My feed
Premium

Please
or
to access all these features

AIBU?

is DH being a dick or am I

207 replies

Mrschocolate · 17/11/2013 20:44

DH thinks I am being daft and hormonal (I'm 7 months pregnant)
I think he is being annoying and if he carries on I will kill him.

He has spent the past two Sundays grumping because he wants different veg with his roast dinner. Between them my DCs will only eat sweetcorn, carrots and broccoli and because there is a limited time on Sunday I just make what they all like. But DH keeps saying he is bored, I have told him to make his own if it bothers him that much but he just says he doesn't want too.

Then yesterday I asked him to go and get some Xmas presents we have a set budget for each DC. I had set aside more money for my eldest two and less for the youngest two who are both 1 so they won't notice or remember and they will get lots off family anyway. DH agreed this with me. But yesterday he decided that it was unfair and spent loads on the youngest two and he bought some stuff which they already have. When I pointed this out to him he sulked for hours and refused to take them back.

But when I complain he says I am hormonal and just dismisses me as some mad pregnant woman. So AIBU or is he?

OP posts:
Report
TheRealAmandaClarke · 20/11/2013 07:47

I think you are quite right to insist on time to think.
Can you/ would you want to do your thinking away from the home? Or with the DCs with him at MIL's or somewhere?? I only ask because, although my DCs are the ppl who make me happy, I find it hard to think when they are around.
It sounds to me like he has had his head turned by this woman and is struggling with that. The mugging was unfortunate to say the least, and it will have been very traumatic, but I think he is applying that to this situation to get some sympathy, to partially excuse hisnbahviour IYSWIM.
I would want a strong sign of commitment to your marriage from him. I would want to have every assurance that he will never contact to woman again (do you know who she is? Does mil?)
He should ake this up to you. But I know many people who have overcome such things and been very happy together afterwards.
Honesty. Communication. Atonement. Consideration.
From him.
Thanks Brew

Report
BiscuitDunkingMum · 20/11/2013 09:28

I hope you got a lie in too......maybe someone else helps with the one year olds????

Report
Objection · 20/11/2013 09:44

OP, I'm so sorry to hear that. Big hugs to you!

Sounds like you are keeping a level head about this, I agree with MissSmiley and advise that you need to consider how he has been throughout your relationship and base your decision on that in conjunction with his recent attitude and actions.

Your gut feeling is the most powerful indicator here and please don't put too much weight on the inevitable LTB responses a lot of mumsnetters tend to throw out on these threads. You know your husband, yourself and your relationship best. We're strangers who only know a snippet of the real story, it sounds like you MIL is a real rock with a level head and a fair POV. Chat to her, your friends, your family and have a real good think yourself. (But it sounds like that's what you're doing anyway!)

Best of luck, OP.

Report
noseymcposey · 20/11/2013 10:29

OP, hope you are ok.

Taking what he has said at face value, do you think the temptation he felt has scared him? How does he seem? The fact that he has told you all this without you having an inkling it would be something along these lines I would have thought is a good thing. It's not like you found evidence of there being another woman and then he has given you some half truths as a consequence.

I hope what he has said is true, and I think it's important that you trust your instincts with what he is telling you as you know him best and will be best placed to decide if you think what he is saying is plausible.

It is very hard having young children, just having the one child put mine and DP's relationship under quite a strain so can only imagine how much that's magnified by having several very young children.

If you decide that what he is saying seems realistic, and he is genuinely sorry, and otherwise things are/were ok is it worth spending some time both of you getting it all out about how you both feel so you can move forward?

Report
toffeesponge · 20/11/2013 13:16

To take the time to look for someone on facebook is not a situation where one has had a drunken snog with no thought. He has actively gone after her.

Report
passedgo · 20/11/2013 13:33

Hi Chocolate, so sorry to here that this was his excuse. There was me giving him the benefit of the doubt, maybe a cancer scare, or a death of someone close, or perhaps even he had lost his job, or had an uncontrollable gambling habit.

I'm still not going to be dismissive of him because there is so much at stake here and only the two of you know whether it will work out. You are extremely vulnerable and need to look after yourself. I would spend more time with him so you can make a clear decision together, whether it is to separate or to stay together. The last thing you need is a fight or not talk to each other at all. At least if you do separate it could be done in a way that won't put you under any more stress.

Thanks

Report
ATruthUniversallyAcknowledged · 20/11/2013 22:00

Thinking of you op. I hope you've had a chance to think and are working towards some kind of resolution.

Report
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.