to look out for me. I was on the streets and in and out of shelters for 3 years.

I ended up moving to a different city and being taken in by a really good woman who became my mom. I have a really great life now. I grew...

Went to school, met a great gu,y got married. Had some kids. Have a great career. Our children are all adults.

My birth parents are both gone now. I have no relationship with dad’s family and only a cursory relationship with mom’s. I’m not angry or bitter.

Over the years, with LOTS of therapy, I’ve come to understand and accept what happened

and also know that I wouldn’t have what I have now without having been through that journey.

I shared this to say, OP, you get to choose the type of relationship to have. No one can change what happened.

YOU have to choose to heal!! Your healing is not on them or dependent on them.

That is your work to do. I’m healing (it’s a continuous journey) and I choose what king of relationships I have and with whom.

This user’s emotional account warned of the lasting psychological toll of childhood neglect

No_oNerdy − NTA. Respect yourself, and maintain boundaries. No one should do that to their child.

My husband was 15 when he was thrown out by his mom and abusive stepdad.

His dad wouldn’t take him. His grandmother let him live with her in her 1 bedroom trailer. His parents never admitted they were wrong.

They said, “we did the best we could.” Meanwhile, his youngest brother got everything on gods green earth,

even after getting a girl pregnant at 15 and later abandoning her and the child.

He’s still worshiped by his parents to this day and at 43, relies on them for everything.

We tried to have a “normal” relationship with his parents, but it was through me.

Eventually, after being disrespected and seeing his mom verbally abuse him in our home, on Christmas, in front of our children, I said no more.

And went NC with them. My husband killed himself last December.

In his letter, he cited not being able to recover from the abandonment, abuse and n__lect he suffered as a child.

No surprise, his parents did nothing after finding out about his death—and blamed me.

Said I must have done something to make him k__l himself. Oh, and these are “Christians” who donate to televangelist churches, and would do anything to lick DT’s boots.

They are older, more health issues supposedly. I’m the b__ch for withholding their grandkids from them.

My kids have expressed they don’t want to see them and I support my kids. But why do the wicked last so long? Why?

I would do anything to have my husband back, healthy and whole. Take care of yourself. Do not lot abusers into your life. You owe them nothing.

Abandonment leaves scars that time doesn’t easily erase and forgiveness doesn’t always equal reconnection. The Redditor’s decision not to care for his parents isn’t about revenge; it’s about emotional survival. They taught him indifference when he was a boy, and now he’s simply returning the lesson.

Sometimes “doing the hard thing” means walking away. Sometimes, it means choosing yourself over the people who once chose to leave you behind.

Would you give care to parents who abandoned you, or let the past rest where they left you, alone at sixteen?

Leona Pham

Leona Pham

Hi, I'm Leona. I'm a writer for Daily Highlight and have had my work published in a variety of other media outlets. I'm also a New York-based author, and am always interested in new opportunities to share my work with the world. When I'm not writing, I enjoy spending time with my family and friends. Thanks for reading!

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