Grief is messy. Sometimes it comes in waves, other times it sneaks up during something as ordinary as grocery shopping. And in rare, heart-wrenching cases, grief comes with a strange final promise that leaves you second-guessing every choice you make afterward.
The Original Poster (OP) lost his wife, but not before she requested that he not date anyone after her. After six years of being a single parent, he finally dipped his toes back into dating, only to be accused by his daughter of betraying his late wife’s memory.
More info: Reddit
Promises made in moments of deep pain often carry a weight far heavier than intended
Image credits: freepik / Freepik (not the actual photo)
Six years ago, the author lost his wife after a short illness, but before passing, she told him jokingly not to date anyone else
Image credits: Express_Highway7696
Image credits: fabrikasimf / Freepik (not the actual photo)
He honored that unspoken request while raising his two daughters alone, only beginning to consider dating once they were grown
Image credits: Express_Highway7696
Image credits: EyeEm / Freepik (not the actual photo)
Through a support group, he connected with a widow and went on a few low-key dates, keeping it private at first
Image credits: Express_Highway7696
Image credits: freepik / Freepik(not the actual photo)
When his daughter discovered the relationship through a friend, she accused him of cheating and betraying her mother’s memory
Image credits: Express_Highway7696
With support from his sister-in-law and younger daughter, he spoke openly with his older daughter, who apologized and began to accept his need for companionship
Six years ago, the OP lost his wife after a short illness. The day before she passed away, she stated that if she passed, he wasn’t allowed to date. He laughed it off at the time and said he wouldn’t, but her sudden passing made the words stick. For years, he honored that “promise” without really meaning to, focusing entirely on raising his daughters.
By the time his youngest left for college, the loneliness had become undeniable. At 45, he longed for companionship, and since he had been in a support group for people who had suffered loss, he eventually connected with a woman who had also lost her spouse. They weren’t rushing into anything, just a few casual dates and conversations that seemed to help them both heal.
However, one night when he and the woman went to a restaurant, their server turned out to be a friend of his daughter. Soon after, his daughter called in fury, accusing him of dishonoring her mother’s memory. Though devastated by her reaction, he found comfort in his sister-in-law, who reassured him that nobody in the family saw him as betraying his late wife and that she would talk to the daughter.
In an update, the OP shared that he drove to meet his older daughter for breakfast on campus. They talked, laughed, cried, and remembered their mother together. He promised her he would never try to replace her mom and that any woman he dated would need to get along with both daughters.
Slowly, her anger softened, and she admitted her reaction was unreasonable, apologized for lashing out, and agreed it wasn’t fair to expect her father to remain alone forever. They even discussed going to therapy together during her school break to process the grief more deeply.
Image generated by Bored Panda using chatGPT
To better understand the emotional layers in stories like this OP’s, Bored Panda reached out to Christabell Madondo, a clinical psychologist, who explained that one of the most persistent myths about loss is that it runs on a timeline.
“One of the biggest misconceptions about grief is that it follows a neat, predictable timeline, and that after a certain amount of time, you’ll be over it and ready to move on,” she said, emphasizing that grief is something you learn to live alongside. She then added that love doesn’t have to be a zero-sum game as “opening yourself to new love doesn’t erase or replace the past.”
When asked why children often react so strongly to a surviving parent dating again, Madondo pointed to loyalty and fear. “Kids may see a new relationship as a sign that the surviving parent is forgetting or replacing the one who passed, which can feel like a betrayal of their memory,” she explained.
Beyond that, she noted that children often cling to stability while adults seek companionship to heal. A new relationship, then, can feel like one more unsettling change in an already fragile world.
We also asked how therapy or counseling might help families like this one, and according to Madondo, the value lies in creating a safe space. “A therapist might help the daughter put words to emotions she may not fully understand, like jealousy, fear of being forgotten, or anger at change, while also supporting the dad in balancing his own need for companionship with the daughter’s need for reassurance,” she told us.
Netizens pointed out that the wife’s last request was likely a joke made in the moment, and even if it wasn’t, it was an unfair burden to place on him. Do you think a spouse’s last request should be honored no matter what, or do you think there are limits? We would love to know your thoughts!
Netizens stressed that six years of grieving and raising his daughters alone showed deep devotion, and that he was doing nothing wrong
Follow Us