The Ukiah Daily Journal

Instagram dad doesn’t become instant father

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DEAR AMY >> My daughter recently located her biological father on Instagram. She is 25 years old.

She has reached out to him multiple times over the last several months to try and have a relationsh­ip with him and to meet her siblings.

He doesn’t seem very interested and doesn’t even keep in touch with her unless she makes contact first and sometimes even then he doesn’t respond.

Should she continue to try and have a relationsh­ip with him?

I have encouraged it just because of the sadness and loss that has occurred over the past year. I figured this is a great time to try to reconnect with family and form special bonds and relationsh­ips, but is it really worth it?

— A Concerned Mom

DEAR CONCERNED MOM >> I agree with you that this is a great time to “reconnect with family and form special bonds and relationsh­ips.” The kink in the plan, however, is to assume that a DNA parent who did not know of a child’s existence or has never had a reason to seek a relationsh­ip, might choose to do so now.

You don’t say if her biological father had any knowledge of her before these recent contacts, but I do wonder about your own judgment regarding the hopes you seem to have placed on her ability to quickly form a positive relationsh­ip with him.

Dads who father children and either don’t know about them or don’t claim and help to support and raise them, aren’t always eager to become an instant parent once they are found through DNA matching or on social media.

This man has other children (and perhaps a spouse), and it is possible that he is keeping this daughter’s existence under wraps until he can figure out how to tell his other family members. Or his other family members already know, and they are discouragi­ng contact because your daughter’s presence in their lives is disruptive.

Your daughter knows how to contact her father. You should neither encourage nor discourage this contact — but you must be there to patiently pick up the pieces when things don’t go the way she hopes. DEAR AMY >> I’m so disappoint­ed in your shaming response to “Blank Slate,” the mom who was terminatin­g her parental rights to her son.

Who are you to judge this parent?

— Upset

DEAR UPSET >> I’m not judging this mom; an actual judge is judging her.

Her parental rights are being terminated by a court because she abandoned her young child.

I affirmed her knowledge that this course of action was best for the child and gave her credit for both realizing and admitting that.

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