I remember when I first saw things in my father that my mother couldn’t see- maybe things my father, himself, couldn’t understand. As I got older, I became more in touch with not only my feelings, by what was under the surface of particular emotions- why I felt the way I felt. The insecurities, the sadness, the self-doubt. A marker for adulthood can be understanding the true challenge of adulthood- understanding that a man’s life is defined by struggle.
Take a moment to recognize that your father was alone in that struggle. He didn’t have the connectivity and resources of modern technology which has served to foster a re-emergence of masculinity and an understanding of gender dynamics.
He was taught that his generation embodied a better way of thinking, and a good man was one who embraced this progression. Gone was the responsibility to lead a relationship- his generation would listen to their women and treat them as equal partners. A good man was a compassionate man who respected his wife’s strength and independence, and in-turn she would forgive his moments of failure and weakness.
Just like you, all your father wanted was to be a good man.
And as this way of thinking slowly destroyed him, it was all he knew.
[Except from: Forgiving Your Father and “Return of the Jedi” (1983)]
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antioch94 5y ago
My father grew up without his parents because they went to another place so they could earn more money. He was raised by his grandfather and when he was 16, he went to europe for a better life. His parents choose him a wife (arranged marriage). He is a disciplined hard working man, works in production but he worked his ass off in order to give us ( his children ) a better life. He bought a big house with a garden and provided his family everything. He was a very strict father, very violent and we feared him. He was violent towards my mum and us. He had many flaws but i understand why he was the way he was. He grew up without his parents in a little primitive village. I visited this village several times and many people there have personal issues ( but also good personal traits ). I take responsibility for my own flaws but i can't deny the fact that my dad influenced me and my siblings in many bad ways.
He was this classic strict conservative father but he got upset for dumb reasons. For example one time he just beated the shit out of me because i couldn't spell a word correctly when i was in 1st class.
I forgive him but he had the opprtunity to change his behaviours. He didn't do it for whatever reason. I'm grateful that i question myself and try to own my mistakes unlike him + i found rp and likeminded from whom knowledge i can benefit.
jcrpta 5y ago
It isn't my father I need to forgive; it's my grandfather.
He was the one who wasn't present when my dad was growing up; he was the one who let my dad grow up without a strong male role model; he was the one who realised far too late this his son was only a man because there wasn't a word for a grown man behaving like a young boy.
But he was earning a good living. It probably never even occurred to him he could be doing damage.
TheGweatandTewwible 5y ago
Yeah, I came to terms with that as well. When I began TRP, I was a little bitter that Dad hadn't been there to really discipline me when it counted, which was when I was little. I quickly realized that this is ludicrous and felt guilty. He did the best that he could with the remaining time he had working 10+ hours in a pharmacy plant. He's one of the hardest working men I know and in return, he gets an incredibly nagging wife (love Mom to death but it is what it is lol).
It absolutely broke my heart when Dad became extremely depressed because I knew he wanted something else with his life (who doesn't?) and I was afraid he was contemplating suicide. We never talked much or opened up to each other but one day we decided to go to the movies and afterwards we had a heart to heart. Now he's a lot happier and a lot more open. He has never denied me anything and has given me a bed, food and a roof. I realize I'm luckier than most and I can't thank Dad enough for that.
Good post, OP, got a bit teary-eyed writing this lol
LastRevision 5y ago
Thank you, brother.
19abto 5y ago
Longtime lurker on this subreddit. This subreddit has helped me put A LOT of different things into perspective in my life, and I’m immensely appreciative of it. However, with Father’s Day less than a few hours away, as a 28M still to this day I’m torn between how I perceive my dad as a parent. Hopefully some fellow red-pill’ers can chime in their view.
My dad went leaps and bounds to keep our labour-intensive family business thriving, then barely afloat, then doing well again, for over 25 years. Always making sure we had decent food in the house/could go to quality restaurants every now and then. Growing up in my household, I can’t recall one day where I didn’t have access to quality food. However, he drank a fuck ton of alcohol, was verbally and physically abusive, and just flat out intimidating. This I do not hold too harshly against him, because for what it’s worth it did teach me discipline in certain areas of my life, and I feel it contributed to giving me a natural/strong instinctual sense of being able to do the right thing whenever I feel pressure in situations (in addition, I did some stupid shit as a kid that probably caused me to deserve a beating at times). What fucks me up the most though, to this day, is that up until I got kicked outta the house at 19, around 3-8 times a month I was being sexually molested by him. I knew from the first time I can recall experiencing it at 5 years old that, even though I couldn’t put it into words at the time, something was very wrong and I was being gravely violated...while simultaneously feeling completely powerless to do anything about it. Even though every time after it was done I tried to convince myself that it was a normal thing to experience, and basically say to myself “it’s not that big of a deal”, the reality is that I badly wanted to speak up against it but was too scared to do so. Still to this day I beat myself up over the fact that I was such a pussy at that age to not say anything. I did speak to him about it around 5 years ago, and despite him somewhat downplaying it, he did apologize for it. Despite this, my feelings of resentment towards him for those years of the sexual abuse still continue to linger in me. Perhaps the alcohol had something to do with him doing it - such as impairing his basic judgements- but I just feel like when you do that to a child, you’re basically saying you don’t give a fuck if they grow up fucked up mentally and never feel like a true man.
