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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Or am I just inconsiderate?

66 replies

shouldbeabletomultitask · 23/07/2018 14:30

Name changed for this.

July has been a very busy month as we have been celebrating my youngest daughter’s graduation and 21st birthday within days of each other. Graduation involved a couple of nights stay in her university city and thereafter I’ve had a relative houseful with various of her friends staying for the 21st. The last one will go home this afternoon. I was widowed some years ago but I’m in a new relationship. New partner kindly organised a meal out for graduation and the 21st locally as his “gift”.

In between graduation and the 21st he took some professional exams which he passed. When he phoned to tell me I said all the right things (which anybody would) and even made a suitable congratulatory comment on his FB when he posted the news there.

Thereafter he applied for a job which he was all but “promised” but his application was subsequently rejected last Thursday.

21st was last Wednesday. Meal out was Saturday. I went to his on Friday (we don’t live together), we had a meal out, but I’d taken birthday cake to his for “dessert” as he was working away on Wednesday and unable to attend the party at my house.

Had meal out on Saturday as planned.

I noticed he’d seemed quiet on Saturday and he left mine very early Sunday morning. He has form for being moody so I recognise the signs. Anyhow, he ignored three phone calls from me yesterday plus a subsequent follow up text. Neither did he reply to an email I’d forwarded to him about an event we have pre-arranged for August.

This morning he’s phoned me back. In his words he’s “pissed off” with me because I didn’t do anything to acknowledge his passing his exams. On Friday I “should” have brought over a bottle of champagne and not just a piece of birthday cake. I should also have made the meal we had on the Friday night more special too. As it was we just went back to his for birthday cake and didn’t even have dessert in the restaurant.

I apologised and said my head had been full of the 21st celebrations plus I was conscious he’d been rejected for new job which had taken over his exam success. We had discussed this at some length on Friday.

He said that clearly I didn’t appreciate his job or what the professional exam meant and that being busy with 21st celebrations was no excuse as I should be able to multi task like he did when organising the graduation meal and 21st meal. Apparently I should have seen from the comments on his FB post that this success was something very special and organised something appropriate. I said that I hadn’t even looked at all the FB comments as my life doesn’t revolve around FB!

He ended by saying that the moment had now gone so even should I plan something for a later date it was too late.

He was going to say something about it when he arrived at mine on Saturday but thought it inappropriate as the young friends were all here; he decided to wait until they’d left on Sunday. I told him one was still here and they’d clearly understood there was an upsetting conversation going on as they could see my reaction. That quietened him down a bit.

Have I been inconsiderate? I am professionally qualified myself, in a completely different profession, but one where exams are the norm for progression and promotion. It is not that I don’t understand or appreciate the effort people put into success such as this but when you get to our age (he’s in his 60’s by the way) it is a bit different to the youngsters starting out on life. His didn’t involve a graduation by the way, rather a set of exams which give him a senior role within his field).

Oh, I’ve just remembered, apparently I didn’t wish him good luck at an appropriate time either. I should have done that as he was leaving mine the day before the exam, and not by text last thing at night.......????

Feel a bit flat now he’s said that after the buzz of the last couple of weeks!

OP posts:
alligatorsmile · 23/07/2018 15:01

The only word I can think of that suitably sums up my feelings on this situation is, "diddums".

Silly old bastard.

arranfan · 23/07/2018 15:01

If this even vaguely resembles a recurring pattern of behaviour, take the very first graceful exit.

Tawdrylocalbrouhaha · 23/07/2018 15:05

Whine, whine, whine...I would drop him like a hot brick!

UrsulaPandress · 23/07/2018 15:07

What a joy sucker.

I'd leave him to stew in his own misery.

cordeliavorkosigan · 23/07/2018 15:10

Sounds like it really bugged him that your week wasn't all about him. He's acting about 12. Is this how he always is? If this isn't a one off, consider whether you want to spend the next 20 years making things about him or facing him kicking off like this when you should be able to celebrate something else!

ImAGoofyGoober · 23/07/2018 15:11

I don’t think he sounds that bad! Not perfect but who is?
I would speak to him and say you didn’t realise he would be so upset and next time could he please communicate his feelings more. He knows you’ve been busy but equally the exams have been a lot for him and he is disappointed about his job.
It’s a misunderstanding that can easily be sorted out with the right attitude

Youtopia · 23/07/2018 15:12

Run

Quicker than a tantruming toddler.

