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Sean Camara
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Should you go to your father’s funeral despite him distancing himself from you for 30 years? Social media divided on a heated debate
A British man's dilemma on whether he should go to his father's funeral has stirred a heated debate among social media users.
Can you see what the fuss is all about?
The man, who claimed to have not spoken to his father for 30 years, has taken to Reddit to share his predicament on whether he should bid his farewell to his late father, saying that he's torn because his father's funeral is going to be held 90 minutes away from him.
The man claimed that he has not been in touch with his deceased father for 30 years. Credit: Getty Images.
Reddit user @GeeGeeDub said that he has been in a "weird place" after learning of his father's death, admitting that it might be awkward and bizarre to listen to people tell their stories about how kind and generous his father had been to them given that he himself has not benefited from any of those said qualities.
He claimed that his father had never shown interest in knowing how he had been nor had he reached out to at least get to know his grandkids.
However, the Reddit user said that he might regret missing the funeral his whole life.
He wrote: "OK Reddit, I am in a weird place right now. I found out a couple of days ago that my father died last week. I've had no contact with him at all for 30+ years although I'm still in contact with my paternal grandmother and my uncle."
"So far as I'm aware he has never shown an interest in my life or that of my own kids. As a family he is never discussed, proper British stiff upper lip an' all, and I've spent a lot of my adult life burying the fact that I feel a huge sense of abandonment by his lack of contact."
The man claimed that he only learned of his father's death through social media.
"'I've found through the powers of social media when his funeral is and it's only a 90-minute drive away. On the Facebook post, there are people saying what a lovely, loving and generous man he was. Traits I've certainly never benefited from," he penned.
"I've spent a long time blaming him for decisions he made when I was a kid and actions that he hasn't taken as time has moved on. But I am in a really strange place. I don't miss him because I never had him. But until Monday I always had the hope that one day he'd want to make contact and make the effort."
"If I don't go to the funeral will I regret it? If I go and have to sit through 25 minutes of people saying how great he was will it make me feel worse? I am normally a very reserved and controlled person, but if I go will I end up heckling and ruining it for everyone else there? Has anyone else been in a similar situation? What did you end up doing? How did it go for you?"
The man was torn whether he should attend his father’s funeral. Credit: Getty Images.
The Reddit community seemed to have divided opinions on the matter, with some arguing that he should not visit his father's funeral as the father clearly neglected him and has made it clear that he had cut his ties with him.
One user wrote: "I'd say don't go, you have your own life that you've made without him. You got to where you are without him, so what will hearing about him achieve for you?"
"You don't have the emotional attachment as 30 years would quell that but if there's a free buffet then maybe," another sarcastically added.
A third chimed in: "You don't need to go to a funeral to say goodbye especially if you were estranged. Going might make you feel awkward. I'd stay at home and say a quiet goodbye in private."
Others urged the man to go as his suspicions of him regretting not attending the funeral might hound him for the rest of his life.
One comment read: "You've achieved a lot without his support and you should be proud of that. You shouldn't concern yourself over what other people might think of him. If you think that other people would like you to be there and you are ok to be there then I would recommend you attend."
"Will there be relatives, even distant ones, that you'd be interested in seeing again and would probably be there?" one user asked.
"That would sway my decision. I think I would probably go, prepared to leave quickly if I felt like I needed to."
A third quipped: "Yes. Do it for you, not him. You probably won't regret going but you probably would regret not going."
How about you? What are your thoughts on this? Should the man attend the funeral or not?