For what it means to be a man, I do see my dad as an alpha - always swiftly finds solutions to problems, has respect from other family members/friends/my mom, is giving to others, access to resources, etc. - however as a PARENT and for his actions as a parent, I can’t help but view a lot of the shit he’s done as flat out unforgivable injustices. What’s even more odd is that in recent years he’s been encouraging to me, saying I’m his pride/his strength, telling others I’m gonna be something big, blah blah blah, yet to me it goes in one ear and out the other coming from him because I can’t help but just see what he did as a parent when I think of him (in addition, he was NEVER encouraging to me growing up like he is in recent years, so naturally I think he’s being fake/just saying it so it ‘makes’ him look good as a parent).
As of today, I haven’t spoken to him since last November, didn’t wish him happy birthday last month. Despite him trying to call me on and off within the time frame since. I’m torn between letting the past be the past and allowing him to be a part of my life for the reason that life is too short, versus my belief that accepting him around my life would cause me to continuously relive those past abuses/childhood memories and continuously make me feel like less of a man.
I’ve also tried the therapist/counselling route- without any luck.
I’ve been trying to make sense of this whole thing for years. Am I being a beta? Am I giving too much power to someone, and some past events, that are only gonna screw me over in the long run? Water under the bridge?
Thanks
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19abto 5y ago
I appreciate you mentioning your thoughts. Sorry that you went through that kind of abuse as well. All the best to you on your red-pill/life journey ✊
Protocol_Apollo 5y ago
It’s important to remember we shouldn’t direct our anger out to our parents.
Of course they couldn’t teach us this.
They came from a different time, how could they teach us for something they never faced?
Times changed, and we got the internet but you know what else we got?
Hindsight.
We got hindsight and that’s what let us participate as reactionary to this post modernism.
Inside-Party 5y ago
Yeah, it's shocking when you one day realize they're just people too.
ilikeoranges73826151 5y ago
Why do you have to forgive your father? What if he was a genuine, narcissist piece of shit?
I don’t want to go on a “woe is me, feel bad for me” rant. But I can’t really forgive my dad under the circumstances. I just accepted what happened and moved on.
My dad would put his girlfriends over me when I was a kid, and let them walk all over me. He never showed up to my custody hearing in court, so my mom got full privileges. He never called me, never sent me Christmas gifts, never talked to me on my birthday. The few times I did see him, he was playing World of Warcraft for 12 hours a day and barely talking to me except when he left the computer.
I just lived with him recently. I was 20-21. He lost his job 6 months into me living with him. Stopped paying rent and any bills whatsoever, which led to me working 60 hours a week at 2 fast food places to pay every bill and have no money leftover to save because it all went to bills, meanwhile, he sat at home on the couch doing nothing. i couldn’t save up money for myself, let alone go to college because of the situation I was in. He was literally holding my life hostage. He never thanked me once. All he told me was “don’t expect me to pay you back.” He even saw me walking back home from work in the snow and it was 4 degrees out, and he just kept driving, then he told me “hey I saw you walking earlier!” Thanks for the ride douchebag.
He’d be angry or upset at something and I’d try to ask him what’s wrong, which would lead to him freaking out on me for simply asking him a question. I tried to help and console him and instead I got shit on. Everything I ever did to try and be nice to him he shat on me for it. It genuinely confused me and he’s the only person I’ve ever met who has been like that. It’s even worse considering he’s mean like that to his own child but not to random people.
some of us have genuine piece of shit fathers/families that had fuck all to do with raising us. I find it hard to forgive. I grew a LOT from it and holy shit did I become a man super fast, and became way more mature than most guys my age (22) but can any of the older gentlemen here give me some advice with that? is it worth forgiving them? i merely just accepted the fact, and moved on.
vwowv 5y ago
Fuck him. Don't forgive him for his sake, forgive him for your sanity. Better yet, forget him. I've heard people say I forgive, but don't forget. For me it's reverse, I can not forgive, but I can forget. My forgiveness is only after I forget and it crosses my mind eventually. I forgive knowing people are trapped in their habits and mental structures. That's about the only forgive I'm capable of.
If you turn things upside down and look at them, I'll slap you in the face by saying you are lucky to have figured that out at 22. You know now you don't need to know your dad. You do have to watch 'functional families' on tv, and in ads that preach preach preach over and over and over the value of family over anything else, any money, anything material. We all want to believe that. So movies, shows, ads tap in to that. If you don't have a good family, it's ok, you can be a hell of a great man if you are capable of letting go of this bullshit one size fits all notion of a family.
You are lucky compared to me. I was almost 50 when my mom died. She was kind of nuts and I assumed all my vacant siblings were they way they were because we all spent our lives dealing with her. After she died I went through the realization that all my siblings actually were truly vacant inhuman people. It was another form of being redpilled. All my life I was stuck between believing it was my mom or somehow was me. That was the first day of my life in many many ways. I had discovered redpill a few years before that. Now I live 99% free of all my family confusion. I will not ever spend any time with any of my siblings ever again, and it feels so good because it's not based on passive aggressive thoughts, or dramatic feeling, or being in denial. I proudly will never spend time with any of them again because that is my choice. I've ever since felt on top of the world in this area of my life.
Fuck your father, just do it in a way that you are letting go instead of obsessing. Forgive him to throw away the baggage and also walk away from him.
