Never The Same: 45 Of The Darkest Family Secrets These People Found Out
InterviewEvery single person and every family has secrets. It’s inevitable. However, not all secrets are alike. Some of them are simple and straightforward, like who stole the pie while it was cooling on the windowsill. Others are deep and foreboding. The kind of stuff that can cause nightmares or even wreck entire families if the truth got out.
Redditor u/EgglessYolk ignited a very serious discussion on the internet after asking everyone to spill the tea about the family secrets that they only found out once they grew up. Scroll down for a big dose of reality and just how dark things can get when everyone finally decides to be honest about their family history.
We reached out to the author of the viral thread, Reddit user u/EgglessYolk, who was kind enough to share their thoughts on family secrets and how transparent relatives should be about them. You'll find Bored Panda's full interview the the OP as you scroll down.
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When i was a kid in the mid 80s my uncle got some serious braces and had to drink liquids only for a whilr
Only when I got older did I learn that he'd actually had his jaw wired after being tortured for information... had a gun put in the mouth and eventually his jaw shattered because he wasn't talking...
...He wasn't talking cos he didn't know anything.
Thank god northern ireland has moved on from those days.
Bored Panda was curious to get the thread author's thoughts on why the question they posed started such a massive discussion on Reddit. They were happy to share their take on why the topic resonated with so many online readers, pointing out that it's a relatable question.
"Reddit is quite a platform, covering all sorts of topics with people sharing their weird stories. In my own family, there are some secrets and drama, but nothing too outlandish," the OP opened up to us about the inspiration behind the question.
"I decided to ask Reddit about darker family secrets to see what would come up, and surprisingly, it gained a lot more attention than I anticipated!" they said.
Y’all’s stories are WILD! Mine is super tame:
When I was in my early 20s, I found an old photo of someone in a family album I didn’t recognize. When I asked my mom about it, she said, “Oh that’s your aunt Gloria.” Then she lowered her voice (even though we were alone) and added, “she’s a *NUDIST*.” Poor aunt Gloria, just wants to be a nudy-lady and everyone acts like she’s a leper.
I found out when I was in my early 30's that my mom hadn't only had 4 kids, but actually 6 but gave 2 up for adoption before I was born. Also, i was the last baby she had with some rando before she married my stepdad and she had intended to give me up for adoption, as well.
Silver lining? One of the babies she gave up contacted her a few years after I learned about this and now I have an awesome new brother!
We also asked the redditor how open families ought to be about their secrets, and how old someone ought to be to hear the real truth about their relatives.
"I reckon families should be quite open about their history. Sooner or later, those holes in the made-up stories meant to avoid the real secrets start to show," the author of the post, Reddit user u/EgglessYolk, told us.
"Especially when someone hits their twenties—that's when things start to click as you become more of an adult."
Circa 1994 My dad died(32) on Christmas Day. Instead of his family consoling my now single mother of 2, they decided it would be more appropriate to use their spare key to enter our house and clean out all his belongings while we were picking out a tombstone. All his tools, clothes, pictures (he was a model).
Thennnnn grandpa on dads side takes my mom to court while she’s mourning to try to prevent her from using his life insurance to raise us ( sister and I were 5 and 6 at the time). He wanted all the money to be set aside until we were 18. Judge pretty much threw his case out. Needless to say, my mom distanced herself from his side I don’t speak with them either. Found this out when I was like 20.
WHY THE NEIGHBORS MOVED: I was pretty young when this happened so the details won’t be perfect, but the story is otherwise true. I grew up in a coastal town and we had some neighbors whom I really liked. My parents were friends with them, their kids were roughly my age. Wonderful! We played together all the time. One day they very suddenly moved. I was a bit confused as there had been no clue that they were going. I remember some police cars and the moving vans weeks later, but that was it. My mother told me that the kids grandmother had become very ill ( the cops came to tell the family) and they left emergently to care for her and never came back. I was only about 5….. seemed legit. Many years later, as an adult, and long since moved away from that area… my parents and I were reminiscing over our old home. I mentioned that I wondered what ever happened to them. That’s when my mom told me the truth. The parents had gone out that night on a date and left the kids with a 14 yr old babysitter. When they returned home they found the sitter dead. Someone had broken into the home. My mom stated the cops think the sitter pretended to be the only one home to protect the kids. When the parents got home they checked the kids were safe and set them back to sleep. The police obviously immediately came. Once the kids were hard asleep the parents picked them up, put blankets over their heads, asked the cops to be silent as they walked them out, and took them out of the house. They gave the kids the same story my parents told me. Gramma was sick and they were going to live with her. Gramma dutifully played along with the ruse for several weeks until the parents could find a new home to live in. The kids were kept unaware of what had happened just mere feet from them as they didn’t want the kids to be forever terrified of it happening again. Not sure if the kids ever eventually figured out the truth of that one.
