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Man Blocks His Father From Seeing His Dying Wife After He Left Her For Another Woman

by Annie Nguyen
February 9, 2026
in Social Issues

End of life situations have a way of revealing the true weight of past actions. When someone has caused deep harm, forgiveness is not always guaranteed, even when time is running out. For the people left to make decisions, the burden can be overwhelming.

That was the position one man found himself in as his mother lay dying in the hospital. After years of sacrifice, heartbreak, and quiet suffering, he chose to draw a hard line that many believe crossed into cruelty.

Others argue it was an act of protection. With grief still raw, he turned to Reddit to ask if denying his father access was justified. Keep reading to understand the history behind this choice and why it sparked such strong reactions.

A son blocks his estranged father from seeing his dying mother after a bitter betrayal

Man Blocks His Father From Seeing His Dying Wife After He Left Her For Another Woman
not the actual photo

'AITA for not allowing my father to meet my dying mother at the hospital?'

I'm a 25 year old guy and my parents were in the process of divorcing when my mother got diagnosed with a terminal illness.

After the diagnosis, my father stalled the divorce proceedings.

My father filed for divorce after 26 years of marriage after he fell in love with his younger business partner.

She recently gave birth to his child.

My mother was a stay at home mom for 25 years who took care of the entire household while my father worked long hours.

She was blindsided when my father told her about wanting a divorce.

He told her that he would always love her as his best friend and as the mother of his 5 children, but he was also in love with this other...

My mother was devastated and stopped eating properly.

In the middle of the divorce, she was diagnosed with terminal illness and was only given a few months to live.

All this time, we, her children have looked after her. I took her to her appointments and we paid for the treatment by taking loans.

We didn't ask our father for money, even though he was willing to cover the expenses.

Legally, at the time of her death she was still married to my father.

During her last days, my father had to move to another city to be there for his daughter's birth.

My uncle made a facebook post asking for blood donation (she has a rare blood type) and stated that she was critical.

When my dad got to know about it, he immediately flew down to our city.

When he showed up to the hospital, he was in a bad shape. His clothes were unkempt. He wanted to see my mother one last time.

I told him that there was no use of that as she was unconscious.

He begged and cried in front of everyone, but I still didn't allow him to meet her.

(The hospital authorities let her family decide who was allowed to visit her)

My mother passed away the next morning. He still didn't leave and wanted to be there for the funeral and memorial service.

We banned him from attending.

I believe that he lost the right to see her in her pain when he was the one who caused her immeasurable pain.

My buddy tells me that me and (my mother's family) are the assholes for not letting him see her one last time.

Edit : I want to make some facts clear

1) When my father told my mother that he was in love with his business partner and wanted a divorce,

the other woman was already pregnant with his child.

2) I was/am her legal representative (edit : Power of Attorney, to make things clear).

I had the legal right to deny visitors. My mother's entire family supported me in my decision to not let him see her.

My grandma wanted the same. My siblings wanted the same.

Edit 2 : 3) During her last days, when she was in the hospice, she got to a stage where she could no longer communicate verbally.

And she never expressed anything about wanting our father there. In fact, she didn't mention him at all.

4) I realize that this means the end of my relationship with our father.

I have accepted that and I have no interest in pursuing a future relationship with him, his new woman or his child.

My siblings are on the same page. We have accepted the fact that we have lost two parents forever.

I plan to be there for my younger siblings as their pillar of support.

When someone we love slips toward the end of life, we all long for a sense of meaning and closure. In those final moments, the heart aches not just with impending loss, but with the weight of unresolved wounds.

Many people know the longing to protect a sick loved one from more hurt, emotionally as well as physically, especially when the bonds that once held a family together have shattered.

At the center of this story is a profound collision of grief, betrayal, and boundary setting. The OP’s mother endured both emotional devastation from her husband’s affair and the physical decline of a terminal illness.

For the children, allowing their father to see her in that moment, especially after he abandoned her for another relationship and a new child, felt like flipping the switch back to the source of deep pain.

This wasn’t merely a logistical hospital decision; it was an emotional boundary rooted in years of hurt, loss of trust, and the sense that true reconciliation was never offered.

Their father’s presence at her death might not have been comforting to her or to the family, especially since she was unconscious and never expressed a wish to see him, leaving the children to make a painful choice on her behalf.

Family estrangements, especially those rooted in betrayal, abandonment, or deep relational wounds, are real psychological phenomena and can influence how adult children navigate contact with estranged parents.

According to Verywell Mind, family estrangement often arises when individuals feel emotionally unsafe or unsupported in a relationship, and distancing oneself may be a strategy for emotional survival rather than impulsive rejection.

Similarly, Psychology Today explains that when longstanding negativity, hurt, or betrayal characterizes a relationship, an adult child’s decision to reduce or cease contact with a parent can be justified and emotionally protective.