I feel I succeed because I already lived far away from any of them, so I only had to get past the mental aspect. If any of them lived near me I'm pretty sure I'd have to move far enough away that none of them were in my territory before I could have moved on.
Another thing I did is instead of announcing to any of my siblings I was no longer interested in them in my life, I waited till they approached me. Only two of the four have. One invited me to lunch to establish himself dominate over me one last time after my mothers death. I'm the youngest. I simply told him I wasn't interested and was moving on. That was the complete phone call. Before that said brother emailed me that my sister wanted to know if it was ok to contact me. She is the hustler of the family, always trying to hustle everybody. I always was in denial of that and attributed her behavior to trama. I simply replied with 'full no contact'. By waiting for them to reach me, I basically had last word and it helped me rebuild easier.
I'm now far happier than I've ever been in my life. I rarely have any memories of what I used to semi-routinely obsess over 'wondering what I could do', 'what my responsibilities were', my need 'to be sure I was not in denial' (I wasn't. I was in denial I wasn't in denial up till then).
If you do it in a way that memories rarely echo back to you, you've won, you are free for the first day of your life. You don't get rid of your bad family by shooting your pistols in to the air. You do it like the olympic sport 'Curling' You let it slide away gracefully, it slides away and is not coming back.
​
Unfortunately, this turned in to a book.
phaeth0n 5y ago
My mom wanted to be a stay at home mom, and my dad wanted to be a stay at home dad, so he quit his high-paying job and tried to get my mom to pay for everything. She didn't like that so she threatened divorce and eventually followed through. During that time he inflicted as much damage upon me as he possibly could before up and leaving to move back in with his other ex-wife, who he also had a kid with, in order to leech off of her. I was 5 at the time, and suffice to say, did not know how to handle these goings-on, so I developed a number of unhealthy and irrational coping mechanisms at the time that have, let's say, persisted into adulthood.
My father is the single most evil human being I've ever met. He's not "flawed", he's not "misunderstood", and I don't give a flying fuck what his childhood was like. He is a parasitic, sociopathic narcissist.
I have forgiven my father. I haven't told him such over any method of communication or said so publicly in any way that can be easily connected to me. I haven't contacted him in 16 years - half of my life ago. I don't need to and I will never need to.
Forgiveness doesn't make what they did right. Forgiveness doesn't mean you forget who or what they are. Forgiveness doesn't mean you let them back in your life. Forgiveness just means you let go of your ability to punish someone for what they did.
To put it into perspective, my mother is also a narcissist, though not as bad. Growing up I experienced a textbook example of the golden child/scapegoat paradigm with my other older sister. The kindest thing I can say about my mother's parenting is that she did not intentionally try to harm me. I have forgiven her too, and have told her as such.
But I don't keep in touch with her either. I would otherwise, and I've tried multiple times, but every single time thus far she has said or done something to me that I find intolerable, so I stop talking to her. If she eventually gets the message - because you have to teach the people in your life how to treat you - we can be friends, but not a moment sooner.
I am 100% sure that she feels that I am still punishing her, and that the nature of my forgiveness never landed on her. That is her responsibility as someone who naturally seeks victimhood and shirks responsibility. I am not going to coddle her and tell her I really, definitely, double-pinky-winky-promise forgave her, she's a fucking adult. I am continually in a state of moving on with my life.
Forgiveness isn't for them. It's for you. By giving up your ability to continue punishing someone for something, you free up your mind to have more room to address what you need to address for your life in the world. That's all it means. You don't have to forgive anyone, but I would highly recommend it.
If you find your mind running over and over about how horrible someone is, you need to forgive that person, because your mind needs to run over and over about something that's actually productive and moves you into the future. The vindictive part of me had a hard time accepting forgiveness, my mind kept running over and over about my mom after I told her I forgave her, as if to say "I can't believe you did that! Look at all this!" But I eventually let it all go, with patience and determination. Neither of my parents, nor any of their actions, bother me anymore, and let me tell you, it is the biggest relief and weight off my back I have ever felt in my life.
I still have a lot to work on. In the time since learning this, I finally graduated college with a bachelor's in Computer Science (at 32) and have started working as a software engineer doing the "for someone else" version of my dream job. My real dream job is to start my own business, which I'm slowly working towards. So, I still have a lot to work on, but learning the nature of forgiveness and exercising it isn't something I will ever regret.
thetotalpackage7 5y ago
Accept that you got dealt a bad hand with your dad compared to many, but not all. Some dads were even worse. There must have been some things he’s done for you that you are happy with, no?
Mines not perfect either. I’ve received more hugs from friends dads whom I’ve known for two years that my own dad, whose given me zero that I can remember. But I guess it’s just his way. I can’t change him. He gave me life, a home and some good advice. It is what it is.
25russianbear25 5y ago
Thats understandable. I dont think anyone will try to defend your dad and say he deserves forgiveness. I think do whats better for your mental health.
Forgiveness or not, just dont dwell on it
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YeOldeDingusKhan 5y ago
Theoretically you don’t need to forgive anyone.
However, I was in a similar boat as you. I had a father who was an alcoholic and an abuser. It took me a long time to realize that the pain he inflicted on me was simply the pain he had experienced. He didn’t have the modern resources or mental health services to deal with it. I’m not making excuses for his behavior but I let it go in order to grow as a man and be what he couldn’t be.