I knew my grandfather was a coal miner, and that he was really involved with the Union, but it wasn't til after he died that I found out just how much of a Union Man he was... if something needed blowing up or someone needed to not be breathing anymore, they called Gramps.
After he died, my brother remembers some men coming to visit Gran and giving her a lot of envelopes. She took off for a yearlong vacation in Europe after that.
Edit: for all the people saying my Gramps was a great man, thank you for the kind thoughts, but seeing something you think is cool on reddit is not the reality. He wasn't a good husband and he wasn't a great father to 3 of his daughters, although he loved my Momma very much, as well as me and my brothers and cousins.
Being a violent person for good reasons does not make you a good person. It just makes you a means to an end.
Meanwhile, the author also revealed their thoughts on transparency as a whole, and shared whether there are any family secrets that ought to remain, well, secret.
"To be honest, I don't think so," they explained that they're 100% set on transparency.
"I believe that all family secrets should see the light of day at some point, at least within the family circle. Of course, there might be some you wouldn't want outsiders prying into, but within the family, it's essential to eventually share them," they told Bored Panda.
"Over time, they can even turn into interesting stories for people to tell—you know, like on a Reddit thread or something."
My uncle was actually my cousin. He was kidnapped as an infant and when he was returned a year later, my aunt didn't want him back. My grandparents adopted him so he was legally my uncle.
Found out my Dad's mom was a lesbian and that my "Godmother" who lived with both my Grandfather and Grandmother was actually her lover. They slept in the same bed while my Grandfather had his own room. Growing up I had no idea, but as I got older I pieced it together... But I loved them all and still do (RIP).
That my grandma didn't lose her leg to cancer, she lost it because she got injured helping my grandpa fix the roof, and my grandpa was too cheap to have it fixed properly so he told the doctor to cut it off.
How open family members ought to be about secrets depends on a couple of things. First of all, you have to take into account whether the secret affects just you as an individual or the entire family as a whole. And secondly, it’s important to keep in mind the scope of the secret and the possible fallout from telling everyone about them.
For instance, if something tragic happened to a relative, it might be wise to keep the information under wraps, within a small group of people. Sharing something traumatic with a child may give them nightmares, especially if they don’t have the capacity to process the information (yet). So it may be wise to wait until everyone’s grown up until they’re told what happened to a beloved relative.
Meanwhile, keep in mind that secrecy and privacy are two very different things. Just because you’re close to someone does not mean that you have to tell them about every tiny little thing and thought that pops into your head. It’s fine to keep some things to yourself. Living with 100% honesty would be exhausting and might make people think that you have no filter or may be too blunt.
My parents took me to Disneyland for my 7th birthday. I recall landing, going to the park, having a great first day or two. Then my parents had to step out and take a bunch of phone calls. They sounded very stressed. They kept telling me nothing happened and everything was okay. Eventually we flew home, and surprise!! Took an extra couple days to go to a big Waterpark away from home. I fondly remembered this birthday and eventually forgot about any of the weirdness. Maybe 10 years later my parents finally told me what happened. My uncle, my dad's brother, tried to k**l himself on my 7th birthday. He was poor, addicted to drugs, no work, etc. He felt depressed my dad had the life he always wanted. He ended up living. My parents took me to the Waterpark so that we didn't have to come home to him leaving the hospital. By not telling me, my parents let me keep my birthday as my day, not the day uncle tried to die. Knowing how a 7 year olds brain works, I probably would've thought I had something to do with it.
My relatives were a wealthy, childless couple in Chicago. Their housekeeper, who had a baby, took ill and was hospitalized. The couple took the baby to California and raised her as their own. This baby (Marie) grew up without siblings, as my grandmother’s cousin. Marie discovered the truth as an adult, by accident. Even though this kidnapping happened over 100 years ago, I always wondered what became of that poor woman who was released from the hospital to find her baby had been kidnapped by her employers. I have a set of china dishes from Marie that I use at Thanksgiving, every year. Wild story.
When my grandma's gentleman friend was admitted into a care home for his dementia they had a problem in verifying his medical records. As he deteriorated he lost his Irish accent and would occasionally speak in German. He was a child during WW2.
My Parents reckon he was probably a Jewish escapee
However, if the information affects the people closest to you, it might be a good idea to spill the beans. After all, deep relationships require trust, respect, and transparency. If you’re being secretive, your feelings should give you a heads up about it: you might feel guilty or ashamed. On the flip side, if something’s merely a private issue, you won’t feel bad about withholding that information. There’s nothing wrong with having at least some privacy in your life, no matter how much you might love your family.
When uncomfortable secrets come out, they might shock everyone. What’s important is that you embrace whatever feelings you have, instead of shying away from them or repressing them. All emotions are valid, and it’s vital that you allow yourself to feel what you feel.
“You might feel discomfort, disgust, anger, pain, denial, rejection, grief, apathy … maybe even excitement. It’s all normal, and you have permission to fall anywhere along that full range of human emotion. In fact, you might not even be able to put your finger on how you feel,” ‘Focus on the Family’ explains.
