Skip to content
Search AI Powered

Latest Stories

Guy Asks For Advice After Conducting A Paternity Test On His 12-Year-Old Son Behind His Wife's Back

Guy Asks For Advice After Conducting A Paternity Test On His 12-Year-Old Son Behind His Wife's Back
Peter Dazeley/Getty Images

A man asked the subReddit "relationship advice" for guidance on how to confront his wife over the shocking results of a paternity test on their 12 year-old son.

Posting under the username throwRA8507, the person identified themselves as a 34 year old married man.


He told the story of how he discovered his son wasn't his biological child.

The man started by explaining how he and his wife got together.

"A little back story before I get to the meat. My wife and I met when I was 20. We had a drunk hookup the first night we met. We continued seeing each other after that night. A few weeks later she found out she was pregnant. We stayed together and I proposed a few months later."

Giphy

He admitted to having doubts about the pregnancy's timing.

"I had doubts about her pregnancy lining up with our timeline but I never brought it up or discussed it. Not to mention I was in the military and deployed a few months later."

Even though he had doubts about getting married, he felt it was important for the baby's sake.

"My proposal weighed a lot on her carrying my child. I grew up in a home without a dad and never wanted that."

Giphy

Unfortunately, the marriage ended up not being that great.

But he has one reason for staying...

"Fast forward 12 years we are still married. Though it has been extremely volatile and rocky I've stayed together honestly because I could never part from my son. I can't let him grow up with an absent father. So I've made it work. Our marriage is dead outside of our child."

A chance meeting with an old friend led to new information about his wife.

"I ran into an old friend who I knew around the time I met my wife. He asked if I was still with her and I said yes. He mentioned how 'it was crazy I dated her and then you stole her from me!' I wasn't sure what he meant and asked him to elaborate. He said 'it's no big deal but I was seeing her up until that weekend you met her.'"

The man was once again filled with doubts about his wife... so he took action.

"I dropped it but inside my doubt and insecurities ran wild. I couldn't get it out of head. I broke down and bought a home DNA test kit and used it on my son and I without telling my wife."

Giphy

Turns out that his suspicions were true.

"The results came back today. He is not my son. 0% chance I am his biological father. I'm destroyed. My whole world is upside down. I'm just on autopilot at the moment. I don't know how to act or feel. I'm just a zombie right now."

But that didn't change how he felt about the child.

"One thing I know is no matter what he is my son. I've been by his side the moment he was born and will absolutely never abandon him. Absolutely nothing will change that."

What may change is how he wants to approach his marriage.

What I haven't decided is how if at all I bring it up to my wife. I feel like my whole marriage was a lie. I can't help but wonder if she knew. How do I confront her.

He stressed that despite everything, he doesn't want to hurt his wife.

Regardless that I'm not in love with her I still love her. This will crush her. This will absolutely devastate her. I don't know what to do. I plan on seeing a counselor/therapist ASAP. So many emotions and thoughts flooding my mind. Just need some help to bring me back down.

Overall, the man was very confused by this huge and potentially life changing realization, and wanted to see what others thought he should do about it.

Giphy

People on Reddit commended the man for not letting the paternity results ruin his relationship with his son.

User jillbowaggins commented:

"He didn't know any better than you did, you both grew up knowing each other as father and son, and DNA only changes that biologically. It doesn't change all the time you spent together, all the time you spent raising him, all the time he spent knowing you as his father and you are still that person and so is he. Family is so much more than blood and I'm glad you're on board with that."

BuilderCG wrote:

"'One thing I know is no matter what he is my son'."
"That's the single most important thing to remember as you move forward, regardless of what you do. As you've written, you've been there since the first day - more than the actual bio-Dad - and the results of test don't change the last 12 years of your life or the entire life of your son."

But people couldn't understand why he was still with his wife if the marriage was failing.

