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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To tell the dc about ex's infidelity without discussing it with him?

106 replies

theduchessstill · 09/08/2017 20:38

We split three years ago as a result of his infidelity with a mutual friend. They are no longer together – she was also married and she and ex have never been a ‘proper couple’. The dc knew her and her dd but we moved to another area of the city just before he told me, so ds1 remembers her vaguely and ds2 not at all afaik. They were 7 & 5 when we split.

When we split we just told the dc we weren’t getting on well and didn’t want to be arguing anymore. Unfortunately there were a lot of loud arguments as there was a period of 3 months between ex telling me about the affair and finally moving out. He had been a sahp (took advantage of that to shag the ow in our bed, sometimes leaving ds2 behind a stairgate Angry) so the dc had always been close to both of us – I always sort of over-compensated for not being there by kind of ‘leading things’ at weekends and during school holidays (teacher) when ex would take a step back. He wanted to move out and never wanted to be left with the dc.

The dc seem to have coped well with the split and we share custody about 70/30 to me. Ex has never had a career, which was why he was sahp, and, aside from his infidelity, we were arguing a lot over his work plans, or lack of them, at the time of the split. He wants to be a writer (but never finishes anything), or a musician (plays in bands, mainly for beer money) and since the split receives £700 per month from his mother and works part time through an agency. He has no work ethic and will walk out of places if he deems the boss to be an ‘arsehole’, or the role to be beneath him for whatever reason.

Today, looking through ds1’s school books from last year, I found some autobiographical work they had done. In it ds1 wrote about the split and how horrible it was to hear us arguing and how it has affected his life having to live between two homes. It was obviously hard to read, but not really surprising. However, twice he stated that the reason we split was that ‘dad wanted to get a job, and mum didn’t want him to.’ He also writes that I ‘wouldn’t stop teaching’ as if it was my burning desire to teach that had come between me and ex! This version of events is so far from the truth as to be laughable, especially the first bit. I asked ds why he had written that and he said it’s just what he thought. Thinking about it, ex first got a job of sorts after moving out, so I can see why ds1 has confused cause and effect in that way.

The comment about my work I feel may come from ex, as I suspect that he denigrates me to the dc and, if I am ever late from work to collect them from his, will rant about how I put my job first. Ds1 complains about my job a lot – in terms of the fact I am sometimes busy at weekends, can’t ever come to sports days etc, and, worst of all, it causes him to attend before and after school clubs, which he hates. I always explain how it pays for everything (and I mean everything – ex buys them absolutely nothing except for what he feeds them on his days, and pays me nothing) but he obviously resents it.

I just feel awful and that I have failed ds (and his brother) twice over- by giving him a shit life where he heard us arguing, has a split life, I don’t have a good work life balance and his dad has no money and lives in a pretty shitty environment – and, because we failed to give him a proper explanation for what happened and now he has made up a spurious explanation that is potentially dangerous for him to believe, in a way, because it is so far from the truth.

And no, I don’t want to be cast as the bad guy, because I’m really not, and it’s just not fair. I deal with all the shit – ex doesn’t really parent when he has them, and I can’t cope with thinking ds1 sees me as this crazed career woman who pissed everything up the wall because she was so addicted to marking.

I know if I ask ex he will tell me not to tell them, but WIBU, sometime over the remainder of the summer, to give them a highly edited, non-emotional version of the truth?

OP posts:
WinchestersInATardis · 10/08/2017 18:33

If your children had happily moved on, then I would say not to tell them but it's clear that your eldest at least has a lot of unresolved negative feelings about it, and those are affecting his relationship with you because he believes your ex's lies.

If you keep quiet, it will feel to him that you're confirming to him that your ex's version of things was correct.

I think an age appropriate chat about it would be a good idea. But set aside time for it, let him ask questions so he can work through his thoughts. And of course, be prepared for a lot of follow up ones.

My ex cheated on me and I have DC of a similar age. They don't know the full reason and the transition has been fairly easy, thank goodness, but if they ask when they're older, and want to understand why it happened, I will tell them the truth.

Cheating is all about deceit and lying so that the cheater gets to have what he wants without consequences.
Keeping the lie going does no one any favours in the long run.

WinchestersInATardis · 10/08/2017 18:34

it's absolutely NOT damaging for dcs to learn this. However itisdamaging for them to have some kind of warped opinion of you fed to them by their father that you were controlling and unreasonable and somehow kept him without a job at home.

Oh, and this. Absolutely.

notevernotnevernotnohow · 10/08/2017 18:35

For those posters saying the truth out their dad would be damaging for them to hear - why is it better for them to believe a destructive lie about you?

Or you could aim for discounting the lies without telling young children daddy shagged around?

Haffdonga · 10/08/2017 18:41

Notnever

I don't think a single poster has suggested the OP should tell her children that daddy shagged around. Saying for example that daddy wanted to spend time with another person but not mummy is far from giving them detailed accounts of what daddy did with his penis.

KarmaNoMore · 10/08/2017 20:26

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

ChasedByBees · 10/08/2017 20:53

I think your plan and proposed explanation is fine OP and I also totally agree with this:

it's absolutely NOT damaging for dcs to learn this. However itisdamaging for them to have some kind of warped opinion of you fed to them by their father that you were controlling and unreasonable and somehow kept him without a job at home.

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