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Woman Skips Dad’s Funeral but Checks His Will, Family Calls Her Heartless

by Carolyn Mullet
December 22, 2025
in Social Issues

A funeral invitation arrived, and it reopened wounds that never healed.

This Redditor did not lose her father suddenly. She lost him slowly. Over missed visits. Broken promises. Photos that proved he knew how to be a dad, just not to her.

When he died, her family expected her to show up. Sit quietly. Cry publicly. Support people who had watched her grow up on the sidelines of his life.

She declined.

She did not attend the funeral.

But she did go to the notary to check the will.

He left her something. Not a small amount.

That choice triggered outrage from relatives who had already erased her pain years earlier. They called her cold. Greedy. Ungrateful.

She now wonders whether she crossed a moral line, or simply refused to perform grief that never belonged to her.

Now, read the full story:

Woman Skips Dad’s Funeral but Checks His Will, Family Calls Her Heartless
Not the actual photo

'AITA for skipping the funeral but going to the notary for the will?'

I am sorry I am a bit drunk.

My father died recently. He raised me until I was 12. Then he left us because he got his coworker pregnant He promised me he would still be my dad...

But that was a lie. I can literally count on one hand the times he visited me till I turned 18. I sometimes visited him for a few hours. His...

She never treated me warm. She treated me like I was a random kid from the neighborhood and often would refer to me as her daughters cousin.

I stopped going because even when I was there it was awful for me. I was not poor. We were scraping by.

Meanwhile I would always see pictures of father daughter dances and him proudly with my half siblings in his arm and so on.. It hurt me very much.

When I turned 19 I cut contact because I just could not see it any longer. I really really loved that man at a point In time.

He left me and never gave me the love he gave to his other daughter.. He got diagnosed with cancer.

He called me and asked me to come. He wanted forgiveness. When I went to visit him he said he was scared to go to hell..

He died. Half sister send me the invitation to the funeral and I refused. They begged me.

But I went to the notary to see if he left me something in the will. He did. I guess he regretted something because it was not a little amount.

Now my father's mother is telling me I am an ungrateful woman . All that stuff. Half sibling saying that I don't care about life and her pain.. Idk. AITA...

Edit : I just woke up and almost didn't remember making this post. I have to say... Thank you guys so much. I have received so much support.

It really helps. I will try answering to your pms and direct messages! Thank you really so much. Also I fixed a bit of the spelling. - to answer some...

My half sister is 22..  I "forgave" my father in the hospital. At least I said it. He was there with a priest.

- I did not go to a will reading. I don't think those are a thing anymore? Idk. I went alone.

- I didn't not have any contact with my fathers side of the family. My grandmother hated my mother and stopped talking to me the minute my father left us.

- My half sister and her mother also never really made an effort. They never straight up mistreated me but never treated me good.. - I am a woman.

- I hope I answered all the questions.

This story hurts because it exposes a truth people avoid. Some relationships end long before death.

This woman grieved her father while he was still alive. She did it quietly, as a teenager, while watching him show up fully for another child.

The funeral asked her to pretend that history did not matter.

This situation is not about money. It is about who gets to define grief and who gets to police it.

Families often treat funerals as moral obligations. Attendance becomes proof of love. Absence becomes evidence of cruelty. That framework collapses when the relationship itself caused harm.

Estranged children experience grief on a different timeline. The emotional loss happens during abandonment, not at death. First comes confusion. Then hope. Then disappointment. Eventually, emotional withdrawal becomes self-preservation.

By adulthood, many estranged children have already done the grieving work that death usually triggers.

So when death arrives, it does not create new loss. It reopens old wounds that never received validation.

That is why funerals can feel unsafe rather than healing. They often sanitize reality. They elevate the best version of the deceased. They pressure silence from those who lived the worst.

In this case, the father’s final request reveals more than it repairs. He did not ask how his absence shaped her life. He did not acknowledge the harm done by years of emotional neglect. He asked for forgiveness because he feared consequences.

That matters.

Forgiveness requested under fear is not accountability. It is self-soothing.

She gave him what he asked for. She did not owe him more.

There is also a deeper psychological layer here. Children who grow up emotionally abandoned often learn that their needs come second. They become experts at minimizing themselves to keep peace. Attending the funeral would have required her to continue that pattern.

It would have asked her to center everyone else’s grief again.

That is emotional labor she does not owe.

Now consider the inheritance.

Psychologists say that many people treat money left behind as a reward for loyalty or attendance. That belief has no ethical or legal basis. A will reflects the deceased’s final decision. Motivation does not invalidate it.

Money cannot undo abandonment. But it can acknowledge it.

In many cases, inheritance serves as symbolic recognition. It is a quiet admission of failure. It says, “I cannot fix what I broke, but I recognize it existed.”

Her relatives’ anger likely comes from discomfort, not principle. Her absence disrupted the image of a redeemed father. Her inheritance confirmed that even he recognized his shortcomings.

That combination forced truths they preferred to ignore.

Grief comparison only deepens harm. Her half sister lost a father who showed up. She lost one who disappeared. Both losses hurt, but they are not equal experiences. Demanding identical expressions of grief ignores unequal damage.

Calling her ungrateful collapses under scrutiny. Gratitude requires consistent care, protection, and love. She did not receive those things.

What she received was absence, followed by a late apology shaped by fear.

Skipping the funeral did not harm anyone materially. It protected her mental health. Accepting the inheritance did not exploit grief. It acknowledged years of loss without recognition.

Boundaries often anger people who never needed them.

That does not make boundaries wrong.

Check out how the community responded:

Many commenters focused on emotional abandonment and said she owed him nothing.

GoAskZombieland - If he wanted forgiveness only to avoid hell, that wasn’t love. You have every right to be upset. Therapy could help you heal for yourself.

Berlinerpfannkuchen - You already visited him before he died. That matters more than a funeral. He died to you long before his body did.

refusestopoop - He showed up only when he needed something. It makes sense you skipped the funeral and accepted the money.

Others emphasized that funerals are for the living, not obligations.

neobeguine - They never treated you like family. They don’t get your emotional support now. Take the money and build your life.

cridhebriste - You owe them nothing. They wanted you there to make him look good. Use the money to heal.

[Reddit User] - Funerals are for the living. You don’t owe people who treated you badly. NTA.

Several commenters focused on grief and self-care.

Abblz - You’re not cruel. You’re in pain. Please talk to someone about it.

CheerilyTerrified - What exactly are you supposed to be grateful for? He failed you. Take care of yourself.

This was never about choosing money over mourning. It was about refusing to fake grief for people who ignored pain when it mattered most.

She already faced her father. She offered forgiveness when asked. She survived abandonment without support. Skipping the funeral honored her truth.

Accepting the inheritance acknowledged harm that never received accountability.

Grief is personal. Closure is personal.

So what do you think? Do adult children owe public mourning to parents who failed them privately? And when does protecting yourself become the most honest form of respect?

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%

Carolyn Mullet

Carolyn Mullet

Carolyn Mullet is in charge of planning and content process management, business development, social media, strategic partnership relations, brand building, and PR for DailyHighlight. Before joining Dailyhighlight, she served as the Vice President of Editorial Development at Aubtu Today, and as a senior editor at various magazines and media agencies.

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