These expert perspectives help illuminate that the OP’s choice wasn’t simply punitive or spiteful. It was grounded in a history of emotional injury and a desire to avoid deeper harm in an already fragile moment.

Estrangement isn’t always about denial of love; often it’s about protecting one’s emotional integrity when attempts at connection have repeatedly failed. The OP’s protective stance wasn’t just about a single hospital visit, it was about standing for boundaries in a context where trust had long since eroded.

Making decisions about access to a dying parent is never straightforward. There’s no universal playbook for grief, reconciliation, or boundaries, especially when betrayal and abandonment are involved.

In this situation, the OP chose emotional safety and protection over a fractured presence that might have reopened wounds rather than healed them.

In the long run, this choice may help the siblings grieve and move forward without perpetuating harm. If healing is ever to begin, it must start with honoring emotional truth, even when it looks unconventional to others.

Check out how the community responded:

These commenters fully backed OP, saying the father forfeited all rights through betrayal

Daddyless_Princess − So let me get this straight. Your father cheated on your SAHM with a coworker,

knocked her up, and decided to blindside your mother with a divorce and dip out to go be his new family?

And then your mother fell into a horrible depression due to his betrayal and blatant disregard of HER feelings,

stopped taking care of herself, discovered she had a terminal illness, and unfortunately passed away from it?

Anyone saying OP is the a__hole needs to re-evaluate their thoughts and realize life isn’t a freaking Hallmark movie.

It’s a proven fact that a terrible state of mind can worsen a terminal illness

and his father’s betrayal probably had a lot to do with her deterioration during her illness.

He didn’t deserve to see her one last time and “get closure”

because he wasn’t worried about any of those things when he was cheating on his wife and then living it up with his new family

before the divorce was even finalized. He chose his bed and he deserves to sulk in it.

OP, NTA 100% and no one will ever convince me otherwise.

stephanorga − NTA if push comes to shove I’m protecting my mother 100% especially if he were to put her through that!

Sorry but why should he get the luxury of relief when she died

knowing her marriage was not only broken but the only man she loved had a baby! Uhhhu no way!

soshinysonew − NTA, he lost the right to be treated as her husband when he cheated and threw her away.

LeonAvem − NTA He cheated on the person he was with for almost 3 decades? Before the divorce proceedings were even finished?

And she had no say in anything and thought nothing was wrong? Folks, I don’t know what that is, but it sure as hell isn’t love

This group argued the father sought closure for himself, not for OP’s mother

addictedtochips − NTA - I’m going to go against the grain here, because I TRULY do not blame you for what you did.

He caused her a lot of pain, where was he when she wasn’t eating? Or had all of her appointments?

Or even prior to her being critical? No, there was a divorce happening while she was going through a horrible illness.

And he was off with his new lover and new family. I do not blame you for the amount of resent you have, and I probably would’ve done the same.

toesno − NTA. Your father cheated, got another woman pregnant, and moved to another city.

The latter of which he did knowing his wife and “best friend” was dying.

If you believe she wouldn’t have wanted to see him (and you all would know this better than anyone) then you did the right thing.

Your father isn’t entitled to being there.

fecundissimus − NTA. He flew out to assuage his guilty conscience, not for your mother's benefit.

He was the cause of all her heartache and if he cared so much about her, he shouldn't have cheated on her.

Sucks to suck for him, but his feelings are the absolute last priority at this point.

Your mom's would obviously be top, but she was unconscious at the the time

and they weren't in contact when she was sick with heartache after the divorce.

Next, you and your family's feelings; y'all are totally justified in not wanting him at the funeral.

Next are her friends and any other loved ones, but their feelings really don't matter.

Then finally, your dad's feelings, which matter the least of all. Yes, the extremely kind thing would be to let him attend the funeral,

but you don't have to do that and I don't think you're wrong for not wanting him there.

I don't think you were wrong in not letting him see her at the hospital since they hadn't been in contact at that point regardless.

It sucks that he had to learn it this way, but how you treat people matters, and he should be ashamed of himself. That's not on you to fix.

He can go to therapy for it if he's genuinely torn-up about it.

wthzombos − NTA. Your father made his choice. He chose the other woman. You're right.

He gave up any rights to your mom the day he got with another woman, got the other woman pregnant, filed divorce papers.

Each of those is grounds to keep him away.

He may have thought of them as friends but obviously your mother didn't. Actions have consequences.

These Redditors emphasized protecting OP’s mother’s peace over the father’s guilt

AQualityKoalaTeacher − NTA He can't have his divorce and be a husband, too.

There she was, brokenhearted and dying for months, while he played house with the sidepiece and a new baby?

There's zero reason to allow him to barge in with his grief, disrupting her last hours. I hope the divorce was finalized.

If not, that means he dragged his feet on the divorce he initiated,

because he knew that he'd end up with more money as a widower than he would as a divorcé.

If the divorce wasn't finalized, I hope you make sure he gets the full benefits of that via your mom's medical bills.

malissamajora − I don’t want to get into detail but I lived through something similar. F__k your dad. NTA.

