Father refuses to pay for daughter’s wedding after finding out her fiancé mistreated his son in high school, despite his family urging him to: ‘My son may have forgotten but I haven’t’

Advertisement
  • 01
    Now, my daughter is furious with me and claims I'm punishing her for something she had no part in. My wife thinks I should reconsider, but I feel like funding this wedding would betray my son.
  • 02
    r/AITAH ⚫ 16 hr. ago im4cagefreepizza AITA for refusing to pay for my daughter's wedding after finding out her fiancé used to bu y my son?
  • 03
    I (50M) have two kids: my daughter (25F), who is getting married next year, and my son (23M), who came out as gay in high school. My son had a really rough time in school. He was bu ied relentlessly, and it took a toll on his mental health. He's doing much better now, but those years left scars.
  • 04
    Last month, my daughter introduced us to her fiancé (27M). I recognized him immediately as one of the kids who made my son's life h I. When I quietly brought it up to my son later, he confirmed it but told me not to make a big deal about it because he's "moved on."
  • 05
    Here's the thing: I haven't moved on. I can't stand the thought of helping pay for a wedding to someone who tormented my son. I told my daughter this, and she said her fiancé has changed and regrets his actions. She asked me to let it go for her sake. I said I'm
  • 06
    happy for her but that I can't, in good conscience, fund the wedding.
  • 07
    Now, my daughter is furious with me and claims I'm punishing her for something she had no part in. My wife thinks I should reconsider, but I feel like funding this wedding would betray my son.
  • 08
    My son is staying neutral and says he doesn't want to be the reason for family drama, but I can tell the situation is making him uncomfortable. My daughter says I'm ruining her big day and being petty. AITA?
  • 09
    • 16h ago Edited 5h ago • Top 1% Commenter You met your daughter's fiancé for the first time after they got engaged? What's the rush to get married? If her fiancé has truly changed then he should be making amends to his future brother in law before the wedding,
  • 10
    and he should be taking the time to integrate better into the family before the wedding.
  • 11
    EDIT: y'all I am BEGGING you to stop commenting that this story is fake. I agree it's probably fake. You are at least the twelfth person to reply to my comment with "it's fake." My advice still stands. Stooooppppppp.
  • 12
    Ok_Structure4685 • 16h ago • Now, my daughter is furious with me and claims I'm punishing her for something she had no part in. BS, why is she even close with someone like that in the first
  • 13
    place? There are nearly 4 billion men on the planet, but she chooses to be with the one who used to buy her little brother...NTA,
  • 14
    asafeplaceofrest • 16h ago • Top 5% Commenter INFO Has her fiancé - expresssed to you and your son that he regrets what he did, and that he has changed? Or has it all been second-hand through your daughter? I think I would want a heart-felt apology
  • 15
    directly from him before I "moved on" from it. But you can't force it out of him. If your daughter asks you what can he do to make it right, you could mention it to her. And then there is a place for forgiveness when someone has truly repented.
  • 16
    You could all wind up being a truly close and loving family.
  • 17
    Competitive-W... 15h ago • I'm confused. So this kid who was 4 yrs older than your son bu ied him all the way through high school? Did he fail a few times? Your daughter who is de d in the middle of their ages had no idea? And she never once
  • 18
    mentioned the fiance's name before he was a fiance? This whole story doesn't make any sense.
  • 19
    FreezeMeTrophy •3h ago ⚫ Wow, this is like a soap opera with moral dilemmas instead of secret twins. Honestly, I think you're in a tough spot because you're trying to balance being a good dad to both your kids. How about offering a compromise, like
  • 20
    paying for something less symbolic than the whole wedding, but still contributing? That way, you show support without feeling like you're betraying your principles. Also, maybe have a heart-to- heart with the guy. If he's truly changed, he should be
  • 21
    willing to address the harm he caused. Redemption arcs are more believable when they come with an apology! You're a great dad! NTA imo
  • 22
    celticmusebooks • 15h ago Top 1% Commenter It's kind of weird that your daughter got engaged to a man and you'd never met him or knew his name? This sound a bit like ragebait because the problem here isn't paying for a wedding but the fact that you and
  • 23
    your daughter apparently don't have a very close relationship and that the man she's marrying and your son will never feel like family.

Tags

Scroll Down For The Next Article