Father’s Day visit goes wrong after dad compares it to the effort his daughter made for Mother’s Day: ‘She got up and drove home’

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    An illustration of a father greeting a daughter who drove 1 hour to visit him on Father's Day.
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    AITA for mentioning to my daughter that she did more for Mother's Day?

    My wife and I (53m) have one kid, a daughter (25f) who lives an hour away and drove over to "celebrate" Father's Day. We got brunch and walked around a park and spent time together.
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    We've always had a close relationship but it's been rocky the last year. We've had arguments recently about her career. I'm a lawyer and she enrolled in law school but dropped out in year 3. That's been the source of many arguments.
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    The whole day today it felt like she was mad at me. I perceived her being cold towards me, with curt answers, not much engagement or warmth, polite smiles.
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    Everything very distant. She didn't get me any gifts or even a card. She did say "Happy Father's Day" but that was about it.
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    Law books representing a daughter’s decision to leave law school and the family tension surrounding her career path.
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    In contrast for Mother's Day last month, she came for the whole weekend, she took my wife to a massage spa and a nice lunch and dinner, she brought over my wife's favorite baked pie, she got her various small gifts and a nice card.
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    I don't care about gifts but I do care that she was cold with me on Father's Day. It felt awful. I asked her what was wrong, what I did, if we could please talk, she denied anything was wrong and told me I'm trying to make a big deal out of nothing.
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    My wife asked me to let it go but denial from my daughter when something was obviously wrong was frustrating. It ended with me bringing up that she did a lot more for Mother's day in comparison to today (to
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    make the point that obviously she was upset with me). It set her off. She called me 'entitled' and got up and drove home.
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    My wife got upset by how I handled this. She says I'm the AH in this situation. AITA?
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    Edit: I never pressured her to go into law. She decided that herself. My wife and I both wanted her to finish the last 5 months of law school just to get the degree, as we'd poured lots of money into it and she was so close to the finish line. We told her not to do law if she's not
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    happy with it. We just wanted her to get the degree. She quit to become an artist and when I realized she made up her mind, I stopped trying to convince her and did my best to be loving and supportive.
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    A representation of a father and adult daughter walking through a park during a Father’s Day outing.
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    VironLLA YTA. she was there spending time with you & instead of appreciating it you decided it wasn't enough. she drove an hour each way to spend time with you
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    Polish_girl44 I dont get what was wrong with Fathers Day and why it should be the same for both parents. This are different relations and dynamics and OP wasnt left without celebaration
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    Ok-Walk-8453 YTA for saying she did more for Mother's Day. I understand you were frustrated, but the comment was out of line and parenting is not a competition. If she denies anything is wrong, best thing to do would have been to drop it. Even if something was wrong, she wasn't in a space where she was able to talk about it. The reason she was short may or may not have had anything to do with you- could be unrelated.
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    chaserscarlet She spent the whole day with him and kept things polite and civil. He got pred she wasn't acting the way he expected to gift and all. He has every right to be mad she dropped out, he has no right to expect that constantly fighting about it will have no impact to their relationship. -
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    roseofjuly Come ON people, this is weak. We all know that "being polite and civil" is below the bare minimum expectation for father's day. She's upset because her father called her out on her monumental selfishness and impulsivity and she's punishing him for it like a child.
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    shizzstirer Exactly. Something else is going on. I came out of law school with severe depre son; I can't imagine what would cause someone to drop out at that point. Are you sure you didn't push her to go, even implicitly? It sounds like your wife also wasn't on board with her dropping out, so it's not about just disagreeing.
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    7lexliv7 I wonder if she's actually mad at herself for dropping out of law school and is taking it out on her dad.
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    AlufryNA YTA. I have a dad like you, and trust me, it's rarely about just one incident. It's usually years of resentment building up over time. At least your daughter is trying to be a better daughter than I ever was. And yeah, effort tends to come naturally when someone feels loved and appreciated. The fact that she goes out of her way for her mom suggests that her mom has created that kind of relationship with her. If she's not putting in the same effort with you, it might be worth reflecting
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    chaserscarlet So you've been an unsupportive father and are now surprised she's not going above and beyond to celebrate you on Father's Day? Wow it's almost like actions have consequences huh Edit to add: for all the bot hurt people in the comments - this isn't about whether or not OP had a right to be upset about the daughter dropping out. It's about expecting everything to be normal on Father's Day when your relationship is obviously fractured.

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