My dad secretly had a vasectomy after I was born, after my mom lying to him about taking birth control resulted in my birth.
Our family is GREAT at communication and conflict resolution.
I always thought my two older brothers got addicted to drugs because of their own decisions and the people they hung out with. It turns out that my dad had been feeding them pills since they were about 10 to "shut them up." Years I held resentment against them for not being good older brothers like they should have only to find out that it was my father who I had praised all those years that was truly evil.
Edit: wow, wasn't expecting all of this lol. Just to address some of the comments: My brother's are doing mostly fine now. Both struggled but eventually found sobriety. Luckily enough family didn't give up on them. We have a pretty good relationship now and none of us hold anything against each other. We realize that none of us are to blame for the sins of our father. Not sure where dad is, no contact for about a decade now. In contrast, mom was and still is an angel. With her showing me who to be and my dad showing me exactly who NOT to be, I think I turned out pretty okay. A lot of the time the cycle just continues but my brother's and I managed to break it. I'm sorry to every one who has gone through something similar, thank you for sharing your stories as well. Hope everyone finds their peace some day. Love you.
My dads first cousin is Kenneth McDuff. We saw the Americas Most Wanted episode when it aired and were so surprised to hear about a McDuff, not knowing he was a relative.
However, if you’re having difficulty processing the news, it might be worth reaching out to someone for help. You could talk to your family members to make sense of things or to understand the context of what happened better.
Meanwhile, a trusted friend who won’t judge you could, for instance, hear you out to show their support or even offer you some advice if you ask for it. It might also be worthwhile to reach out to a therapist who could offer fresh new perspectives on the entire dramatic family situation. Whatever you choose to do, just remember that you’re never in this alone… and asking for a helping hand when processing things isn’t a sign of weakness.
Which of these stories shocked you the most, dear Pandas? Have you ever had to deal with sensitive family issues like these before? Feel free to share your thoughts in the comments. Meanwhile, for some more radical honesty on Reddit, take a peek at Bored Panda’s previous article about uncovered family secrets right here.
Found this out after my grandfather died. Growing up every older guy in the neighborhood would say how tough he was. I mean he was the most intimidating man Id ever met, you would jump if he sneezed. Im not even exaggerating. But Id never seen him actually fight. But everyone, and I mean everyone, women and men, would say he never lost a fight and usually never had to throw more than one punch to knock someone out. Simply put he was a bad m**********r. But growing up he would always preach to me and my cousins to never fight if you could help it. Just walk away. If theyre insulting you just walk away. Its only words. Sticks and stones and all that. Hed drill it into our heads that you never fight unless you have to and never under any circumstances do you throw the first punch. Ever. I was kind of confused. Every older person in our neighborhood would tell me how nobody f****d with "Blackie" because of how many people he knocked out, and he would always tell us NOT to fight. Turns out when he was in his 20s he got into a fight with someone. Apparently the guy kept insulting him and wouldnt leave him alone. Finally he had enough and cracked the guy. Knocked him out with one punch. Problem is when he landed he hit his head on a step. It was lights out for good. K****d him with one punch. I had never heard this story and confused about how he didnt get locked up. Turns out he did. Got like 15-20 years or something like that. Then WW 2 happened. When I was a kid Id always ask my mom how my grandfather entered the war, was he drafted or volunteered? Shed say oh it was like the movie The Dirty Dozen. Which I had never seen or had any interest in when I was young so I had no idea what that meant. Turns out the Army made him a deal. Go to the front lines in Japan. If you live well expunge your record. If not, oh well. He went. Things made a lot more sense after that.
My great grand-parents got drunk and locked two of my uncle's out of the house late at night in the middle of winter. My great-grandparents wouldn't wake up and my uncles couldn't get in, so they tried to walk to their grandma's house that was like 15 miles away, and one of them froze to death and the other had to have is feet and hands amputated because of frostbite. My great-grandparents lied about what happened and said they snuck out.
It was in the newspaper and was made out to be this heartbreaking story, about two dumb little kids who snuck out in the middle of the night because they wanted to see their grandma.
I found out I had a sister who had been given up for adoption. The only reason I found out was the person who informed me no longer felt bound to secrecy after my mom died. And the person who told me had "receipts" solid enough that I have no reason to doubt them.
It also explains why mom freaked out when I told her I'd done a 23AndMe test.
That my biological mother used to give me pills as a baby and toddler to control me then drop me off at my grandmother's house when she couldn't afford to share so I'd go through withdrawals but no one would no what was wrong. Needless to say, I was put up for adoption to get me away from that
Not exactly dark, but I found out my father wrote p**n novels under a pen name to make ends meet when I was a baby. I've been trying to find one ever since.
