One Redditor took a DNA test out of boredom—and ended up unraveling a 23-year-old lie, a manufactured identity, and a flood of repressed family racism.
He always knew he was adopted. What he didn’t know? That everything his adoptive family told him about his race right down to his birth parents’ names and ethnicities was fiction. When he started to grow out his curly hair as a teen, his parents pushed back.
When his Black girlfriend braided it, they “lost it.” But nothing compared to their outrage after the DNA test exposed the truth: he’s not white-passing Italian-South American. He’s Black and Middle Eastern.
What followed was a storm of gaslighting, accusations of ungratefulness, and family fallout worthy of a docuseries. Want to know what really set off the family feud? Dive into the original story below.
An adopted man rages at his parents for lying about his Black and Middle Eastern heritage













OP later edited the post










Discovering your biological identity should be empowering, not a trigger for rage from the very people who raised you.
This man didn’t stumble into a minor clerical error. He was raised with a manufactured story about his heritage. And when he dared to question it, with help from science and a strand of curly hair, his parents tried to shame him back into silence. Their response? “Abandon what you just learned.”
Dr. Gina Miranda Samuels, a prominent scholar and transracial adoptee, critiques “color- and race‑evasive parenting.” She explains that adoptive parents who avoid naming or celebrating racial differences, what some call “colorblind love”, may actually hinder their child’s development of cultural identity and belonging. Her research suggests that ignoring racial realities can leave adoptees feeling isolated or disconnected from their heritage
This isn’t just about “good intentions gone wrong.” It’s about control over how someone sees themselves, and who they’re allowed to become. His parents didn’t just conceal his race, they actively suppressed it. They objected to his hairstyle. They disliked his girlfriend. They claimed to have met birth parents who clearly didn’t exist. That’s not protection. That’s projection.
One commenter brilliantly pointed out that the “stigma” his parents claimed to fear was one they were clearly participating in. By dismissing his identity, they didn’t just deny him cultural connection, they denied him honesty, autonomy, and decades of personal discovery.
Still, healing may be possible. But only if his adoptive family is willing to unlearn decades of bias and meet him where he is now, not where they wanted him to stay.
Check out how the community responded:
These Redditors slam the parents’ racist lie, saying he deserved the truth about his heritage







These users call out the parents’ hair policing and girlfriend mistreatment as deeper prejudice, relating to his pain through their own adoption stories





These commenters praise his girlfriend’s support and urge him to hold his parents accountable while exploring his roots





This story isn’t just about a DNA test—it’s about what happens when love is conditional, truth is convenient, and identity becomes a family secret.
Was the poster’s anger justified, or should he accept that the “lie” was meant to help him blend in? Could you forgive your parents for rewriting your origin story? Share your thoughts below—have you ever uncovered a family secret that changed everything?