User k8tiebr0wn wrote:

"My first thoughts while reading this (before I even got to the part with the results of the DNA test) were that you should consider splitting up with your wife. From what it sounds like, you're not exactly happy with her. Life is too short. I think that the results of the DNA test are irrelevant."

They felt that it was better for them to separate than for the child to grow up with unhappily married parents.

User autumnals5 thought of their own childhood:

My parents split up when I was thirteen and I was so relieved when they did. I'd rather have a broken home than an unhappy home.

lookingforbeautybaby said their parents had the same mindset as the man:

"My parents had a dead marriage but refused to get a divorce until I turned 18 and moved out. I understood that they were trying to be nice, but the constant fighting and mind-games they played with each other kinda fucked me up mentally. Divorce may be what's best for your son."

Original poster throwRA8507 eventually updated the post to say he would consider everyone's advice and consider what to do next.

"I appreciate all the support and words of advice. Both good, bad and the bulls**t. I'm going to sit on this until I get my head right."

More from Trending

Pope Leo XIV; 2005 World Series
Andrea Staccioli/Insidefoto/Mondadori Portfolio via Getty Images

Someone Found A Video Of Pope Leo At The World Series In 2005—And It's Truly Wild

You've probably heard that the new pope Robert Prevost, named Pope Leo XIV, is a Chicagoan, raised primarily in the southern suburb of Dolton.

And as a Southsider (or adjacent to one, anyway), that means he's a huge fan of the Chicago White Sox.

Keep Reading Show less
Robert F. Kennedy Jr.
Andrew Harnik/Getty Images

RFK Jr. Blasted For Taking Grandkids To Swim In Sewage-Tainted Creek For Mother's Day

Sunday was Mother’s Day in the United States, so many families gathered to pay tribute to the moms in their lives.

People marked the occasion by attending church services, going out for Sunday brunch, gathering for family dinners, and violating national park regulations to go swimming in sewage tainted waterways.

Keep Reading Show less
Pope Leo XIV
Salvatore Laporta/KONTROLAB/LightRocket via Getty Images

Pope Leo's Brother Sparks Outrage Over Vile Posts About Nancy Pelosi And Parents Of Trans Kids

The brother of Robert Prevost, a Chicago-born Roman Catholic Augustine cleric who last week became the newly-elected Pope Leo XIV, is facing heated criticism after some of his older Facebook posts resurfaced and revealed that he'd shared a video calling Speaker Emerita Nancy Pelosi a "drunk c**nt" as well as a transphobic meme about transgender children.

For instance, in an April 23 post, Prevost claimed that former President Obama desired “the total destruction of our way of life” and aimed to turn the U.S. into a dictatorship, adding that it would be “a racist one on top of it.” He had previously pushed a conspiracy theory alleging that “OBAMA WAS A CIA ASSET, PUT IN PLACE TO DESTROY THE USA.”

Keep Reading Show less
Donald Trump; a street in Stockholm, Sweden
Anna Moneymaker/Getty Images; Pradeep Dambarage/NurPhoto via Getty Images

Stockholm Floored After Trump Administration Sends Letter Demanding They End DEI Programs

Swedish authorities in the capital of Stockholm criticized the Trump administration for sending a "bizarre" letter ordering that the city end its diversity, equity, and inclusion (DEI) programs.

The letter marked the latest step in President Donald Trump’s broader push to dismantle federal programs focused on diversity and inclusion—part of what he pledged in his inaugural address would be a campaign to stop attempts to “socially engineer race and gender into every aspect of public and private life.”

Keep Reading Show less
person using laptop computer and green stethoscope nearby
National Cancer Institute on Unsplash

Doctors Divulge The Medical Questions They Wish Their Friends Hadn't Asked Them

Some professions seem to inspire people to ask for advice or insight. Medicine is high—if not at the top—on that list.

Once people find out a person is a medical professional, they often ask for an impromptu diagnosis or treatment recommendations.

Keep Reading Show less