My dad’s side of the family has ties with the mafia. Thankfully my mom has long since divorced my dad and they life a decent distance apart. I heard stories of my mom’s parents who lived close by at the time circling the block in their truck late at night soon after the divorce to ensure no one was there to hurt us. I was very young at this point, probably like 3-4 so I really have no memory of this. I do remember one night our garbage can was burned to the ground, and my mom has since told me about death threats soon after the divorce. My mom a couple years ago watched a documentary on prominent mafia families and noted multiple names that were at her wedding.
That my adorable nerdy mom spent 3 years in prison for being an accessory to hiding a body in the late 70s.
My grandpa (15) kidnapped my grandma (14) from a convent. No one even bothered looking for her thereafter cause she was an orphan and didn't even know who her family was. They had 16 children together.
My grandfather had severely scarred legs from burns he got as a kid. Growing up we were told that he was in a fire in an apartment building and sustained the burns while escaping. He died when I was 7, and one of my few memories of him is an image of those scarred legs. Well, when I was 23, my great aunt (his sister), told me that it wasn't a fire. Their father ran a bath with scalding water and put my grandfather in it as a punishment.
I don't know about dark but here goes. My great grandfather m******d the mayor of the village he lived in. Why? Because the mayor was sleeping with his mom while his father worked on the field. I think he was 15 or 16 when he did that.
Growing up I always knew my parents had marital issues; constant fighting, a couple times Dad disappeared for a few days living in his car, issues with drinking. But they stayed together and when I asked why didn't they divorce, they always said they loved each other too much. And in the past few years, things seemed to have gotten better. My parents in fact are now so comfortable in their relationship that they make jokes about all the awful stuff they've done to each other in front of me. What I've managed to put together is: -my parents met when they were 14 and my mother was dating an 18 year old and my dad would relentlessly ask her out until she eventually dumped her boyfriend for my dad -my mother went onto university after college (we're UK) whereas my dad dropped out of college and went straight into work while constantly drinking and partying -it was at one of these parties (while my mum was studying) that he cheated on my mum with someone from their old secondary school so she dumps him -barely a year later my dad realises he doesn't know how to do anything for himself, no one else wants him and he goes crawling back to my mum -she agrees to take him back but ONLY if he marries her (not immediately but *eventually* she said), he agrees and a short year after that (aged 22 now) she's already pressuring him to propose, he fumbles it frankly (were in Paris but forgot the ring and proposed back in the hotel room after they'd visited the eiffel tower that day which was her dream proposal) but she says yes -a month after they're married mum pressures him into having a child that he doesn't want and nine months later I was born, they soon realise how hard having a child is and basically drop me off on my grandparents for the rest of my childhood -after me there were two more accidental babies and each time my dad threatened to leave her, but she managed to convince him to stay while keeping my siblings by promising he wouldn't have to raise them (he didn't but neither did she frankly, I did) And that is only what happened before/shortly after I was born, if I carried on into my childhood, we'd be here for years. What they sold to me as the perfect love story (been together since they were 14, proposed in Paris, soon married and had children because of pure love) is in fact a bunch of skewered half truths from a horrible twisted love map of my mother's manipulation and my father disappointing her time and time again.
Husband’s family has a dark secret that still isn’t out to the people who really need to know and I hate that I know. His youngest aunt was “sent away” when she was a teenager and shortly after she returned, the oldest uncle and his wife introduced the family to “their daughter”. Young aunt went on to have 3 more kids who have no clue that their cousin is actually their half sister. What’s even more F’d up is that her “brothers” know the secret!!! I’m dreadful that someone will need a donor or do an ancestry test and all the lies will be exposed. Glad I could get that off my chest. If you’re assuming this is a “good Christian family” you would be correct. It’s all about appearance.
I was told by my aunt (before my parents thought it necessary) that my Dad had cheated on my Mum and slept with a stripper and that I was her daughter and not actually my ‘Mother’s’.
I found out years later that my Dad wasn’t actually my Dad either - though he thought he was which is why he put his name on my birth certificate and brought me home when my birth mother wanted nothing to do with me.
Fun times.
My grandmother married her second husband entirely for money. Her daughters both like to joke about her intentionally giving him a heart attack. He had heart problems but liked to eat unhealthy food, and the rumor goes she would put extra salt and butter on his food until he finally kicked the bucket.
My paternal grandmother had an affair with our small town’s mortician in the 1940’s. She got pregnant and he performed an illegal a******n. The fetus was buried behind the funeral home he owned where we kids used to sled every winter. My dad told me this as I was getting ready to take a ride down the hill on the sled when I was 12. Also, paternal grandfather had multiple illegitimate children around our small town. Turns out one of my best friends was also my half cousin. Father told me when I was 17. My father was educated, intelligent, honest and moral. The fact that his parents were so wild was absolutely shocking to me.
FINALLY I GOT ONE!
From when I was aged 6 to 13, my Mom dated a fellow named Murray. We all lived together in an old farmhouse.
Murray was a wonderful father figure to us, but he also had a drinking and driving problem, and after a particularly nasty accident, mom waited until he came home from the hospital and was well enough to take care of himself before leaving.
