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Dad Is To Walk Out On Family Therapy After Only Three Sessions, Despite Being Emotionally Absent For Two Decades

by Jeffrey Stone
December 8, 2025
in Social Issues

A father finally stepped into family therapy hoping to mend fences with his 26-year-old daughter, only to feel cornered as the only target in every session. After decades of admitting he emotionally neglected her while raising her, he now faces hour after hour of her unloading years of hurt, while his wife escapes any blame whatsoever.

Three sessions in, he’s already done. He told his wife she can keep going alone, because sitting there week after week listening to himself get painted as the family monster feels unbearable. The same dad who once checked out when his little girl needed him most is now ready to check out again the moment accountability gets uncomfortable.

Dad wants to quit family therapy after three sessions of blame.

Dad Is To Walk Out On Family Therapy After Only Three Sessions, Despite Being Emotionally Absent For Two Decades
Not the actual photo.

'WIBTA if I stopped going to family therapy?'

I wasn't the perfect father, but g__damn. The way my daughter (Alana, 26) talks about me in therapy, you'd think I'd never done anything good for her at all.

I get it. I f__ked up. But it's like I told the therapist when he asked me how my daughter's words made me feel:

"I'm not trying to shift any blame, but my wife is right here and my daughter hasn't said one bad word about her this entire time.

Is this going to be family therapy or bash Dad for an hour and forty-five minutes every week?"

He told me that, that uncomfortable feeling I felt and that frustration was how my daughter has been feeling for all these years.

And I told him, "I get that, that's why I'm here, so we can all get past that and move forward. Forward.

Not continuously going back to the past and talking about things that we can't change. What are some solutions moving forward?"

And he said, "It starts with listening."

That was the first session. We're on session three. I've been listening and all I hear is a lot whole of "Daddy this" and "Daddy that" and I'm ready to...

I told my wife that she could go to the sessions without me from now on and she can listen to my daughter complain about me all they want

because obviously if she hates me that much, it's better if I stay away.

My wife said that if I stopped going that would make me an AH because this isn't about me and that we're there to support our daughter in her healing...

I said that was easy for her to say because she's not the one getting targeted every week and if this isn't about me (too)

then this isn't family therapy and I should just remove myself if I'm the cause of all the problems.

I'm having doubts though because I did neglect our daughter a lot when she was little,

and I do want a better relationship with her, but if I have to keep going through this? F__k no.

Look, showing up to family therapy when you’re the identified “problem parent” is basically volunteering to sit in the emotional hot seat. No one said it would be cozy.

This dad’s frustration is painfully human: he wants solutions, forward motion, and maybe a gold star for showing up at all. His daughter, meanwhile, finally has a safe space (and a professional referee) to unpack two decades of feeling invisible. Three sessions in, she’s still venting, he’s already tapping out. Classic standoff.

The core issue here isn’t even the past neglect itself, it’s the wildly different timelines for healing. Adult children often need to fully voice the hurt before they can even think about forgiveness. Parents, especially ones who’ve spent years minimizing or forgetting, want the express lane to “we’re good now.”

Clinical psychologist Dr. Harriet Lerner, author of Why Won’t You Apologize?, explains it perfectly: “Words of apology, no matter how sincere, will not heal a broken connection if we haven’t listened well to the hurt party’s anger and pain.”

Research backs this up hard. A 2019 article in Psychology Today, drawing from various research studies, found that the average length of parent-child estrangement is nine years, with estrangements from mothers averaging over five years and from fathers over seven years, not resolved in just three therapy sessions.

Another study published in Psychotherapy in 2020 shows that unresolved ruptures in the therapeutic alliance, which can include defensiveness and withdrawal, are strong predictors of dropout from psychological therapy, with only 21% of ruptures resolved in dissatisfied dropout cases compared to 79-93% in completers.

Relationship therapist Esther Perel puts it even more bluntly in her 2025 newsletter: “Repair and reconnection is not a happy ending; it’s healing. And healing, as always, is not an instant switch.”

Neutral take? The dad isn’t wrong that the current setup feels lopsided. But quitting now would basically confirm every fear his daughter has about not mattering to him.

