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Single Dad Wants To Give Up His Daughter For Adoption, But He’s Not Sure He Can

by Layla Bui
May 4, 2026
in Social Issues

Losing a partner is one of life’s hardest challenges, and when that loss comes with the added responsibility of raising a child, it can feel like too much to bear. For this 26-year-old father, the weight of both grief and parenting has left him questioning whether he can continue to raise his daughter alone.

He’s exhausted, overwhelmed by the constant juggling act between work and childcare, and struggling with feelings of inadequacy. While he deeply loves his daughter, he’s questioning whether he can offer her the life she deserves. Keep reading to understand why he’s considering adoption as a way out, even though it’s breaking his heart.

A grieving father struggles with overwhelming responsibilities and considers giving up his daughter for adoption, unsure of how to handle life as a single parent

Single Dad Wants To Give Up His Daughter For Adoption, But He’s Not Sure He Can
not the actual photo

'[SERIOUS] I (26m) can't handle being a single parent. Should I give my daughter (3f) up for adoption?'

My girlfriend passed away two years ago unexpectedly. It was all far to quick for me to process. We were both estranged from our parents.

It was hard work raising our child together but we were happy. I just can't cope anymore.

I'm finding it too difficult to raise a child on my own. I work all day with two different jobs, most of that going on childcare.

I spend maybe a few hours a day with her before I put her to bed. I'm ashamed to say, I don't know if I want her.

I love her but I just can't handle all this pressure on my own. If anyone has been in a similar situation, I would love to hear what you have...

Edit: Thank you for all the comments and replies. I am so grateful for all the support. The advice you have provided is amazing.

> It really looks like OP is only considering this for financial reasons.

I'm in debt because of I can't afford to provide the basic necessities for my daughter. I live off paychecks and take cash in hand jobs.

I skip meals. I don't regret any of it. I would take a bullet for her. This is a really hurtful comment. I just want her to have a better...

Edit: > I'm ashamed to say, I don't know if I want her. I want to clarify this. I don't know if I will be a good dad. I'm not...

No real education and a criminal record to my name. I think I'm still depressed and I can't get over the fact that my other half is not here with...

I am going to act on the advice and get some therapy. However, I am still not sure if I can raise her.

Sometimes, a parent asking “Should I give up?” is not asking for permission to stop loving their child. They may be asking whether anyone can see how close they are to collapsing.

In this story, the father is not cold or careless. He is grieving a partner who died suddenly, working two jobs, drowning in debt, skipping meals, and trying to raise a three-year-old with little support. His fear that he “doesn’t know if he wants her” sounds less like rejection and more like emotional depletion.

He later clarifies that he loves his daughter and would take a bullet for her, but worries he cannot be the father she deserves. That distinction matters. Shame can make exhausted parents interpret their burnout as moral failure.

A fresh perspective is that this may not be an adoption question first. It may be a survival question. Many people imagine parenting as a test of love, but love does not pay childcare, create sleep, repair grief, or erase isolation.

A struggling parent can adore their child and still need urgent help. His daughter may not need a “better” father somewhere else as much as she may need her father supported before he breaks.

SAMHSA explains that grief can include sadness, anger, guilt, confusion, numbness, helplessness, fatigue, appetite changes, and sleep disturbances. It also notes that coping with grief may involve support from loved ones, grief groups, counseling, peer support, and outreach to mental health professionals.

Verywell Mind adds that single parents often face psychological stress from poor support, financial pressure, isolation, and full responsibility for parenting decisions; unchecked stress can contribute to anxiety, depression, burnout, physical symptoms, and lower energy.

This expert insight reframes his despair. He is not simply “bad at parenting.” He is bereaved, overworked, under-resourced, and likely trapped in a crisis where every option feels cruel. That is why permanent decisions should not be made from the lowest point of exhaustion.

Before adoption is treated as the only door, there may be other doors: therapy, grief counseling, childcare assistance, food support, debt help, local parent support groups, temporary respite, or safe kinship care.

Child Welfare Information Gateway also highlights kinship care resources and programs that help relatives and close caregivers support children, which can sometimes prevent unnecessary family separation.

The most realistic advice is not to shame him into enduring alone. He needs immediate support from a doctor, therapist, social worker, community organization, or child welfare professional who can explain legal and temporary options without panic. NIMH also stresses that people struggling emotionally can get help and should use available mental health resources.

Here’s the feedback from the Reddit community:

These Redditors urged OP to seek mental health and financial support

Ohmytripodtheory − Op, where are you located? Let us help you find support services.

Parenting is f__king hard. Parenting solo is f__king harder. But you can do this.

Sounds like you’d benefit from a mental health exam and possibly anti-depressants.

No shame in that. Get the help you need so you can better help your girl.

Roena − Is your daughter getting survivors benefits?

You NEED to find the courage to get help because you are not only failing your baby girl, you are failing yourself.

dancingtrees45 − OP, I don't know exactly what you're going through, but I have somewhat of an idea. I am the single mother of a now-5-year old.

He cried all day long (I wish I was exaggerating) and three months after he was born, his father had an affair. I took him back and then he did...

When my son was 1, he was diagnosed with Autism Spectrum Disorder.

He was screaming all day, crying, flailing, throwing his body everywhere, etc.

He didn't sleep therefore I didn't sleep. His father didn't help out at all from the minute he was born.

He even left me at the hospital myself, even though I almost died during labor and the hospital was concerned about how I was hemorrhaging.

His father moved out a little after his first birthday and rarely has been involved in his life.

My point is that there have been times where I ugly cried and wondered if I could continue being my son's parent.

