Daily Highlight
  • MOVIE
  • TV
  • CELEB
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • MCU
  • DISNEY
  • About US
Daily Highlight
No Result
View All Result

Teen Refuses To Accept Dad Coming Out As Gay, Furious About Years Of Lies

by Annie Nguyen
January 4, 2026
in Social Issues

When your parents have been married for nearly two decades, the revelation that one of them has been hiding their sexuality can feel like the rug has been pulled out from under you.

One teenager found herself shocked, hurt, and angry when her father came out as gay, revealing he had known for most of his life while raising a family.

While society emphasizes acceptance and understanding, the emotional fallout of discovering that someone you trusted to love your mother deeply had been living a secret life is complicated, especially when that secret affects a spouse and children.

A teen struggles to accept his dad coming out as gay after years of secrecy, confronting him angrily

Teen Refuses To Accept Dad Coming Out As Gay, Furious About Years Of Lies
not the actual photo

'AITA for not accepting my (16M) dad (38M) coming out as gay?'

For context, my parents have been married for 18 years and I have 4 younger siblings.

My mom, apparently, was completely blind-sided and had no idea.

They were both raised in a fundamentalist Christian environment and were each others firsts for everything,

a story that I've heard a thousand times so it makes sense but I'm so shocked, angry and hurt that he had lied to us for so long.

My mom is also a stay at home mom who married my dad out of high-school. So, onto what happened.

Last week I heard my mom crying alone in her bed after what I'd presumed had been a quiet argument,

since her crying woke me up instead of any shouting and my dad was nowhere to be seen.

I asked her what had happened and she told me everything.

My dad had revealed to her that he's gay and has known for the majority of his life, and he wants a divorce.

She said he planned on telling us in the upcoming months, gradually, to get us used to it

but that since I'm the oldest I deserved to know first.

Instead of letting him come to me as per my mom's advice, I went to him immediately the next day and demanded an explanation.

I admit that he was very level headed and calm about it, saying he understood why I'm upset,

but I was having none of it and basically told him that he's an awful, selfish c__ard

who took advantage of my mom for years and that I'd never forgive him.

He just nodded solemnly and said I'd understand as I got older,

which made me even more angry because it was such a passive and emotionless response.

I told my guidance counsellor about this and she said that my response was an emotional one, not a logical one, and that I should apologise.

However why should I say sorry when nothing I said was untrue?

I'm not h__ophobic, it's the lie that I'm upset about, however I'm beginning to wonder if I'm in the wrong here. AITA?

Reading the post feels like watching a glass shatter in slow motion. There’s the image of a mother blindsided, a father unnervingly calm, and a teenager forced into emotional adulthood overnight.

The son’s rage reads as grief wearing armor. Many readers could relate to that instinct to protect the parent who didn’t get a choice, especially when the truth arrives wrapped in politeness and patience.

Adolescence is a developmental stage where identity, trust, and understanding of relationships are actively forming. When a parent discloses something deeply personal after decades of assumed heteronormative family life, it doesn’t happen in a vacuum, it reorients the teenager’s sense of safety, family narrative, and future stability.

Research on late life disclosures into new family identities shows that a parent coming out after years of a heterosexual marriage is not only a shift in sexual identity but a disruption of the entire family structure and expectations.

A study of families facing these situations found that when a parent comes out after a long heterosexual relationship, it creates discontinuities in the family’s established roles and gender scripts, often requiring significant emotional adjustment for children as well as spouses.

These changes can feel destabilizing and even like a “crisis” for the family system because longstanding assumptions about identity and commitment suddenly need reorganization.

In addition, research on parent-child adjustment after major family transitions, such as divorce or parental identity changes, shows that adolescents often react with anger and aggression, not just sadness.

Psychological literature on family disruption demonstrates that when protective and secure structures change unexpectedly, teens are more likely to externalize distress and assert autonomy rather than process emotions quietly.

In the context of parental divorce, adolescents more commonly show aggressive or defiant responses, partly because their sense of predictability and safety has been breached.