The whole time we lived there, my sister and I never went down into the basement, as it was *INFESTED* with spiders.
I always thought it was because of the drinking and driving she left him, but as it turns out that was only part of it. The other being that **he had a massive grow op for weed in the basement**.
Mom stated had the police found out about this, she would have lost custody of us.
Murray has long since passed, but he would have had a giggle that weed is legal here now...
Fidel Castro was my moms cousin.
Which is why we moved to Los Angeles instead of Miami.
When I was very young, my family lived in a townhouse, and against all local bylaws, my mother decided to keep a horse in our backyard. Not only that, but it was an ex-racehorse that came as a package deal: the goat companion that slept in the closet of my nursery. I also later found out she was running a grow-op in the basement.
My dad took me out for a walk when I was in middle school to tell me that I have a half brother in Japan with a similar name and birthday as me. We have the same dad, different moms. My brother has known about me his whole life, as a sister who lives in the States, but I only found out about his existence on that day.
Just found this one out recently. My uncle was a doctor working in a small town hospital. He was married and had just had a baby boy. While his wife was pregnant or just had the baby he had an affair with two nurses in the hospital and ended up getting one of the nurses pregnant. When he found out of the second kid he took his family and f****d off to New Zealand for 3 years. Upon returning to Canada and the same small town hospital his wife immediately found out about his illegitimate child and divorced him.
My (illegitimate) cousin stopped coming around to family events and when I talked to him about it last year he told me that my grandparents always blamed him for ruining my uncle’s marriage.
My father is from small working town in Eastern Ukraine. And most of our lives we've been poor.
But my mother always praised my father for his ability to know the parfume by smell, and not only that but also he can recognise many famous parfumes my smelling them.
Once, when i was 20-something years i asked, why is that so? Where he obtained this skill? My father asked me to not ever tell this story to my mother.
And here's the story: my father had a close friend who was actualy a secret lover of one of the most famous soviet singers, who officialy had wife. But it reality he was gay and did a lot for gay community in soviet union. He brought a lot of expensive things from abroad, like new music, clothes and parfumes. And a lot of that parfumes has been met at secret parties.
This gay-friend of my father also gave him all the fresh music releases vynill and he sold it and they shared the profit, unofficially of course. That's why my dad knows release years of most hits from 60s and 70s.
And more of that, he told me about special square in Sochi (the place of Olympic games 2014) where gays of ussr met each other and what secret signals they had.
Nice
UPD: I was probably misunderstood. That secret-gay friend of my father was the only gay my father knew. All info about gays of USSR he know from that friend.
Parties, that i mentioned above, were not for gays, they were just normal parties for counter-culture youth. Gayness of his friend was a secret. Everybody on this parties was wondering where did he gets all this goodies rare in USSR, but he never answered. My father was allowed to know, only because he knew that friend from childhood. They were like relatives.
Okay, even if my dad had some gay experience, it's fun to know, lol.
I found out when I was about 32 that apparently in 1973 my dad had a daughter he never knew existed.
I found out because he texted that to me while I was working, after finding out about it himself about 1 week earlier. She was in her late 40's by that point, I think.
What's sort of tragic is all this time we thought I was my dad's only kid, and he always wanted a dauighter but never got one due to marriages ending. He would have f*****g LOVED this girl. his daughter was the result of a one-night stand with a girl he never talked to again, and according to his daughter the mother had a mental breakdown not longer after giving birth and never really had custody of the daughter anyway.
Dad never would have had any way to find out, the baby grew up with the mother's parents in another state, and the mother kinda went AWOL.
My grandma had an affair with a catholic priest while she was married and then left her high school sweetheart who she had 5 children with. Then she ended up living with said priest and her kids had to lie and refer to him as an uncle when people asked them about their living situation.
I always thought it was true love; I found and kept letters and notes they wrote each other when he was overseas with the military and it seemed so genuine and I’d always heard so many nice stories (and I suppose it could have been true love.) I was raised to believe that my biological grandfather (my dads real dad) was a monster. I had been under the impression he left my grandma and abandoned his 5 five children. My one aunt died in a drunk driving accident and he couldn’t be bothered to show up. I never met him my entire childhood. I was literally encouraged to actively hate him. They said he remarried and basically started a new family and was controlled by his wife.
The priest essentially raised my dad and aunts and uncles and they have always revered him. He died before I was old enough to have any memories of him but I’d always looked at him with a positive light. He’d taken my grandma and a couple of the kids to Hawaii, bought my grandma a suburban and the house was in his name. My grandma was even left his military benefits (still unclear on how this was finagled.) He paid for the kids colleges. He had an incredible life. He had pictures with Bob Hope and other celebrities, got to travel a ton of places, etc.
One day I was curious if he had any relatives alive and if they had ever known about this salacious relationship. Then I googled him and it changed my life forever.