That said, we don’t speak. He will likely never admit responsibility for what he did. Forgiveness for me is no longer possessing the need to hear it from him. All the anger and confusion and resentment is gone; I feel bad for him and I’m grateful for the chance to learn from his mistakes.
ilikeoranges73826151 5y ago
ill take what you said into consideration for my own situation. I think the same way. He didn’t have the resources of knowledge to better himself. I do feel bad for him...
Pristine-Mechanic 5y ago
jesse lee peterson says the same. forgive your mother and father to get rid of their emotional baggage
supersoup- 5y ago
Just talked to my dad for almost 2 hours about life, women and purpose then I saw this. Everything happens for a reason!
vwowv 5y ago
No. Life is chuck full of coincidences and selective memories. Be thankful, but skip believing in voodoo. Coincidences do make things more memorable.
Popeman79 5y ago
I (very respectfully) disagree. Life is both completely rational, and subject to forces we don't know about. A couple of anecdotal experiences:
when there is a full moon I can't sleep. I always find out the day after that it was a full moon
Life is twofold: magic and logical. The mistake is only focusing on one aspect.
Edit: I just saw your other response so I guess we agree
bbgdog21 5y ago
life is also beautiful if you embrace the magic that's literally all around you
Phoenixtorment 5y ago
You can't be serious about this.. please don't be. You have the TRP endorsed tag.
bbgdog21 5y ago
I've never typed that out in my life, dunno what you're reading
vwowv 5y ago
I agree, but many things people accept as magic I don't/aren't, while the real magic is systematically overlooked. IMO you can't embrace the real magic around you if you are distracted by crediting magic things like coincidences. We are splitting hairs at this point.
bbgdog21 5y ago
Only difference in magic or otherwise is how you see it. I'd rather look through the eyes of wonder. Who's to say where we draw the line, explainable doesn't mean its not magic.
semenatics I guess
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Inside-Party 5y ago
I'm seeing a lot of alcohol abuse as a theme in the comments. I don't have any kids, but it's getting me thinking about my own relationship with alcohol. I wonder if I gave it up if I'd miss it.
fuckingjoggers 5y ago
i gave it up for 10 years now. i don't miss it. best part is, if i do end up drinking on a very rare occasion, that 1 beer fucks my shit up lol
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abbolutelythewootley 5y ago
I’m in the middle of understanding it was necessary to forgive my father, and I have had multiple times where I’ve forgiven him to his face, and I’ve done it within myself. But it’s not necessary to then take the forgiveness and try to salvage a relationship that will never change. I’m only burning myself again after making these steps in levels of awareness.
There is a belief driving me that once I forgive, it’s then time to mend and rehabilitate. Just because I love the guy and accept and love him for what he has done and who he is, doesn’t mean a relationship with him going forward is going to help benefit my own personal growth.
Don’t forgive and forget, or forgive and never forget. Just forgive, and recognize when to keep moving on.
TwentyDubya2 5y ago
I’d venture to guess everyone here has their daddy issues, I certainly do. I like your posts and appreciate this one, it put things into perspective simply in a way I hadn’t thought of before.
And maybe to the rest of us, we can take a lesson. Forgiving your father and his failure no matter how badly, is for YOU. If you’re not speaking to him, or he’s dead, it doesn’t matter. All that matters if you’ve made peace with yourself and let go to be someone bigger, better and more accomplished.
FrenCan316 5y ago
My father is a very flawed man, and he always rubbed me the wrong way growing up. Today I am happy to say I have become a proper man with the help of some hard learned lessons, good male role models and from TRP. I now have a lot of respect for my father and the challenges in his life. He always lived in the shadow of my mother who was vastly more successful. And I see now that he was emasculated and didn't know any better because his generation was awkwardly stuck in the middle of a patriarchal society and the true sexual/social liberation of women. He was always a compassionate man who loved me very much but didn't know how to show it. He also stands to me as an example of the kind of man I don't want to become.
Don't forget tomorrow is fathers day. As men we need to help raise up and appreciate other men, because no one else will. Don't forget to give your old man a call or visit.
srtor 5y ago
It is not only the women in the family, like in your case. It is the society, it it the changing norms in laws, in work place - everything was to emasculate the men. Thus the struggle they went through was enormous with absolutely no support system.
Nowadays we have social forums or pages where we can at least vent. These men had no chance.
I totally agree, for all of us, if the father is still alive, give a call, go beyond any differences of the past and look for a better future.
messicena10 5y ago
This is exactly what my experience has been
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FrenCan316 5y ago
I read it about a year ago. Can't remember exact parts that you're referencing but my dad is definitely a Nice Guy who internalizes a lot of anger (then blows up periodically) and uses covert contracts.
caf_app 5y ago
I think it's very important that if a man is with a woman and feels emasculated by her success he should leave her and find a woman or women who look up to him in his ability. I feel that this crucial for men to feel self confident and become more effective in the world.
FrenCan316 5y ago
Thank you for this excellent advice, I'll be sure to pass it on to my mom so she divorces my father.
caf_app 5y ago
It is excellent advice. You'd rather your father live in the shadow of his wife and feel emasculated? The best thing your dad could do is divorce your mom and go it alone. It's never too late to find out who you are and what you could be come. That goes for every man alive. Maybe your soft dad wore off on you more than you think?