TemptressofWaikiki · 23/07/2018 15:13

Good grief! Run!

NonaGrey · 23/07/2018 15:14

Goofy no one is perfect, you are quite right. But there’s quite a long way between “perfect man” and the behaviour noted in the OP.

Singlenotsingle · 23/07/2018 15:15

Poor baby. Too manipulative for my liking; he should have grown out of this long ago! How old is he???

howabout · 23/07/2018 15:15

Why haven't you dumped him already?

Ihopeyourcakeisshit · 23/07/2018 15:17

I was married to a man like this.
If his name is Mike leave him because it will only get worse.
Actually leave him whatever his name is.

Kingkiller · 23/07/2018 15:21

The point is surely that no reasonable adult would make such a whiny fuss about this out loud, even if they were secretly a little disappointed not to have a slightly bigger deal made of their exam success. You say he's a new partner? So this is probably the tip of the iceberg - you can probably expect much worse tantrums when the 'best behaviour' phase has worn off.

StepBackNow · 23/07/2018 15:21

He's a brat. Dump him and call it a lucky escape.

ACatsNoHelpWithThat · 23/07/2018 15:23

I might have been inclined to give him the benefit of the doubt due to him arranging the graduation & 21st and also his disappointment about the job application, however you said he has form for being moody. Sounds like he has expectations of you that he expects you to mindread and if you don't, well you fail the test.

How has this left you feeling about your future - do you see it with or without him?

AgathaF · 23/07/2018 15:26

Oh dear. How needy?

Yes, a bottle of champagne would have been a nice gesture from you, but having a strop because you wished him luck at the wrong time, being moody at your house and then ignoring the phone calls because he was in a mood - really not good for a man of his age. You mentioned he has form for being moody. How often does it impact on your relationship? If it's anything more than very, very occasionally then you might want to rethink your relationship with him. Have you been together long?

TotHappy · 23/07/2018 15:43

What a bore.

RedSkyLastNight · 23/07/2018 15:46

This is one of those threads where I wish we could hear the other side.

I suspect it would be along the lines of new partner being so absorbed with their adult children that they couldn't be bothered to say more than a routine "well done" to an achievement that was something that was important to them.

Kewcumber · 23/07/2018 15:50

I'm a chartered accountant - passing your professional exams is a huge deal. But only to yourself (other than maybe "oh well done - you must be so pleased from a handful of people)! Unless you are 13. Is he 13?

Zaphodsotherhead · 23/07/2018 15:50

I think, basically, as soon as any man says 'you should have...' it's practically over.

RafikiIsTheBest · 23/07/2018 15:57

After all the threads on MN about wives/girlfriends/daughters that are upset about presents or lack of events for birthdays etc where everyone say's I'd be upset too and you need to tell x,y,z how you feel I'm shocked at the responses here.

I see a difference between sulking, being moody and being upset. If he was just quiet on Saturday and wanted to wait until your DD and her friends were out of the way before talking I don't see an issue with it. He threw two events for your DD, and was expecting something more in return and has voiced that feeling.
However yes the ignoring your calls, texts and emails is childish. But was he really being moody and manipulative or is he just upset he put so much effort into your DD and feels he got so little in return?

InfiniteVariety · 23/07/2018 15:59

If you had ever wondered why this man is single, here's your answer.
I couldn't be doing with someone like this.

shouldbeabletomultitask · 23/07/2018 16:00

Sorry everyone, thank you for the replies. I have been tied up with other things - multi tasking 😀

He is kind and generous but I've noticed that that is usually followed by a price: " I've done this; you should have done that" sort of thing.

We've been together, on and off, for a few years. He broke up with me by email when my oldest daughter went to university because I didn't put his name in the good luck card I sent her. He came grovelling after that. At that point we'd been together a matter of months.

We got back together after he expressed remorse.

I agree with previous posters that he may be reacting like this because he didn't get the job and is therefore taking it out on me. Totally unacceptable.

OP posts:
InfiniteVariety · 23/07/2018 16:06

He broke up with you over a good luck card?

Really don't know why you're bothering OP - he's a petulant self-absorbed twat.

Ihopeyourcakeisshit · 23/07/2018 16:07

Your update only makes him sound worse.

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