It’s also important to note that children’s reactions to a parent’s delayed coming-out can vary widely depending on how the overall family narrative was constructed before the disclosure.

A parent keeping their sexual identity private for many years, especially in a fundamentalist environment, can leave children feeling betrayed because the parental identity they relied on was incomplete.

Even if the father’s sexual orientation is not the source of the teenage anger, the perceived concealment and resulting shift in family structure intensify emotional responses.

Research supports the idea that these disclosures are major life events, not just private revelations, because they challenge established family roles and require everyone to reinterpret past experiences.

In summary, the intense emotional reaction from the teenager is not automatically a sign of prejudice but a natural human response to the sudden disruption of trust and long-held family narratives.

It reflects shock, betrayal, and grief over a stable identity suddenly rewritten, especially in a context where religious and traditional family values were central.

Recognizing the pain behind the anger and understanding that emotional responses precede intellectual acceptance can be a starting point for healthier communication and eventual reconciliation.

Take a look at the comments from fellow users:

This group emphasized understanding the father’s perspective

-Apocralypse- − Start with understanding in what kind of era and religion your father was raised.

He probably heard demonic slur about gays all his life and lived years in fear of being one as well.

I am not going to say you are or aren't the a__hole at this moment. You have better things to think about.

Your dad staying in a marriage with your mom would be unfair as well, because that robs her of the chance of a loving new future.

RobertHogg − NTA for having an emotional response. I would also say NAH.

The family life your parents made and the experiences they had together are still real.

Calling your dad a c__ard is unfair, you likely have no idea of the pressure he was under to appear "normal" within his community.

He's still your dad and the important part now is that he still supports your family as a father.

It's better he tells the truth than perhaps continues to a point where his, and as a consequence your mother's, mental health suffers further.

Or that things end up coming to the fore in a bad way.

I'm sure your dad regrets nothing about his family life and perhaps even sees this as a way he

and your mother can continue without resentment and perhaps have more fulfilling relationships while still being your parents.

I can't imagine how shocking this is for you and it's terrible that people like you and your mother get hurt,

but this is why there should be acceptance of homosexuality in society, so people don't feel forced to hide who they are.

[Reddit User] − NAH. You are reasonably shocked and upset and hurt, this is big life-changing news.

However, try to step into your father's shoes. Growing up fundamentalist, thinking his feelings of attachment to men is wrong,

trying for years to just push those feelings aside, and then finally having the courage to come out.

These Redditors highlighted societal and cultural responsibility

Nobodyimportant56 − You should be mad at the people and culture that made your dad feel unable feel comfortable being out,

if it weren't for that then I doubt it would have ever gone this far.

[Reddit User] − NAH, but if you don’t work on eventually accepting this news, YTA.

I understand why you would find the revelation upsetting, and it’s really problematic when gay men are pressured

(often by religion, as in this case) to deny their truth and to be in relationships with women — in part because,

as you have identified, it is unfair and cruel to the women in these relationships.

But I think you owe your father some understanding for for the kind of pressure he was under,

within a fundamentalist Christian environment, to suppress and deny being gay.

This is still happening to young gay men today, and was more intense in the 80s and 90s.

I am sure that your father has been hurting for a long time, and it took him a lot of courage to finally come out.

I urge you to try to give him some understanding for what he has gone through — and how the fundamentalist tradition

he grew up in led him to make the choices he did, at the expense of the truth and to the harm of both him and his mother.

But also to look at the ways in which your parents did support each other and make each other happy.

I’m sure that they both love you very much. I think all three of you, separately, should look for counselling or therapy to help process this.

[Reddit User] − NTA. Your dad isn’t an a__hole for being gay but just the fact he knew for the majority of his life

and strung your mom along for those 18 years. She built a life with him and now he is laying this all out after the fact.

This group focused on the mother’s suffering, stressing that the father’s deception caused significant emotional harm and disrupted her life

123ofolivetree4 − Oh, everyone congratulating dad for coming out and no one gives two sh*ts about the mother

and how she found out her entire marriage was a lie.