FrenCan316 5y ago
Why would he downgrade from a high value woman when he could just work harder to make something of himself? It's not a zero sum game. Crab bucket mentality.
caf_app 5y ago
If your idea of a high value woman is one that makes more money than you, takes care of you financially and makes you feel emasculated, then I've got news for you. What are you even doing in TRP?
juddshanks 5y ago
It is really interesting reading everyone's different stories.
Everyone red pills for different reasons, but I reckon one of the best reasons is to ensure if you're ever a dad yourself, you do it right.
If you're strong, confident and have self respect, you're going to do a way better job of parenting your kids. You're going to be a better provider, you're going to have a stronger relationship with your spouse and you're going to be able to parent your child by leading through example rather than resorting to violence or abdicating responsibility.
.
NoFapCZ 5y ago
I want to share something that I realized this year.
My dad died when I was ten(I am 26 now). He was a good man and very hard working. But he let himself get dragged by circumstances, he drank a lot and did not spend much time with me when he was alive, almost zero. And that made me very sad. And he also kicked the shit out of me, a lot.
I still miss him to this day and I wish I could speak to him at least once, I wasn't able to say goodbye, I just cried like a little bitch when his friend drove him to our home because he got another heart attack. He died, doctors were able to bring him back, drove him to a hospital where he died after a couple of days, at least peacefully, in sleep.
So I grew up without a role model and had to figure out everything myself. It was pretty tough sometimes, the biggest issue I am facing is that I just cannot connect with my male friends, I have no problem with women, but when I see other guys having deep relationships with their buddies I kinda envy them because I really don't know how to do it.
But despite all of that I wanted to say that I think I am better of without him. I think that if I had his influence I would be better at talking and connecting with guys but other than that, his presence would do more harm than good. The fact that he left me in all this shit alone, made me tough and self-reliant because I had no other choice.
So, dad, I forgive you for leaving me so early, you don't own me anything. You brought me to this world, rest is up to me.
LastRevision 5y ago
Thank you for sharing, my friend.
555WeWolf 5y ago
I find this hard to do since my fathers problem isn't that he was something like blue pilled in terms of intersexual dynamics, but with life mostly regarding money and finances. All my life as I've known him he has had a strong frame, he doesn't take shit from anyone, like at all, sometimes to the point where he would get angry even tho he has nothing of it and it would be wiser to let it go and move on with your life.
He has been unemployed for almost a decade (lost his job because the government took over the company he was working at and it basically went to shit), tried to make some money fixing cars since this is his hobby but could never be accounted for anything. Lost a lost of money which my mother and his in laws gave him so he could start the car business.
Today even tho my mother and father are still together that marriage a is stereotypical toxic and sexless marriage (sexless for a couple of years already). My mother doesn't have almost any respect since for the last 30 years he couldn't be accountable and provide for the family while she has provided for both me and my sister growing up for the little that we could have. I think that the only reason she hasn't divorced him already is because my mother comes from an extremely traditional and religious family.
I dare say that my fathers lack of providing, especially in my late teens has directly had a negative effect on almost every aspect of my life (for example i'm currently 23 and still don't have a drivers licence because we could never afford it).
Do not get me wrong i do not hold an active grudge, i have learned to live with the situation and looking to better my life everyday, in fact i finally landed a job in my field a few months ago and things are looking good in terms of me getting my life in order but i don't think that i will ever be able to simply "forgive". It is something that will always be there and the only thing i can do is just not pay attention to it and live my life.
I apologize for this rant but honestly it did feel a little better getting this out.
theeagleeye7 5y ago
But... How about the fact that he became father when he was not ready? How about he tried to impose his insecurities and his lack of self respect on me when inwas growing up? How about he made me black sheep of family? How about he didn't let me have any friends when I was growing up, attacked me viciously when he became aware of any of female friends?
It cut me off from other people. I developed difficulty trusting people, having friends, developing relationships. I grew up to become loner and it's that way since. It's not easy my friend.
finsnfeathers 5y ago
My father always chose my step mom over me. She was verbally abusive to me since she was the other woman my dad was seeing when he was married to my mother. I went to my grandparents about my nasty stepmom when my dad proposed to her. I always thought I was the problem growing up. It destroyed my confidence in all social environments.
My dad loved me when I was a kid but when I became a difficult teenager he never tried, like to do anything. Now that I’m an adult and dated mothers and seen my friends become parents etc. I can’t believe how my dad could choose pussy over me and abusive pussy who always talked shit about his only child. Idk if I can ever forgive him for that...
pacjax 5y ago
whats the point in forgiving him?
fuckingjoggers 5y ago
why does it show as "removed"? was it removed?
GraveyardZombie 5y ago
What about if you never knew your father and your mother never told you about him so you gave up and lived your life but sometimes wonder? Is it worth finding the answers or its better to just keep going with your life?
noothersinvolved 5y ago
This may be true of some men. But many fathers were not like this. My father was selfish and did what he wanted, to the detriment of the rest of us.
I still recognise the need to forgive my father though. I don’t like him but I accept that he is not a bad person. He’s just confused and trying to do the best that he can, like most of us. What I find difficult is that I can forgive him in abstract. I no longer spend time retreading old ground in my head. I no longer feel resentment towards him. But I just don’t enjoy his company. He’s a very difficult man to spend time with.