Real repair starts when the parent decides the relationship is worth more than their own comfort. Therapy isn’t punishment; it’s demolition before renovation.

The question is whether he’s willing to swing the sledgehammer a little longer or hand it to his daughter and walk away for good.

Here’s what the community had to contribute:

Some people believe the father is a massive asshole for wanting to quit therapy after only three sessions when he neglected his daughter for years.

poeadam − YTA 3 sessions is…. not a lot. If your daughter spent her entire childhood being neglected by you, you can spend more than 3 hours listening to her...

GlitterSparkleDevine − "I did n__lect our daughter a lot when she was little."

So your solution is to continue to n__lect her because hearing about how you neglected her is "too hard"?

You want some magic solution that doesn't require work, empathy or accepting your faults and that's just not how it works. YTA

TwoCentsPsychologist − This is the THIRD session…. THIRD Rounding up you’ve listened to 6 hours of your daughter venting her 20+ YEARS of frustration and pain with you.

Do you REALLY want a better relationship? Or you want HER to magically just forget all that she endured?

I’d almost encourage you to stop going. Because THEN your daughter would learn that you’re hopeless and be able to move on and be happy.

But in the OFF chance, you TRULY love her , and want her to HEAL and have a bond with her, then YTA! !

AMonitorDarkly − Hope you’re ready to get torn a new one by the comments that are about to come in. Also YTA. Majorly.

Some people say the father must sit through the discomfort because it is the direct consequence of his past neglect and the only way to repair the relationship.

mustafabiscuithead − Okay let’s say you’re a plumber. And you’re doing the best you can at your job, but turns out the guy who taught you wasn’t very good.

So your projects aren’t turning out well and your clients are P__SED. They want you to re-do the work you did.

Can you tell them “Yeah, you’re right, I made mistakes, let’s just move forward” and continue doing things the same way?

Or do you have to open your mind to re-learning what you were taught? It’s not about morals - you did what you could with the tools you had.

Now you need new tools. If you give up on that - with your own child - then YTA.

Realize she’s trying to improve her own tools, so that your grandchild doesn’t live the same script.

hellocloudshellosky − YTA. You know you neglected her when she needed you.

Put on your big boy pants and go to the sessions with less ego and more heart.

evolqueen66 − YTA. It's not comfortable when you have your flaws projected back to you.

However you did the crimes, and they have an effect, so do the time. Be thankful.

A lot of grown children write off the parents that were too toxic to do the job they signed onto when you helped create life.

This isn't about you, when you cause pain there are consequences. These are yours. Suck it up.

Some people call the father a narcissist and predict his daughter will go no-contact or even celebrate his death if he doesn’t change.

lyruhhh − You sound exactly like my dad. I only went to his funeral to make sure the b__tard was really dead. Hope you're okay with that being the future....

ThreatLvlMidnight74 − Listen to you. No wonder you daughter has issues with you,

you are clearly a self-absorbed narcissist in making this all about you instead of listening to whatever f__ked up s__t you did to your daughter that traumatized her so much...

Therapy isn't about getting past the past and moving forward, therapy is about understanding the pain and suffering that you have caused

so that your daughter can heal. Instead it's all about you and your feelings.

And for that, you are an enormous a__hole father. So yeah, YTA without a doubt.

[Reddit User] − HAHAHAHAHA WHY IF IT ISN’T THE CONSEQUENCES OF YOUR OWN A__HATTERY.

YTA. I hope your daughter keeps it coming. You clearly need to hear it. You sound like a pretty s__t father.

Three sessions versus twenty-six years of damage, math was never going to be kind here. This dad says he wants a better relationship, but only if it doesn’t hurt too much, too soon. Reddit’s unanimous YTA verdict boils down to one painful truth: you don’t get to set the timeline on someone else’s healing just because you finally showed up.

So tell us, was walking away the ultimate self-own, or is there a point where “accountability” tips into masochism? Would you keep sitting in that chair if you were him? Drop your take below, we’re all ears!

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone

Jeffrey Stone is a valuable freelance writer at DAILY HIGHLIGHT. As a senior entertainment and news writer, Jarvis brings a wealth of expertise in the field, specifically focusing on the entertainment industry.

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