He (posthumously) was accused in a lawsuit, with a large group of priests, of wrongdoing over an extended period of time. You can guess the nature of the lawsuit. It was on several law websites and I found the lawsuit papers. Surely enough his name was mentioned. Unease began to ensue.
I did more digging and eventually found a 16 page document. This document was specific to him and included a police report and internal Catholic Church investigations into his transgressions among other things. Early into his priesthood he was accused of harboring a runaway 14 year old girl. He had explanations for everything… ofc. Reading the police report was absolutely devastating bc it seemed like the police did no due diligence and nothing came of the report. Then there were pages worth of internal Catholic Church investigations in which I learned he would have young, distastefully dressed girls hanging out in his rectory and was drinking and showing up to events and/or not showing up at all. He once said he had been called by the military and was away from the church, except he lied and had been drinking, gambling and philandering with women. Members of the church and other priests wrote anonymous letters about his conduct and asked for his removal. There were bouts of rehab and probation but he was moved to another church. Some of the same antics occurred. You get the picture. This man my family had told me to revere as a literal god send was in fact NOTHING of the sort.
Then I found a summary of all his transgression over the years that led to his “retirement.” This is when I found out when he took my grandma, dad and his two siblings to get the suburban he physically assaulted my grandma and assaulted kicked my dad and his siblings. I cross referenced all of this information with birth years, where they grew up and lived and the fact my uncle still has the suburban.
I was by myself when I found all of this out and I’ve asked my dad if he’s ever looked him up and he said yes. So he knows of the lawsuit but I haven’t asked if he dug as far as I did to find this 16 page document. I don’t know how to approach this or if it’s even worth bringing up to him. I’m curious how much he knows and if he remembers being assaulted. I’m also extremely disturbed if they knew of his past and chose to lie to me about this man. If they didn’t, then my heart breaks for what they endured with years of lies, abuse and the hurt they felt. It also makes me question my grandmother and he choices and everything she subjected her children to.
My dad and aunt reconnected with my biological grandfather a few years ago. He eventually came to visit us from across the country. I was in my mid-20s meeting my biological grandfather. I am truly apathetic to him and forming a relationship with him. My moms mom had 2 husbands and those were my grandpas. My grandpas and grandmas have all passed now so I’ve mourned losing all of my grandparents. I do not feel this man is my grandfather and have been at peace with this for a very long time.
However, it’s made me realize, my grandma abandoned him. He was the one who came to the church with the suspicion she was having an affair with the priest. At that my heart breaks for him. The priest also did my aunts funeral, so while some piece of me feels I can’t forgive him for not going to his own daughters funeral, I also can’t imagine having to face a priest who my wife ran off with.
I’m so torn that my family pitted me against this man that is my biological grandfather when this priest was clearly a fraud and lacked human decency and morals. It is also clear that my grandma made extremely questionable decisions and (with other unrelated reasons) had tarnished my vision of her.
Needless to say one of my wild facts has changed significantly from my grandma fell in love with a priest. Truly so conflicting and heartbreaking.
Not super dark or super secret, but when I had to do a project on my family tree in elementary school one of the questions was "When did your family immigrate to America and why?" For one of my great-grandfathers, my grandma told me "Life was very hard back in his country, and it was getting dangerous to stay there." and for a long time I thought "Yeah, I can see that. It was probably hard for a teenager living in Poland with WWI right around the corner!" And I'm sure it was. But it turns out it's even harder and more dangerous when you're a teenager who has slept with a married woman and then accidentally k****d her husband when he confronted you. I can see why she didn't want me to put that on my elementary school project. edit: Wrong World War. I just pulled up his Ellis Island records and he immigrated in 1912 aboard the Carpathia in August.
My grandpa’s brother died when I was a child. I hardly knew the guy so I wasn’t too interested in the service. I vaguely remember my parents warning me not to stare at some of the men but I figured that was a “good manner” moment. Fast forward to my later teens/early adult and turns out, yup, we were **surrounded by members of the Italian mafia**. Everyone in my family was tense (even the departed’s wife) because they all knew he had *some* connection to them, but didn’t exactly know as he never spoke of it to anyone
Dark-ish, but I prefer to see it in a romanticised light: my maternal great grandmother was the chief of a gang of highwaymen (think early 1900's). I would LOVE to know more, but apparently it's a touchy subject for my Nana so I don't push it.
My dad left when I was 7 and we were always told that it just didn't work out with my parents. We saw him off and on for about 2 years after he left then never saw him again. He had remarried and she had a kid that became his step son that my brother and I would hang with when we would go to my dad's house, then when I turned 13 my mom finally told me that the step son was actually his son from having an affair with that woman. So that kid was my half brother and I had no clue.
My MIL got married (in her late 60's) to her current husband about a month after his first wife died.
My 22-year-old niece commented about how short their courtship must have been.
"Only if you don't count the decades that they were having an affair," I replied.
My niece was flabbergasted that this had happened. Her Mom walked by, and my niece said, "Mom, did you know that Grandma had an affair?"