I know I need to reach another level of acceptance. Another level of detachment so that I can appreciate him for the qualities he does have.
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caf_app 5y ago
I wouldn't worry too much about forgiveness when you're still in that person's space daily. Forgivness can come when you're able to see how their negative actions, even if they made you suffer, weren't not intentional but due to their own fucked up life. And they were possibly harming you because of the own pain they had to live through. It doesn't justify their actions, but you can see them more as a human who is suffering themselves, rather than strictly malevolent.
noothersinvolved 5y ago
I try to understand that he was just doing the best he could with the tools he had. He had shitty parents and was a single child brought up in a time when people didn’t show much emotion. Like I said, he’s not a bad person. He’s just confused about what his priorities should have been. And he is stuck in cognitive dissonance. He’s unable to be honest with himself now to recognise this truth. So he has doubled down on his selfishness as way to shore up the justifications he’s made for the last fifty years.
Just as he is deeply flawed, so am I. I would like forgiveness for the things I shouldn’t have done in my past. I think I deserve forgiveness. And so does he.
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noothersinvolved 5y ago
Some people don’t have the ability to self critique. It takes courage to look at one’s behaviour and acknowledge where we fall short and need improvement.
Also, strange as it may see, some people have no internal monologue. They just don’t think beyond reacting to whatever is in front of them. They don’t reflect on the past or project into the future. Not with any depth anyway.
D_Underscore 5y ago
I’ve heard of this before but it is something I’ve overlooked when confronting people. I take a lot of time throughout my day self reflecting on bettering myself and could not fathom how others do not. I completely forgot some people just do not have an inner monologue to help cope with decision making.
SKRedPill 5y ago
You can't forgive anyone without dissolving your own past traumas in the present.
Forgiveness is really about healing oneself and making peace with the past.
adam-l Senior Endorsed 5y ago
I have never understood this kind of discussion about forgiveness in general. That's probably because I am not religious. For me, forgiveness has to do with two things: 1) what they did, and 2} did they ask for forgiveness?
caf_app 5y ago
Forgiveness is more about seeing the perpetrator as a person who underwent trauma themselves and is choosing to unleash their pain onto others, rather than a person who hurts other simply out of a malevolent, evil spirit. In this way they become a person who is suffering, just like you. This perspective basically releases their hold on you. It turns the world from good vs evil, perpetrator vs victim into humans hurting humans. And some humans choose to understand their pain and some choose to multiply it and take it out on others. I believe that is the actual intended definition of evil.
noothersinvolved 5y ago
You’ve got it back to front. Forgiveness Is not for the other person. You forgive other people for yourself.
If you hold onto resentment it’s like drinking poison and expecting the other person to die.
Once you forgive that person, the space they occupy in your mind becomes free again.
Have you ever found yourself retreading old situations where you felt that someone did you wrong? Replaying the injustice of the situation. That feeling of anger and bitterness.
Once you forgive that person, whether they ask for it or not, then you can move toward letting that resentment shift.
It’s not a religious thing. It’s a spiritual thing.
D_Underscore 5y ago
This will make it easier to forgive in the future and moving forward. Thank you for this.
SKRedPill 5y ago
Let's just say you decide to forgive someone -- what happens anyway? Your memories and emotions will still haunt you. What has been done cannot be undone. Besides, it's illogical that anyone can do what they want and just get pardoned with a word. You can forgive, but you can't forget.
Ultimately its you who suffers. There is no point in letting yourself suffer more than you already have. So forgiveness to me is not possible without getting out of the grip of one's past or the grip others continue to have in your subconscious long after they might have even passed away. That has to be dissolved. That's the only way it makes sense to me.
adam-l Senior Endorsed 5y ago
So give me a concrete example, that I may begin to understand. There is a famous writer that his father used to beat him up so hard when he was a kid, that was left impotent. How would he go about forgiving him?
SKRedPill 5y ago
It is not about really forgiving another person, that's what I've been saying twice now. It's about coming to terms and acceptance with your own life. Forcing yourself to forgive someone else doesn't work. What's more important is getting past your own grief. The best forgiveness is doing the best you can to help yourself get unstuck.
For me, I do not face the issue of forgiving my ex for example - I've never even considered it. That's lip service compared to what I've done for myself since then after coming to this place. I won't deny that my past does influence me to an extent even now, but I'm not trapped in it nor do I need to drink or do drugs or do some stupid shit like plotting to killing myself to cope with it. One fine day I just realized I had a choice to either rebuild or let myself go down the slippery slope. I refused to go downhill.
That's making quite the peace with my past.
dauntlessmax 5y ago
I like this post man, and I’m happy to be a part of this community.
Unzipthosegenes_04 5y ago
My Dad passed away two years ago. He had a serious neurological disorder that was destroying his mind. The man that raised me was no longer the same person. He had flashes of his old self, but they were short and infrequent. I remember it was a Wednesday afternoon, and he hugged me and told me he loved me. The next morning he was dead, via a 9mm. I remember getting the call at work from my hysterical mother telling me I needed to leave work and come home immediately.
I don’t blame him for what he did. Losing your mind must be dreadfully terrifying, having the thing that makes you “you” slowly stripped away, piece by piece, until you’re just a husk waltzing around.
