Meet the Other Phone. Only the apps you allow.

Meet the Other Phone.
Only the apps you allow.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To think DP is being a twat to my son?

61 replies

RoamingArizona · 12/08/2013 17:32

We moved in together in June after 2 years of knowing one another. He got on well with my kids (aged 12 and 14) and I got on well with his teenagers (who we have over every saturday night).
Ive never been houseproud, he is. So this is one thing we've had to work together on and compromise about. He's accepted the fact that I'll never play the part of the good little wife at home all day mop in hand and I've accepted the fact that I need to work a little harder at keeping the place as tidy as pos baring in mind that I do work full time too. Housework is probably 70/30 with me doing the majority but he does a lot of diy/gardening etc so it balances.
My kids are also having to come around to the idea that mum is wanting to be tidier and keep a nicer house and have started making progress - putting pots straight in the dishwasher instead of leaving in the sink, taking shoes off at the door etc. DP admitted the other day that they're making progress.

New situation - we have just bought a £2k sofa. It gorgeous but not kid proof so we're having a "no eating on sofa" rule (apart from when his kids are here apparantly but I digress). So the other day both my kids took chocolate milkshakes into the living room and sat with them on the sofa. DP went in and told them to not drink them in there. DS2 said "ok" and took his to the kitchen. DS1 also said "ok, ill take it through there in a minute." he didn't and continued to drink it on the sofa. DP caught him. DS lied and said he wasn't drinking it, just holding it. out of order, I agree. DP was pissed off and they had a little argument about it.

But that was last week. Today DS2 did the same with a bowl of soup. I told him off, ordered him back to the kitchen and banned him from the TV for the rest of the day. Sorted. DP comes home from work, I vaguely mention it (not really thinking it was a big deal) and he goes mad, starts shouting at DS2 and goes all weird and animated and starts dancing about laughing like a mad man. To the outsider it would have looked like he had lost his mind. The kids giggle. He goes mental and starts on DS1 about the milkshake episode from last week!! something that not only was a mountain/molehill scenario from the start but something that I assumed to be last weeks news so to speak. He gets all shouty at him - ds1 gets upset, turns thee defensive on and asks DP why he has to be such a dick. All hell breaks loose. I send DS1 upstairs - DP is shouting up after him "yeah see ya!! bye!!! cya later!!!" wtf??? and he wonders why they laugh at him??

Long story short - mme and dp start arguining in which I say he's out of order having a go at ds1 for something that happened last week and was sorted - he says we're doomed because the 3 of us gang up on him, it's a circus and he can't be arsed anymore. He says he could maybe have coped with my kids when he was younger but not now (he's only just turned 40!) and in light of tonights events - he'll just now let them "do whatever the fuck they want."

Was I unreasonable in all of this?? I'm willing to admit blame if I was.

OP posts:
Emilythornesbff · 13/08/2013 08:04

Agh! Auto correct fail.
Should've read: "I confess I was thinking that I don't like this guy".
Sorry.

Reality · 13/08/2013 08:09

She's moved into a house he's bought, if any of this is true.

I doubt she'll be back to this thread though.

SpottyDottie · 13/08/2013 08:34

Your DS 2 sounds like a PITA. he was told last week about the milkshake but took his own sweet time moving and then he takes soup to eat on your new sofa this week?? I would have been frustrated too. If the rules are not applying to his DC then that needs to be sorted too.

Your DP has moved in, and although he is not your DC father I would find it odd that he couldn't pull them up if they did wrong. Maybe he over reacted. And what was done about the DC laughing at that time? You both need to be agreed on discipline - your DC and his.

EachAndEveryHighway · 13/08/2013 09:53

Why spend so much on a sofa anyway when you must know in your heart of hearts that this relationship is not going anywhere. I hope you bought it outright (or he bought it), and not on finance because more debt on top of what you have already is the last thing you'll need when you finally reach breaking point and ditch this loser.

pictish · 13/08/2013 10:08

Who the hell buys a sofa that must be treated like a some sacred monolith, while there are kids in the house anyway?

angelos02 · 13/08/2013 10:25

Why can his kids sit on the sacred sofa but yours can't? No wonder your kids are pissed off.

RoxyFox211 · 13/08/2013 10:58

Yanbu. Does sound like an over reaction on the part of your dp. If your kids are used to eating on the sofa it will, understandably, take time to change habits.

cory · 13/08/2013 11:03

This young whippersnapper is only 40 but is already referring to his age as something that excuses him from coping. He'll be a right bundle of laughs by the time he gets to 50...60...70... Hmm

Plenty of men have their first child in their mid-forties and cope with rebellious teenagers in their sixties. There's such a thing as being young at heart...and there's such a thing as being a miserable old sod.

Let's face it, he won't get any younger. Think carefully.

UniqueAndAmazing · 13/08/2013 13:20

1: it doesn't matter whose house it is - if he wants the house to a higher standard then he should be the one who cleans to the higher standard.
2: it doesn't matter whose house it is - if you both work full time, then housework should be 50/50 (you doing the lesser standard if that's how you do it and him doing the higher standard stuff)
3: who the fuck does he think he is treating your children like that???? You dealt with the issue, he should NOT have undermined your authority by going on about it. Nor should he have raised previous misdemeanours when dealing with this one. It doesn't matter whose kids they are - one rule for all. Which leads me to
4: he should not be allowing his own kids to eat on the sofa if your kids aren't allowed to - no wonder they keep disobeying the rules - rules are there to set the groundwork for life. If one person is seen to be allowed to break the rules, then the rules are DEFUNCT.
5: he's treating you like a skivvy.
6: leave the fucking twat - you deserve so much better.

hellsbellsmelons · 13/08/2013 13:38

Good grief OP - Is this you again!!
If it is, we've all told you 100 times and more to kick this dickhead into touch.
All we get are more stories of what a prick he is, but he's still there and your poor kids are still suffering.
I give up - I really do!!!

Emilythornesbff · 13/08/2013 15:44

40! Are you joking?
I honestly pictured a wet behind the ears 20 something with his pants on show above his low slung jeans.
Is he much older than you?
He is out of his depth and his behaviour will get worse.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page