It’s easy for people who weren’t there to watch your mom deteriorate to judge you.

You are 100% within your rights, legally and morally, to make that decision. I understand why you did it and I’m so sorry for your loss.

coderedb − NTA. I would have done the same . My condolences on your mother's passing OP. I'm so sorry.

This group took a more nuanced stance, debating whether intent or the mother’s wishes mattered most

[Reddit User] − NAH- this will likely be unpopular, but your parents’ marriage falling apart,

and your mother falling terminally ill are completely unrelated. Life is long. Marriage is hard.

People can’t force themselves to stay in love and sometimes things happen.

With that said, I agree with people who say that you shouldn’t let your father see you mom if it would cause her additional stress.

I just don’t think he’s TA for wanting to see the mother of his children one last time. This is hard for everyone. Life is messy.

You did what you thought was best for your mom, and that’s the best you can do.

Edit: to be clear-I’m not justifying the father cheating, nor am I trying to gloss over all of that.

All I’m saying is that he’s not an a__hole for wanting to see the woman who fathered his children before she passes.

No matter what their relationship is now, she is CLEARLY one of, if not the most important and influential people in his life.

At the same time, she and her children are all 100% justified in not wanting to see him during this time. Therefore, NAH in my opinion.

RedditDK2 − INFO - Prior to her passing, was your mother in communication with your father?

If she had cut communication after he left her, then you were correct that her wishes were paramount.

However if you banned your father because you were angry, then you were wrong.

durtletog − Unpopular opinion, but I wouldn't ban your father from your mother's funeral.

He was a huge part of her life, as they were married for 26 years. That's a long time.

This commenter dissented, arguing OP crossed a line by denying final closure

DarkMarxSoul − Going against the grain and saying YTA. What your father did was terrible, I won't lie.

But there is a limit to how far you can go in retaliation against others, and you crossed it.

Firstly, your father had no way of knowing when he cheated and then filed for divorce that his wife had a terminal illness

and that his actions would expedite that process (if they did).

In my view he can't be blamed for your mother's fate even if he can be blamed for being selfish. He didn't sign up for what happened.

Secondly, the illness put your father in a precarious situation given what he did.

After causing your mom so much pain, I would imagine he would have wanted to keep his distance

from her while she underwent treatment on the grounds that being around him

could have caused your mom even more distress and could have made the situation worse.

He also wasn't absent from the situation entirely—he offered to foot the bill entire bill for the treatment,

which is no small commitment especially if you're American.

He was involved in a way that he could be. Thirdly, the man can hardly be blamed for moving cities.

Whether his new child was conceived in an affair or not, he does still have a responsibility for his partner and especially for his child,

the latter of whom didn't sign up for their life. He isn't entirely a deadbeat here,

his responsibility towards many conflicting parties makes his situation ambiguous and nuanced.

Fourthly, cheaters are terrible but they are human, and sometimes are empathetic to those whom they cheated on.

That may be uncomfortable to acknowledge, but not all cheaters are amoral sociopaths

who are perfectly selfish and numb to the suffering of the people they cheated on.

If your father's account is true—if he cheated on your mom because he did the wrong thing after falling in love with another woman,

and he still cares about your mom—then facing the death of your mom is an extreme source of trauma.

It would have been traumatic even if he had gotten to see her,

but now that you denied him his final moments, you've driven the knife further in the wound.

Lots of people want to take the attitude that if you cheat on someone you're automatically evil scum and you can suffer,

but in my view there is a line where you go beyond reasonable anger against a cheater and enter into depraved sadism.

Preventing your father from getting closure on someone he loved but wronged before she died crosses that line.

I understand why you did it, but you shouldn't have. It was too far.

Edit: Okay that's it I'm done replying to comments, there are too many and I'm just repeating myself at this point.

This story left many readers asking the same hard question. Does someone who caused deep harm still deserve a final goodbye, or is that a privilege forfeited by their choices? The son chose to protect his mother’s dignity and his family’s peace, even knowing it would cost him his relationship with his father.

Was that justice, self-preservation, or both? How would you weigh compassion against accountability in a moment like this? Share your thoughts below.

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

WHAT DO YOU THINK OF THIS STORY?

OP Is Not The AH (NTA) 1/1 votes | 100%
OP Is Definitely The AH (YTA) 0/1 votes | 0%
No One Is The AH Here (NAH) 0/1 votes | 0%
Everybody Sucks Here (ESH) 0/1 votes | 0%
Need More INFO (INFO) 0/1 votes | 0%

Annie Nguyen

Annie Nguyen

Hi, I'm Annie Nguyen. I'm a freelance writer and editor for Daily Highlight with experience across lifestyle, wellness, and personal growth publications. Living in San Francisco gives me endless inspiration, from cozy coffee shop corners to weekend hikes along the coast. Thanks for reading!

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