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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To expect my boyfriend to realise his wife is a gold digger and vindictive person?

409 replies

NMC89 · 24/11/2013 20:15

Background: my boyfriend and I have been together for 2 years, having been friends for some time before that. We have a large age difference but have an incredible bond and are best friends. He has been separated from his wife for 4 years but they still live in the same house (they don't have sex). I live in London and she lives in Italy - he commutes, spending the week with me in the UK and the weekends with his children.

She has had multiple affairs openly and manipulates him unbearably (she has threatened to stop him seeing his children). He financially supports her (as well as her sister and brother). I find her behaviour disgusting, she only speaks to him when she wants money or a new car and refuses to do anything for him or the household (she is a sahm) - including disciplining the children, cooking, cleaning or food shopping. He does all these when he gets back after a week working in the UK. I try hard not to constantly be horrible about her, but it is hard to see the man I love being taken advantage of so viciously. I know they are not going to divorce (for the sake of their children) but I really can't see how this is a good alternative. He admits that she is awful and has got very angry about some of the things she has done (notably bringing her boyfriend to their family home to spend the night when his children were there), but he is incapable of doing anything about it and has aided her boyfriend's business and bought her property. Am I being unreasonable to expect him to tell her about me, stand up for himself and stop being a coward as well as getting divorce proceedings under way?

OP posts:
OneStepCloserIWillExterminate · 24/11/2013 21:47

I`m confused as to what you want from this thread tbh.

If your happy to be his bit on the side, thats your look out. You understand he wont leave his wife, you`ll never be any more than a secret in his life. If that makes you happy and you think that makes a good relationship thats up to you.

What do you want us to say?

thenightsky · 24/11/2013 21:47

I think 'dumb as a box of hair' has just replaced my old favourite 'thick as mince' Grin

Thurlow · 24/11/2013 21:47

Madame, that is amazing Grin

NachoAddict · 24/11/2013 21:47

I think he is lying too. You are his entertainment while he works then he goes home to his real family all weekend. They don't know about you because you are the other woman.

Writerwannabe83 · 24/11/2013 21:48

I think this is the saddest thing I have read in a very long time.

OP - please open your eyes and more importantly, please listen to what EVERYONE is telling you!

MadameDefarge · 24/11/2013 21:49

He knows his wife a good deal better than you do. In fact, he liked what he saw so much he married her and had kids with her and doesn't want to divorce her, tell her about you, or stop supporting his in-laws, oh yeah, and her boyfriend.

gamerchick · 24/11/2013 21:49

Ah man I want to know what happened with the rumpled sheets Grin

TheCrackFox · 24/11/2013 21:49

Maybe it is time to take this "relationship" to another level and ask to meet his mum and dad, siblings and friends? His wife and DCs wouldn't have to know.

MadameDefarge · 24/11/2013 21:49

OP, how old is he? how old are his children? I see you have failed answer those questions. We might be able to help a bit more if we knew the answers.

antimatter · 24/11/2013 21:50

did you just write she complains they haven't had sex for 4 years and you believe his wife doesn't think of him as her husband..... Hmm

there are many marriages with such arrangement

who is he spending his holidays with?

Christmas, Easter....
Have you met his kids?

SquirtedPerfumeUpNoseInBoots · 24/11/2013 21:53

hey NMC when you come to your senses, will you come back and say thank you? I think you should. Or when he leaves you pg and in need of help.

tinmug · 24/11/2013 21:53

social experiment

Cor, a social experiment! That takes me back to the early days of LJ!

MadameDefarge · 24/11/2013 21:53

I got deleted! who reported??!!

Pearlsaplenty · 24/11/2013 21:54

Maybe it is true.

But you have been together 2 years. There is a large age gap. Do you see yourselves together still in 5-10-20+ years?. Do you want to make plans together for the future? Do you want him to make a commitment to you? Even in your early 20s after a 2 year relationship it is natural to ask youself these questions so you can decide to make a commitment together or move on and find someone more compatible.

Only1scoop · 24/11/2013 21:55

Eh What happened to Madams post....

LadyAlconleigh · 24/11/2013 21:55

Agree you have some questions to answer.

MadameDefarge · 24/11/2013 21:56

I think I might have called her behaviour appalling. Sorry about that.

And I might have said OP was stupid. Sorry for that too.

SweetSeraphim · 24/11/2013 21:57

Dearie me. You're being incredibly naive. Sorry for you.

Only1scoop · 24/11/2013 21:58

So should one take it that Op's little 'Social Experiment' has helped somewhat?

NMC89 · 24/11/2013 21:58

I trust him about the not having sex with her so I'm just going to park that. The bit that has really struck a chord is that she gets to be open about everything and we don't. I think that is the bit you have all got really right and perhaps the part I should focus on going forward, so thank you.

I'm early twenties, he's late forties. His kids are teenagers.

OP posts:
jonicomelately · 24/11/2013 21:59

I can't believe there are women who still fall for these lines Confused OP, this relationship will end in tears-yours. Take the advice you've been given and end this now otherwise you'll have wasted your best years being at the beck and call of a very manipulative man.

littlemisssarcastic · 24/11/2013 21:59

OP, If your boyfriend is indeed genuinely being truthful, when are you going to meet his children? When is he going to commit to you instead of freezing you out of every Christmas and weekend?

Would you be happy if this situation is exactly the same in 5 or 10 years time?

Have you ever spoken to his wife? Have you ever spoken to any of his friends? I mean, the friends he has had since he has been married?

Has the wife's boyfriend met their children yet? Why is your boyfriend concerned about who his wife is seeing if they are not in a relationship anymore?

SweetSeraphim · 24/11/2013 22:01

Do you want children with him OP?

AnAdventureInCakeAndWine · 24/11/2013 22:21

I don't think you could be a neurosurgeon in your early 20s, actually; you wouldn't normally finish your Foundation Programme until you were 25 and you wouldn't start specialising until after that.

You could be very ugly, though, if that makes you feel better.

ILoveAFullFridge · 24/11/2013 22:23

I don't believe you, OP. I don't think you're out to cause trouble, but your lack of discomfort over some of the things posted, and your lack of response to perfectly reasonable questions (do you read Italian?) are deeply unconvincing. I think we're the 'social experiment'.