My Dad was a good man, and in retrospect (after reading this piece), I realise he did the best he could. We were always close, and I’m beyond grateful for what he gave me (food, shelter, advice). He always believed in me, and I suspect that’s why I usually bet on myself in most situations. It was difficult typing this on Father‘s day, but it was rather cathartic. Great article and thanks for posting.
redpillcad 5y ago
Good post.
You can also forgive yourself for any emotions, anger, frustration that come up when pondering whether to forgive your father.
Let it rise up, sit with it quietly without judging yourself for having these feelings. Dont resist and just let it happen thoughtlessly.
peacemakerzzz 5y ago
I grew up in the perspective of my mother, since my parents are separated. I never knew what a father should be like as a man. While growing up without the presence of a father’s social responsibility, he did provide everything I needed: a decent shelter, food, etc. While we were never close in my years growing up, he was there, just in a different language of love.
I came to despise him for not being there emotionally, but I learned that a good man is there even when his sons do not appreciate his efforts.
We never talk in the personal sense of rapport building, but I learned that there are different unspoken languages to show support and value. “Man is as man does”. Actions speak louder than words.
Unlike most father-son relationships where emotional investments are apparent, though it saddens me that we never reached that point, I am glad to have a father that is supportive despite familial issues in the household. I may not say it to him in person, typing this is an outlet in itself, the best way to give back to all those efforts is to live on with his (last) name and be a better man than him.
Things aren’t as perfect as they seem, yet our parents are there even if we do not appreciate it. Happy Father’s Day. Everything they’ve come to be is for us to learn how to be a Man.
I can only imagine the many sacrifices my old man had to endure to bring up a bastard like me to a prestigious environment.
johncillo 5y ago
What to do when your father is a bad person? When he wants to destroy your mother through their children, with no signs of empathy. And until this day he doesn’t regret the domestic violence, the abandonment and the betrayal done to us. What to do then? He’s your father, you can’t remove him, you will be united, you don’t have control over that. However, I think you have control over you, accepting you had a bad person as a father is the first step to his redemption in your head.
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throwwayhubu 5y ago
There is a theory out there that Christianity is just a huge allegory around forgiving your dad and that Jesus is just a dude with daddy issues. I don't buy that, but it takes a lot from a guy to forgive his dad even though the sins of our fathers are not that pernicious.
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saintraker 5y ago
I work in the construction industry as a plumber. Virtually no women are plumbers( we have 2 on the books in our local) a few months ago we were doing a water shutdown in a local hospital. Project manager (woman) and her intern(woman) were out the check up on us. We were in the process of hanging a 6” diameter x 20’ long piece of copper pipe (HEAVY) in the ceiling. The look on they’re faces . Only men could have done the task we did that night and they knew it even if they wouldn’t admit it. Happy Father’s Day gents!
keanu__reeds 5y ago
Those are some sweeping generalizations there
Greaterbird 5y ago
My father is an awesome man, and a good man. Always in control of himself. Can fix anything. Plays multiple instruments and speaks multiple languages effortlessly. Refuses to criticize his kids, because he'd rather encourage them to keep trying, but also cannot be crossed. He loves my mother dearly, while also having and old flame that still wants his attention after decades.
I 100% lucked out having him. He is selfless out of strength. I can't even think of a single negative thing to say about him. He's a worthy leader.
Bielzabutt 5y ago
Or a father can do nothing but knock down your self esteem, never try to teach you even the small time that he was around, make you feel the size of a crumb by stamping out any creativity, physically hurting you, gaslighting you, and being an all out psychopath.
Sometimes the best path is going your own way and NOT ever looking back.
FawnBrambles 5y ago
Sometimes I question myself as a man.
Then I come across tidbits of information like this that confirm what I've already acknowledged and accepted.
Then I know I'm on the path.
kyledontcare 5y ago
I was angry at my now deceased father for some years; but now being older myself I understand why he did some things like becoming an alcoholic and basically drinking himself to death and dying from a non-functioning liver. It was to get away from my mother. They had a horrible marriage and I couldn't see it then but I do now, she (my mother) never gave sex for years. So in response my father basically refused to work and support her and went back on the bottle. They both had the wrong response to difficulties in their marital relationship. And it cost them and me and my brother, big time. I forgive him, and understand him, and have learned from his mistakes.
555WeWolf 5y ago
You described my current situation in detail, only replace alcohol with food. Horrible marriage, father is obese because of all the food and a lot of health problems have starting coming out because of that. No providing from his part, my mother is the only one who has kept us alive for almost my whole life. Of course constant fighting and a toxic relationship follow this (it's so bad that literally the only reason i still haven't moved out is because i haven't yet switched to working full time instead of part).