"You mean with
We had to have a sit-down and talk through any other obvious secrets that she may have missed (her Aunt never had kids with her first husband because he was gay, her-step Grandmother had been her Grandfather's secretary right up until the time he divorced her Grandmother, etc.)
I wasn't let in on it more like I found out about it but my siblings have a different dad than I do, that was common knowledge and not the secret at all. The secret was that their dad actually didn't die in the hospital of a terminal illness, he died of s*****e when he threw himself from the window of the hospital he was slowly dying in.
I am always having a hard time to upvote horrible stories. Do you feel the same fellow pandas? How do you do it? Upvote the greatest horror?! I am truly at a loss here...
I was in my early teens when I found this out. My dad's oldest sister wasn't my grandfather's child. My grandmother had gotten pregnant by some guy who promptly skipped town. My grandfather was an older widower who had already raised one family. He stepped in and married her. Together they had 7 more children.
About 5 years ago I found out the name of my biological father and it wasn't either of the two guys I thought it could have been.
Not really dark, but when she was a teenager, my grandmother worked in a flower shop that rarely had customers. Turns out it was a front for bootleggers from Chicago to hide their product.
My friend was helping her mom clean up her grandfathers house after he got alzheimers and ended up in an old folks home, as they were going through boxes in the attic she finds a full nazi uniform compleate with medals. Her mom was like, ”oh yes that thing, well you know those were the times” and just kept cleaning.
One of my cousins was date raped and impregnated in college. One of my other cousins(her brother) and his wife adopted the child, so the woman that the kid(an adult now) thinks is his aunt, is actually his bio-mom. Don't know if he's ever been told about his origin, probably not a good idea.
My grandfather was married when he met my Nan. His parents didn't like my Nan nor that he was getting divorced to marry my Nan, so he was cut off. My great-grandfather smuggled a camera into the trenches of passchendaele (British side), taking some utterly amazing pictures (only seen some). He survived, only to loss a daughter to the Blitz and watch 2 sons go to fight in Franch during WW2 (my grandfather being one of them). On my Dads side, I have a distant ancestor that immigrated to the US and then fought in the Civil War.
No offence to any of these people, but I do wish that when sharing stories, they would write in a more correct, professional way so that it's easy to follow the story. Half of the stories I read but couldn't understand all the way because they lacked the proper punctuation, spelling, and grammar that I need to follow the stories. (I'm also a writer, so I'm nit-picky about these sorts of things.) My ADHD brain can't follow along with things unless they're very clear, or I will lose focus. Again, no offence to any of these people, I'm sure they're all wonderful, I'm just stating something :)
I’ve got one. My mother and her family are Irish, from Tipperary. I was born there too. As my mother died when I was around 4/5 and I was raised in care, I thought I’d have a look at finding out any information about her side of the family as I have nothing. Just her maiden name and that’s it. So whilst looking around using her surname, I find a link to a local Birmingham (UK, not Alabama!) newspaper that has the same surname. Start reading about a Patrick Guilfoyle, who has a slight resemblance to my sister (from what I can remember). Turns out it’s about his trial. Worse still, it’s connected to the IRA bombing of pubs in Birmingham and Guildford. He was part of the cell that targeted these places. What’s even worse was that these were the first bombings that targeted civilians in England (they never bombed Scotland) as previously it had been military targets. I was so shocked that I threw up. And was ashamed.
There was one bit that stuck with me, his arrest. Doing his bit to carry on the cliché of how the English view the Irish. He was arrested in hospital as he was being treated for burns. He’d been smoking whilst making bombs.
Load More Replies...My aunt's father molested my mother, but she didn't know this until a few years ago. Apparently my mother wasn't his only victim. He always spoiled my aunt the entire time he was alive. He died when she was eleven.
These stories are making me think I (F57) need to take that test from Ancestry.com. I know there is Irish from my Dad's background and English from my Mother's background. I was also told we might have French/ Spanish somewhere in the ether. I was told two different versions of my paternal Grandfather's death. One story as a child and a totally different one as an adult. Both stories were told to me by my father's sister. I've also been told by the same Aunt that the family once had money, but her oldest brother wrote bad checks. All the blood relatives that could tell me the truth are dead. I talked to a customer at work today who did the Ancestry.com test and the 23andMe.com test. That's why I read all the original stories and the comments. These stories on here prove the adage that "truth is definitely stranger than fiction".
My both my mom & my dad's family have "European branches", relatives who stayed in the "old country". One (maybe more than one, but I only know of one) of them collaborated with the Nazi in WW2, and not just minor collaboration either, I mean "actively helped round people up for the camps" level collaboration. He disappeared after the war, changed his name, got fake papers, and ran for it. So my family tree includes an internationally wanted war criminal.
