At 47, he was just trying to rebuild his life after heartbreak — until the past rolled back into his driveway in the form of a message from the daughter who had cut him off years ago.
After her parents’ messy divorce, sparked by her mom’s affair, she chose silence, no birthday calls, no visits, no replies. He reached out for years, but eventually gave up.
Now, at 22, she was back. And she wanted the college fund. What she didn’t know? It was gone, spent on a car with horsepower and leather seats.
That one decision reignited a storm. She was furious. Her mom was livid, calling him selfish and a “deadbeat.” But was he really?

When Rejection Turns Into a Request – Here’s The Original Post:






Years of Silence, Then a Sudden Knock
The father had started that college fund when his daughter was still in diapers. Through every birthday party and bedtime story, he imagined the future: sending her off to school debt-free, watching her chase her dreams.
But dreams can be fragile.
When the affair shattered the family, the fallout was swift. His daughter, just a preteen, took her mother’s side. She chose to live with her and her new husband, the stepfather, and over time, she cut her biological father off entirely. No calls. No visits. Just… absence.
By the time she turned 18, he tried again. He told her the college fund was still there if she wanted it. She declined.
“I don’t want anything from you,” she’d said. That was the last real conversation they had.
So when the years passed and the silence deepened, he made a choice. He was tired of waiting for someone who had made it clear she didn’t want him in her life. He took the college fund, untouched for years and bought a new car. It wasn’t just about the vehicle. It was about reclaiming something for himself.
Then came the message.
Her stepfather, once financially stable, could no longer cover her tuition. Suddenly, the door she’d bolted shut years ago was creaking open.
But when she learned the money was gone, the anger came fast. Her mother called him heartless. Accused him of punishing his own daughter. She even tried to guilt him into helping, reminding him that “she’s still your child.”
But for the father, the pain was layered. “Where was this daughter when I was grieving our relationship?” he wondered. “Where was her loyalty when I tried to reach out?”
The Psychology of Estrangement and a Father’s Right to Move On
This story isn’t just about money, it’s about rejection, resentment, and the brutal ache of being pushed out of your own child’s life.
According to a 2023 study by the American Psychological Association, 60% of adult children who cut off a parent cite “unresolved conflict”, especially after events like infidelity or divorce. In this case, the father’s ex-wife had the affair, yet he became the outsider. It’s a tragic but common irony.
Some might argue he should have kept the fund “just in case.” But is it fair to ask someone to keep the door open forever when they’ve been told they’re unwanted?
Author and family dynamics expert Dr. John Gottman writes, “Rebuilding family ties starts with listening, not judging.” But he also emphasizes that relationships are a two-way street. The daughter never initiated healing. She only reached out when she needed something. That doesn’t make her evil — but it does complicate the story.
Reddit commenters largely sided with the father. Many saw the daughter’s timing as opportunistic, especially after years of silence. Some pointed out that the mother, who contributed nothing to the college fund, had no moral ground to demand anything. Others offered a softer perspective: maybe the daughter had regrets she didn’t know how to express until life forced her to.
And perhaps that’s true. But the father’s frustration is valid, too.

Redditors mostly side with OP, saying they’re not at fault for not reaching out to someone who cut contact.



While one commenter suggests there may be more to the story, others stress that OP can’t be expected to fix a relationship without mutual effort.



Most Redditors agree OP is not the asshole, saying child support meets the basic obligation and college funds aren’t guaranteed.



While one user asks probing questions about timing and intent, others believe the daughter can’t expect financial help after cutting ties.



Debt, Distance, and the Price of Reconnection
So now he’s left in the wreckage of an old relationship, facing a crossroads. Does he reopen his wallet for someone who closed her heart? Or does he stay the course, holding to the boundary she created long ago?
He doesn’t owe her tuition, not legally, not even morally, according to many. But could helping now be the start of something deeper? Or would it just teach her that her love is conditional?
What would you do if the child who ghosted you suddenly came back, not to rebuild, but to ask for help?
And more importantly… would you answer?