I questioned whether I was doing enough, whether I was there for him enough, whether I was good enough, etc.

I worked myself to death for a while just to pay for daycare. We'd eat cereal, pasta, anything cheap.

But then I got one job that helped me learn about different services, like daycare vouchers.

That helped a little and I would love to tell you I'm not still working to pay solely for daycare, but I'm closer. It gets easier OP.

The fact that you even find yourself wondering if you are good enough to keep this going shows that you are meant to keep going on this journey

and she has a father that would do anything for her. You are doing a great job. You will get through this, I promise you that.

That little girl is so lucky to have a dad like you. Get the therapy you need to help you build that strength and confidence.

We are all proud of you and 100% rooting for you.

These users told OP to hold on because life can get easier

bootybooterson − She will be in preschool and then K-12 soon enough, which will drastically cut down your childcare costs.

Keep holding out, you can do this and someday she will appreciate your hard work.

Kyle1dc − As a child of a single parent fresh off the boat from the Philippines, hold out for her.

It's a struggle, but I know you can do this, the fact that you've stuck around is a huge testament to that.

I know I wouldn't be the same without my mom, and your daughter needs her dad.

Skwinthead − Single father here - No do not give her up - she is the most precious thing you will find. ​

Bedtimeshine − Hold the line. Get up everyday and put on your boots. It will get better. But there is no going back from giving her up.

jmdugan − your daughter needs you get help get connected you can do everything that presents to you as challenge.

as a single parent of 15y, yes it's really hard and you will grow from it. get into what life is showing you and rise to meet it

These folks said OP needs a village and should ask for help

crosswalk_zebra − Have you tried talking to other people, widowers etc? Reaching out for help? Neighbours, friends, single dad events?

I think that for the sake of your child, who already lost one parent, I should say don't do it.

If you leave her too I don't know what will become of her but probably nothing good.

DanisSpot − You will be able to find support from groups of single parents, probably mostly mothers going through something similar.

Bencil_McPrush − African saying: it takes a village to raise a child. FInd yours. ​

[Reddit User] − I can only recount a similar event I've witnessed.

A guy from my classes had his family ripped away from him, and a 2 year old brother given to him.

From one day to the next he had the responsibility for a small child. Not by choice, not by wish, but the situation came along not caring if he wanted...

Of course he was o__rwhelmed. Panicked. We did study, but nothing that promises great wealth afterwards.

As game dev artists we work long hours, with little pay. The first thing he did, in his panic, was to ask for help.

I babysat his little brother once, for example. Friends, colleagues, professors,... they helped where they could.

Because he was helpless, and he asked for help.

Ask for help! Then he looked into what benefits he gets. The support systems in place gave him some breathing room, may it be financial or time.

And yes, he did look into more permanent solutions. I think its natural to try and ease ones own burden.

But in the end he decided against it, through every hardship. And it paid off.

Now, 3 years later, the little twerp goes to daycare and his older brother couldn't be a more proud guardian.

When asked now if he ever regrets his actions, he verbatim says "the only thing I regret is ever even thinking of giving him away".

They don't have a lot of money. He has practically no free time.

But he has the love of his little brother and the knowledge that he gives the little guy one thing nobody can offer: Love.

We're all gonna make it, my dude. Take a deep breath, get pen and paper, and get your phone.

Ask for help, write down what you need to do. Streamline your problems into tasks.

Reach out to places like /r/personalfinance and /r/Frugal . The eternal love of your daughter awaits you.

These users offered practical help and support resources

wonderberry77 − PM me please. I would like to help. I am super proud of you for hanging in there.

I am serious about wanting to help, so send me a message and I will ask you a few questions to see if there is something I can do to...

There has to be a way you don't much support and it's so hard to stay above water.

BraticornBooty − I’m gonna go the other direction from most of the comments and say, if you genuinely feel there’s no other option, then yes.

No child deserves to be raised by a half hearted or resentful parent, and any couple adopting her would likely be able to give her a wonderful life.

If you felt able to, you might be able to find parents who were willing to let you remain part of her life so that she doesn’t feel totally abandoned.

There are options though, so make sure you explore them fully before you make that choice.

Parenting groups, church groups, community groups who may be able to assist with childcare and ease a bit of the financial and emotional strain.

It sounds like maybe some counselling could help you as you sound like you’re floundering a bit in your emotions.

Have you dated since your little ones mother passed?

Having someone paying you some attention and maybe even helping out with your daughter can be an absolute lifeline

(although you shouldn’t go out looking for someone to be her new mother, just someone to share your life a little).

I’m assuming you’re in the states so wouldn’t know exactly how to access the services over there,

but maybe have a mooch around parenting subs on here and see if you can find any resources there.

One shared their relatable story

EightySixTheWorld − I am a single parent to my 20 month old after my fiancé died in June. I have bad days and I have good days.

I live in a very expensive area and am in the process of moving away from the place I grew up to make a better life for my son.

It’s hard and sometimes depressing but I still find joy with my son. You do what is right for you. No one here has the answer.

I will say in my experience, the pain of losing the man I love is somewhat eased by watching the child we made together grow up.

I also go to a lot of therapy.

I don’t really have any advice to offer you. But I know what you’re going though. Message me if you want to vent/talk whatever.

Do you think he should pursue adoption, or should he find a way to continue raising his daughter with support? Share your thoughts below!

Layla Bui

Layla Bui

Hi, I’m Layla Bui. I’m a lifestyle and culture writer for Daily Highlight. Living in Los Angeles gives me endless energy and stories to share. I believe words have the power to question the world around us. Through my writing, I explore themes of wellness, belonging, and social pressure, the quiet struggles that shape so many of our lives.

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