How she was never loved by her husband and all of the times they had s__ she wasn't even being desired.

The amount of time she put on getting dressed and looking pretty for her husband only to find out that she was just the "beard".

I despise the way people are quick to forget the amount of pain she has received.

Shame on all of you for painting him as the victim and forgetting about that woman's hurt. You're NTA, honey.

Take care of your mom. I can only begin to imagine the pain your father's cowardice caused her.

RollingKatamari − NTA-you have every right to be angry and upset about this lie.

Your father hid who he was from the people he loved most, who are supposed to mean the most to him.

When things like this happen, the person who is gay and finally comes out, gets all the praise and sympathy.

But what about the family they are breaking up?

What about your mom who will now be a single middle aged woman with 4 kids?

She was promised a life with your father, someone to grow old with and now that's all gone.

There's a moment where I think you will have to accept your dad and this new reality,

but honestly, for now, you have every right to be grieving the life you thought you had.

somedayillfindthis − NTA simply because your dad knew this for most of his life

and yet he married your mom and made her financially dependent on him—so she couldn't leave even if she wanted to.

He could have stayed single. Edit: Especially at the age he married your mom, no one would have thought an unmarried man at his age was weird.

Instead he knowingly trapped another person in a loveless marriage and even had multiple children with her.

Edit 2: I just realized how much worse it is. This happened in 2002, not the 80s... an early 20s single man would definitely not turn heads.

These Redditors criticized the father’s choices, asserting that he knowingly trapped the mother in a marriage while hiding his sexuality

fartqueensupreme − NTA. I honestly dont care what time period your dad struggled in or whatever religious beliefs he believed in.

He could've stayed closeted and single and not hurt anyone when he finally did feel safe coming out.

That doesn't give him the right to convince someone he's straight, marry them, and have multiple children.

He doesn't have the right to waste someone's time, uproot and destroy someone's life and emotions.

All for the sake of protecting himself. That's selfish and honestly I'd never forgive him either.

Sincerely, a bi man that grew up in the mormon cult.

ik101 − NTA Im gay myself and I think lying to people and pretending to be in love with them to have a family and kids is incredibly selfish,

but I didn’t grow up religious so I don’t know what that’s like.

Tell him he’s hurt you and your mother and if he doesn’t acknowledge that and doesn’t apologize you’re not wrong for cutting contact with him.

Whatever you do, make sure you keep supporting your mother. She must feel incredibly lonely now.

Edit. To be clear, your father is TA for lying, not for coming out as gay, make sure he knows that.

memer227 − NTA. You have the right to be angry to him.

If he has known that he's gay for the majority of his life, that would mean that he knew that before even getting married.

And he got 5 children with her, him knowing that he's gay. He took the relationship way too far. He should have broken up years before.

He left your mom with scars for her life. I hope your family will get better soon

Edit: removed thing about OP's dad taking advantage of OP's mom

This group recognized the complexity of the father’s revelation

Justbrowsing616 − This is a painful situation, my heart goes out to all of you!

I completely understand why your dad might not have felt able to be honest about his sexuality up to this point-

coming out isn't always easy, even for people not raised in exceptionally religious environments.

I realise you're hurting too, and it must feel like a massive betrayal right now,

but maybe give it some time and talk to him again with a little more empathy.

I doubt your dad ever truly intended to cause anyone other than himself any pain. NAH.

thelastjeka − Everyone feels bad for the dad and absolutely every comment is ignoring what he did to his mother.

He ruined her life. This is all she knows and has known and now she’s paying the consequences for someone else’s sexuality issues.

She’s been robbed of the best years of her life and of the opportunity of true love;

I bet your dad was never even attracted to her. He’s an a__hole.

[Reddit User] − NTA- He used your mother as a beard for years and now that he feels safe coming out he just discarded her.

I'd be pissed too. It sucks that he grew up in an environment that was unaccepting of who

he is but that doesn't give him the right to just use another human being as camouflage.