The only 'secret' I didn't know about until I was an adult was that when my aunt got pregnant as a teen, she was sent to a home for unwed mothers (as was usual at the time). What was unusual was that she wouldn't let them take the baby when she gave birth (again, very common, they are included in the term 'stolen generation') and took him home with her, which her parents weren't happy about, but at least allowed her to return. Not that much of a secret though, because I knew my cousin existed, and while I didn't know the specifics, I knew there wasn't a father/marriage in the picture.
I am always having a hard time to upvote horrible stories. Do you feel the same fellow pandas? How do you do it? Upvote the greatest horror?! I am truly at a loss here...
I was in my early teens when I found this out. My dad's oldest sister wasn't my grandfather's child. My grandmother had gotten pregnant by some guy who promptly skipped town. My grandfather was an older widower who had already raised one family. He stepped in and married her. Together they had 7 more children.
About 5 years ago I found out the name of my biological father and it wasn't either of the two guys I thought it could have been.
Not really dark, but when she was a teenager, my grandmother worked in a flower shop that rarely had customers. Turns out it was a front for bootleggers from Chicago to hide their product.
My friend was helping her mom clean up her grandfathers house after he got alzheimers and ended up in an old folks home, as they were going through boxes in the attic she finds a full nazi uniform compleate with medals. Her mom was like, ”oh yes that thing, well you know those were the times” and just kept cleaning.
One of my cousins was date raped and impregnated in college. One of my other cousins(her brother) and his wife adopted the child, so the woman that the kid(an adult now) thinks is his aunt, is actually his bio-mom. Don't know if he's ever been told about his origin, probably not a good idea.
My grandfather was married when he met my Nan. His parents didn't like my Nan nor that he was getting divorced to marry my Nan, so he was cut off. My great-grandfather smuggled a camera into the trenches of passchendaele (British side), taking some utterly amazing pictures (only seen some). He survived, only to loss a daughter to the Blitz and watch 2 sons go to fight in Franch during WW2 (my grandfather being one of them). On my Dads side, I have a distant ancestor that immigrated to the US and then fought in the Civil War.
No offence to any of these people, but I do wish that when sharing stories, they would write in a more correct, professional way so that it's easy to follow the story. Half of the stories I read but couldn't understand all the way because they lacked the proper punctuation, spelling, and grammar that I need to follow the stories. (I'm also a writer, so I'm nit-picky about these sorts of things.) My ADHD brain can't follow along with things unless they're very clear, or I will lose focus. Again, no offence to any of these people, I'm sure they're all wonderful, I'm just stating something :)
I’ve got one. My mother and her family are Irish, from Tipperary. I was born there too. As my mother died when I was around 4/5 and I was raised in care, I thought I’d have a look at finding out any information about her side of the family as I have nothing. Just her maiden name and that’s it. So whilst looking around using her surname, I find a link to a local Birmingham (UK, not Alabama!) newspaper that has the same surname. Start reading about a Patrick Guilfoyle, who has a slight resemblance to my sister (from what I can remember). Turns out it’s about his trial. Worse still, it’s connected to the IRA bombing of pubs in Birmingham and Guildford. He was part of the cell that targeted these places. What’s even worse was that these were the first bombings that targeted civilians in England (they never bombed Scotland) as previously it had been military targets. I was so shocked that I threw up. And was ashamed.
There was one bit that stuck with me, his arrest. Doing his bit to carry on the cliché of how the English view the Irish. He was arrested in hospital as he was being treated for burns. He’d been smoking whilst making bombs.
Load More Replies...My aunt's father molested my mother, but she didn't know this until a few years ago. Apparently my mother wasn't his only victim. He always spoiled my aunt the entire time he was alive. He died when she was eleven.
These stories are making me think I (F57) need to take that test from Ancestry.com. I know there is Irish from my Dad's background and English from my Mother's background. I was also told we might have French/ Spanish somewhere in the ether. I was told two different versions of my paternal Grandfather's death. One story as a child and a totally different one as an adult. Both stories were told to me by my father's sister. I've also been told by the same Aunt that the family once had money, but her oldest brother wrote bad checks. All the blood relatives that could tell me the truth are dead. I talked to a customer at work today who did the Ancestry.com test and the 23andMe.com test. That's why I read all the original stories and the comments. These stories on here prove the adage that "truth is definitely stranger than fiction".
My both my mom & my dad's family have "European branches", relatives who stayed in the "old country". One (maybe more than one, but I only know of one) of them collaborated with the Nazi in WW2, and not just minor collaboration either, I mean "actively helped round people up for the camps" level collaboration. He disappeared after the war, changed his name, got fake papers, and ran for it. So my family tree includes an internationally wanted war criminal.
The only 'secret' I didn't know about until I was an adult was that when my aunt got pregnant as a teen, she was sent to a home for unwed mothers (as was usual at the time). What was unusual was that she wouldn't let them take the baby when she gave birth (again, very common, they are included in the term 'stolen generation') and took him home with her, which her parents weren't happy about, but at least allowed her to return. Not that much of a secret though, because I knew my cousin existed, and while I didn't know the specifics, I knew there wasn't a father/marriage in the picture.