Losing a loved one is painful enough without family disagreements making an already difficult time even harder. When emotions are running high, it can be incredibly difficult to know whether you are respecting someone’s independence or failing them when they need you most.
The original poster recently lost his mother and did everything he could think of to let his college-aged daughter know about the funeral. After repeated calls and messages went unanswered, he made a decision that has since divided his family.
Now, his daughter believes he should have gone much further to make sure she was there, while he feels he had already done enough. Read on to find out what happened.
A daughter missed her grandmother’s funeral after ignoring her family’s repeated messages






















Few experiences are more painful than realizing two people can deeply love each other while still feeling completely abandoned by one another. Families often assume that love automatically translates into understanding, yet grief, mental health challenges, and long-standing patterns can collide in ways that leave everyone believing they have been let down.
In this situation, the conflict was not simply about a missed funeral. The parents had spent years struggling with their daughter’s pattern of ignoring calls and messages, a behavior that had repeatedly created practical problems.
They attempted multiple phone calls, texts, and even asked her siblings to reach out before deciding not to make a ten-hour round trip during an already heartbreaking week.
From the daughter’s perspective, however, missing her grandmother’s viewing was not just another consequence of poor communication, it represented the loss of an irreplaceable opportunity to say goodbye. Both experiences are understandable.
The parents were exhausted by years of rescuing, while the daughter experienced profound regret once she finally became aware of what had happened.
A different perspective is that this situation reflects the difficult balance between natural consequences and executive dysfunction.
Many people interpret repeated unresponsiveness as carelessness or a lack of effort. ADHD, however, often affects time awareness, task initiation, and communication in ways that outsiders can underestimate. That does not mean the daughter bears no responsibility for managing those challenges as an adult.
At the same time, parents who have spent years stepping in may eventually reach a point where continuing to rescue every situation prevents their child from developing lasting coping strategies. The painful reality is that allowing natural consequences can sometimes produce losses that no one intended.
Clinical psychologist Dr. Russell Barkley, one of the leading experts on ADHD, explains that ADHD is fundamentally a disorder of executive functioning rather than intelligence or motivation.
Difficulties with self-regulation, planning, and consistently responding to responsibilities are common symptoms, not simply matters of willpower. At the same time, he emphasizes that treatment involves building systems and accountability that help adults manage those impairments.
Verywell Mind likewise notes that executive dysfunction can interfere with communication and daily responsibilities, but supportive structure and personal responsibility must work together over time.
Viewed through that lens, neither side appears to have acted out of cruelty. The parents made a decision shaped by grief, exhaustion, and a long history of chasing after someone who rarely responded. The daughter reacted from genuine heartbreak after realizing she had missed a farewell she could never repeat.
Her ADHD may help explain why communication failed so consistently, but it cannot erase the real-world consequences of being unreachable during a family emergency.
Likewise, the parents’ decision may have been reasonable under the circumstances, even though it resulted in a painful outcome for everyone involved.
Sometimes family conflicts do not have a satisfying answer because every option carries loss. The healthiest path forward is not deciding who loved the grandmother more, but acknowledging that chronic communication problems and unresolved executive-function challenges can have life-changing consequences.
Addressing those patterns now may help prevent another irreversible moment from being missed in the future.
Take a look at the comments from fellow users:
This user suggested showing the daughter the consequences of her inaction by matching her level of effort in the relationship





This group emphasized that as an adult, the daughter must manage her own responsibilities, including checking messages and handling consequences


















These commenters highlighted the emotional strain on OP, especially while grieving, and affirmed the daughter’s expectations were unreasonable





This group noted the daughter’s behavior reflects selfishness or self-centeredness, stressing that repeated warnings were ignored






Was allowing the natural consequence necessary, or was a funeral too important to stop chasing her this time? How should families balance compassion for executive dysfunction with an adult child’s responsibility to remain reachable? Share your thoughts below.
