But, i can not forgive him for this. I feel like he thinks that he is entitled to sex just because they have been in this marriage for so long, he always thinks that the world is doing him wrong and continues sitting on the couch watching reality TV. I simply can not forgive since i see him laying there everyday while i had to struggle with my studies in order to get a job in order to afford even the basic things i need in life, let alone live a happy one. Here on TRP we often talk about females hypergamys nature, in my fathers case i honestly approve it, a man first of all needs to have his shit together before he can expect a woman to respect him, only that my father thinks its the other way around which is why day by day even i am losing respect for him.
kyledontcare 5y ago
Well, you’re caught in the middle; he takes out his frustration with her on you and refuses to do things for her that she would want, like slimming down or helping you in some things. Here’s the thing though: Even if your father did a complete 180-turn, lost weight, got a regular job, dressed real spiffy, and so on, your mom probably wouldn’t care and still wouldn’t give him any love and sex on the regular. Women reason like this: “If I withheld sex and was able to get him to jump this high and do such and such, what else can I get by continuing to withhold sex and intimacy from him? Let’s find out.” And so it will never be enough for her. This is hypergamy. For a woman, too much is never enough. You should just move out as soon as possible and become as independent as possible without relying on them for anything. Forgive your dad; he's hurting and doesn't know what to do either and in a lot of pain. If you're married to a person you absolutely should do your dead level best to meet their sexual needs otherwise situations like yours and mine develop. Forgive, move forward, and dream of a better future without women. Never marry; never live with a woman; never make a baby with a woman. After you leave, don't be surprised to see your parents split up; bitterness and refusal to forgive and work together kills everything.
555WeWolf 5y ago
Totally agree with the mentality of "what else could he do" and that makes it look like there is no way out. But still i advocate this turn around for a mans overall well being, not just talking about my father specifically but anyone caught in this kind if situation. You do it for you, a thing that TRP preaches all the time. And with that you have a chance to potentially make some dread which yes it doesn't mean it will solve anything but it definitely has a higher chance than doing nothing.
darkstar1031 5y ago
"Our fathers were our models for God. If our fathers bailed, what does that say about God?"
wtf_ever_man 5y ago
Just saying,best post i have seen on here in the times that i have actually been looking. Good on OP.
I enjoy reading the commentors dad stories also. Good healthy out pouring here.
I talked to my dad some today. I think i am breaking down some walls with him to actually get to know the real him.
goingrandomgod 5y ago
A good man is subjective.
My father is a typical eastern europe macho who runs away from conflicts, has zero patience, is unproductive, lazy, an idiot, always angry and has a wife who pampers him like his mother.
I cannot remember him teaching me anything. It is true that I saw himself in myself and it disgusts me.
You say "that a boy will first get to know his father through the lens of his mother" which is funny since my father likes to tell me how I never respected him in my childhood and tells me in the same vein that it was my mothers fault.
Though I do forgive him for being how he is since he had his struggles and his negatives are only his insecurities projecting. In a way he is a good role model for how not to be a good role model from my perspective.
cglehosit 5y ago
Really needed to see this post today, thank you for the content!
My dad has worked 70+ hors between his full time professional job and the family small business his whole life until recently so my mom could stay home with the kids. He takes so much shit from my younger siblings and my mom ever since I moved out a decade ago, but he carries on. He has a bit of a problem with emotional regulation, but damn is he a respectable guy.
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Throaw4y69 5y ago
I really cannot forgive my father because he is a gambler and he brought undue stress unto my family. My mum is no angel but she scrimped and saved without her efforts we would probably be homeless as a family. I have a higher income and net worth than my father at 25. He's in his early fifties. He is a first gen immigrant but that's no excuse. The gambling is the cause of his lack of money.
noNooodleArms 5y ago
My situation was extreme. My mother was a man hating lesbian feminist junkie thieving pimp who ripped me away from everything that was good in Wyoming when I was 10 and took me down to that shithole called Tampa, FL.
I confronted my father man to man for having let that happen, and the pain that leapt to his face settled the matter. I saw immediately that if I was manipulative I could leverage deep, deep guilt. There's never been any reason to talk of the matter since, and it's at least 10 years gone by.
We will be talking about the insanity of the Tulsa rally soon, though. We won't agree, but we'll both revel in our disagreement.
TheGweatandTewwible 5y ago
That's sad to hear, man. Glad you're in good terms and that you found TRP
noNooodleArms 5y ago
Something he gave me was the strength to come out well on the other side.
I was always on the edge but I never did go into the abyss. I've done meth and coke like less than 20 times each, which is nothing, I mean nothing, in the grand scheme of things. I did fuck 5 of my mother's friends, but I haven't fucked a woman over 40 since I was a teenager. I plan on keeping it that way.
I managed to get a math degree in my early 40's, launched a great career, niche enough to run through retirement, and have been a regular at the Iron Church. Oh yeah, and hand drumming in the park in a place where live music won't happen this summer. Life is good.
Keep in mind, I'm the guy who popped a 19 y/o's cherry at 39. She probably cringes at 27, but at 19, she know exactly what she was doing and she didn't chose me for the project for nothing.
TheGweatandTewwible 5y ago
Lol good to hear man. If you'd like to send a brother some pointers on MILF game, I'm all ears. Been having some cravings, if you know what I mean
noNooodleArms 5y ago
Be young, hot, and useless. If you are, women who would vet the fuck out of me (unless they are married and traveling for work) will give it up to you with little effort. This is one place to play up the Player vibe. Most MILFs are in relationships (even if it's 'complicated') and the last thing they need is a clingy stalker.
As for me, I like my women like I like my Covid: 19, and easy to catch.
Shyrk 5y ago
My father was somewhat absent but was a fucking baller, I can’t even imagine what kind of daddy issue soyboy shit this post is supposed to represent.
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Shyrk 5y ago
lmao at the ninja edit, did it make you feel better?
Shyrk 5y ago
Tell me how daddy hurt you, princess.