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Should I contact the family I disowned?
I'm the youngest of 5 children and I was raised in a pretty dysfunctional family, 4 siblings, all drug addicts and heavy drinkers. Growing up all I remember is arguments, fighting (like actual fist fights, they even stabbed each other once) and chaos. I'm 36 now but when I was 18 I decided I needed to get the hell out of there and joined the military.

I did 6 years in the military and all that time I was made to feel guilty for "abandoning my family" and that I only cared about myself. None of my siblings worked (mum and dad died when I was 13) so nobody ever had money except for me, they were all on benefits. They'd hound me all the time to "lend" them money, which I did because I felt guilty, they'd never pay it back.

Even when I did sometimes ask for it back I was met with responses like "You have a job, do you even need to money, you can't wait until next month!!?". Over those 6 years I must have given out about £10,000. I remember once my sister asked me for money and I said no and she was like "you wanna get off your high horse you think you're better than us because you have money but you're not" etc.

Once I left the military, I decided I was going to slowly distance myself and move on with my life but I was scared, I mean once you go down that path it kind of feels like a one way street. So over the next couple of years I used to visit less, answer my phone less and pretend I didn't have money and was poor like them. But this was draining, the constant lying was so much effort.

Anyway almost 10 years ago today I decided I was going to disown them all. I legally changed my name, moved to another city, new email, new phone number, deleted all social media and didn't make new ones, literally a completely clean slate. Then I sent a letter to them explaining my decision to move on with my life and go my own separate way, that I loved them as family but I just needed to break free and live my life without feeling like I have an anchor attached to my feet dragging me down.

Since that day I've not heard a peep from them and I've never made any attempt to contact them, and honestly it's been incredible, amazing, my life is great in every single way it can be.

But part of me wants to contact them, not out of a desire to rekindle the family or because I regret my decision, but because I kind of feel guilty. I sometimes ask myself if they really deserved to be completely disowned. That they don't even know if I'm alive or not. That one of them may be seriously sick and they'll die without me visiting them in the hospital even once.

But at the same time I know my family members and in reality they probably don't even care that I've gone because they're probably too busy fighting about money trying to get their next fix.

The logical part of my brain is telling me that contacting them after 10 years will probably do more damage than just continuing the path of no contact. But the emotional part of my brain is questioning whether I was too harsh on them.

Have any of you made similar choices, what was your result?
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There are parts of my family I really wish I could have just shut off and left behind.
Then gone back and been better for it and in a better position to deal with them - very different circumstance to yourself though.

You did not do a bad thing.
They would drag you down with them.
The whole 'get off your high horse' shows they got a problem with you achieving something for yourself.

You made in my opinion the right choice to go your own way.
Going back to see them / contact them?

I really cannot nudge you one way or another, that is your decision and I am sorry I cannot make it for you.
If you make the decision to ghost people, stick with it. You did it for a reason.
Last edited by ṼṏẌṏḭḊ; 18 hours ago
I can barely keep together my family or fix the stuff we have going on so i dont think i am the right person to be giving advice. I will say that you should do whatever you feel is right, that's all we can do really. Whatever you decide i hope its a good outcome for you <3 :bluerune::luv:
Tough call. On one hand, the desire to see how they are doing, or not have regrets is probably a strong motivator. You and possibly them as well are all different people than you were a decade ago. Of course, that might not be a good thing or improvment for eveyone . Or maybe some of them got their lives together. The thing is you will never know without contact or at least some hard core snooping.

But the real question I would ask myself is if you don't find out, can you live with and deal with never knowing? Because that may only get worse as time goes, with less options to find out.

Or alternatively if your finances allow, hire someone to investigate them and see whats up before you move forward.
I'd check up on them every 5 years or so. If they clean up from the drug use and get stable, you could resume contact on a more steady basis. Your stuck in limbo, cut them off completely and you'll regret it, let them in and have them ruin your life is not a better option either.

Best you can really do is when you start your own family, try not to repeat the mistakes you saw growing up.
contact them for what?

no
>start reading
>suddenly hear the smiths
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9zNwZomsONA&list=RD9zNwZomsONA&start_radio=1
>sigh
Never "lend" a fiver to fam.
My story also is similar as tons of family got booted to the curb for being addicts and endless troublemakers.

Do not hit the rewind button! They have shown who they are and there is nothing more to it.

The other key is you gotta meet a steady stream of new people- think of it being like the military.

One of the biggest life wreckers- even before the age of internet shut-ins- was people were too loyal to family and the first person they meet they declare to be "The one!!!" and then it's a life of misery.

In sports they have both a draft and free agency every year. The players that can play stay and those can't get replaced with upgrades.

Think about it.
I disowned my younger sister at 33 because she was a alcoholic and drug addict and a petty thief and Hustled herself with sugar daddy's and hooked on the street for her drugs and alcohol, she was a mental and financial burden too, she passed away 15 years after I disowned her of a Fentanyl overdose at 48

I have no regrets disowning her because I'd be dead with her, I used to partake in her drug abuse when I was with her
Last edited by craigsters; 17 hours ago
Nah, sounds like you made the right call ghosting 'em.
Another fundamental about addicts and troublemakers:

They almost never get better.

Even if they quit the drugs or drinking they frequently just switch. Maybe it transfers to gambling or extreme religion or politics or or or... All they did was switch the addiction.

And the endlessly being broke, the neverending drama, the crisis of the day, the regular highs and lows DO NOT STOP.
God no, give the junkies the boot
I would say no; do not contact them. If you made that decision, it was for a reason, and if you did open that line of communication, I believe your chances of being hurt and feeling used are high.
I guess it's a sort of Survivor's guilt , but ha you got out and survived and your a better person for it and better off
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