My Parents Abandoned Me at 18, Now They’re Begging for My Forgiveness

Family & kids
3 weeks ago
My Parents Abandoned Me at 18, Now They’re Begging for My Forgiveness

Some apologies arrive too late to feel simple. When the past comes knocking with tears and regret, it can be hard to tell whether forgiveness is healing or another sacrifice you’re being asked to make. This story, shared by one of our readers, explores what happens when people who once walked away return only after everything else has fallen apart.

Here’s Lauren’s story:

Hi, Bright Side!

My parents kicked me out the day I told them I was pregnant. I was 18. My mom said, “You want to be an adult? Go be one somewhere else.”

I couch-surfed for months, worked double shifts at a diner, and somehow finished school while raising my daughter alone. No calls from them. No help. Nothing. I built my entire life from nothing while they pretended I didn’t exist.

Twenty years later, they showed up at my door. My mom was crying. My dad couldn’t look me in the eye. They said they were sorry. That they made a mistake. That they wanted to make things right.

I was shaking. I’d waited two decades to hear those words. I was ready to forgive them. Then my mom handed me an envelope.

Inside was a hospital bill. Stage 3 cancer. She said, “We didn’t know who else to ask. Your father’s business failed. We have nothing.”

I just stood there. They didn’t come to apologize. They came because they ran out of options. I was their last resort, not their daughter.

I told them I needed time to think. They’re still waiting for my answer. Part of me wants to help. But a bigger part of me remembers being 18, alone, and terrified while they didn’t care at all.

Would you help them after everything? Does being family mean you owe someone who abandoned you? I keep asking myself if I’m being cruel or just protecting myself.

Warmly,
Lauren

Hell no let them figure it out like you did they basically decided you weren't their daughter 20 years ago and just need your money it's not worth it

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I think the negative response elsewhere recommended doesn't quite satisfy your feelings about this dilemma, and it's a terrible one to have to deal with! I'd suggest you'll have to consider how your going to feel about your decision in 5 or 10 years time; it all depends whether you want to punish them for their lack of support/empathy, treating them as they treated you, or, reject that type of behaviour altogether, and support them as much as you can? Clearly your parents are hardly deserving of much consideration, but the question is, can you live with rejecting them, your post suggest you're uncomfortable either way. I really feel for you.

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Any choice, will bring difficult feelings, about what HAS happened, and what WILL happen. I don't envy the decision you are facing. Just do what
YOU CAN HANDLE, AND LIVE WITH. NO ONE ELSE gets a say, about ANYTHING. Not even your parents. I will pray that you decide based on how you want things to play out. No decision will be wrong, so don't listen to the harpies.

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Absolutely NOT!! Tell them to figure it out like YOU did as a CHILD!! Then block them AND anyone that agrees!!

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Don't even reply to them. Just go no contact. They want your money not you.

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So apparently your parents knew for 20 years where you were living? Protect your peace of mind it protects your health. I always say if I'm found in this type of situation, " I'm. not going to do all the loving you have to love me too." Enough said.

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Tell them a version of what they told you: "You're an adult. Go be one somewhere else.”

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Thank you, Lauren, for trusting us with such a painful and deeply personal story. What you’re facing is emotionally heavy, and your honesty captures a moment many people struggle to put into words.

There’s no simple answer, but there are ways to think this through.

If you can easily afford it, then help with perhaps part of the bill. But only if you can very easily afford it. If it is going to leave your finances short, then no.

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This situation isn’t about choosing between kindness and cruelty. It’s about weighing compassion against the cost it may carry for you. If a close friend were sitting across from you, these are the things we’d gently remind them of:

  • You’re allowed to pause, even when someone is suffering.
    Serious illness creates urgency, but urgency doesn’t erase the past. Taking time to think isn’t selfish; it’s responsible.
  • Helping doesn’t have to look like rescuing.
    Support can take many forms, and none of them require reopening wounds you worked decades to heal.
  • Guilt isn’t the same as responsibility.
    Feeling torn doesn’t mean you owe anyone a solution. It just means you’re human.
  • Protect the life you built, not the version of yourself they left behind.
    The 18-year-old who survived alone deserves just as much care as anyone asking for help now.
  • Whatever you decide, make sure it’s something you can live with long after the crisis passes.
    The right choice isn’t the one that quiets others; it’s the one that lets you sleep at night.

Lauren’s story reminds us that family ties don’t automatically erase years of absence or pain. What would you do in her place — help anyway or protect the life you fought so hard to build?

If you’re drawn to stories where respect, boundaries, and expectations collide, you may also want to read this one: My Grandson Insulted My Dress and Still Expected Me to Take Him Shopping.

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OP didn't mention her financial status or how much the bill was. If it's an amount she can't afford to pay she should just tell them, l can't pay this. I personally wouldn't knock myself out 4 these ppl

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