This story left Reddit deeply divided between empathy and accountability. Many understood the fear that shaped the father’s silence, while others couldn’t move past the cost paid by the mother and children. The teen’s reaction struck a nerve because it mirrored what many feel but hesitate to say aloud when truth arrives too late.

Do you think the son’s refusal to apologize protects necessary boundaries, or does it risk deepening the family fracture? How would you balance compassion with accountability in a situation 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) 0/0 votes | 0%
OP Is Definitely The AH (YTA) 0/0 votes | 0%
No One Is The AH Here (NAH) 0/0 votes | 0%
Everybody Sucks Here (ESH) 0/0 votes | 0%
Need More INFO (INFO) 0/0 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!

Related Posts

He Called The Delivery Guy “Four-Eyed Tw*t” And Demanded He Open The Door… So He Did
Social Issues

He Called The Delivery Guy “Four-Eyed Tw*t” And Demanded He Open The Door… So He Did

3 months ago
Dad Interrupts Son’s Date for Help – But What Happened Next Shocked Everyone
Social Issues

Dad Interrupts Son’s Date for Help – But What Happened Next Shocked Everyone

3 months ago
This College Student Got a Rent-Free House From His Grandparents – Then His Family Tried to Hijack It for His Stepbrother
Social Issues

This College Student Got a Rent-Free House From His Grandparents – Then His Family Tried to Hijack It for His Stepbrother

5 months ago
Pregnant Woman’s “Friend” Sneaks Upstairs to Steal Jewelry and Drain Her Bank Account
Social Issues

Pregnant Woman’s “Friend” Sneaks Upstairs to Steal Jewelry and Drain Her Bank Account

2 months ago
Man Covers Entire Cruise For Girlfriend But Won’t Split Extra Credits, Is He Being Selfish?
Social Issues

Man Covers Entire Cruise For Girlfriend But Won’t Split Extra Credits, Is He Being Selfish?

1 month ago
Woman Sues Cousin After He Threw Her In The Pool And Destroyed $6K Hearing Aids
Social Issues

Woman Sues Cousin After He Threw Her In The Pool And Destroyed $6K Hearing Aids

1 month ago

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

POST

Email me new posts

Email me new comments

Save my name, email, and website in this browser for the next time I comment.

TRENDING

Revenged Car Crash With Fake Escort Call
Social Issues

Revenged Car Crash With Fake Escort Call

by Katy Nguyen
October 3, 2025
0

...

Read more
Wife Walks Out After Husband Impregnates His “Friend” – Then He Blames Her for Telling His Parents
Social Issues

Wife Walks Out After Husband Impregnates His “Friend” – Then He Blames Her for Telling His Parents

by Charles Butler
December 10, 2025
0

...

Read more
Professor Insists On 4000 Words In A Single Page, Students Hilariously Comply
Social Issues

Professor Insists On 4000 Words In A Single Page, Students Hilariously Comply

by Leona Pham
November 7, 2025
0

...

Read more
She Didn’t Like the Ring—Now He’s Not Sure About the Relationship
Social Issues

She Didn’t Like the Ring—Now He’s Not Sure About the Relationship

by Sunny Nguyen
July 23, 2025
0

...

Read more
Aunt Refuses To Help Teen Niece After She Robs Her
Social Issues

Aunt Refuses To Help Teen Niece After She Robs Her

by Leona Pham
October 24, 2025
0

...

Read more




Daily Highlight

© 2024 DAILYHIGHLIGHT.COM

Navigate Site

  • About US
  • Contact US
  • Terms of Service
  • Privacy Policy
  • DMCA
  • Cookie Policy
  • ADVERTISING POLICY
  • Corrections Policy
  • SYNDICATION
  • Editorial Policy
  • Ethics Policy
  • Fact Checking Policy
  • Sitemap

Follow Us

No Result
View All Result
  • MOVIE
  • TV
  • CELEB
  • ENTERTAINMENT
  • MCU
  • DISNEY
  • About US

© 2024 DAILYHIGHLIGHT.COM