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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Husband blissfully happy I’m miserable

150 replies

Vanessatiger · 27/09/2018 09:05

I usually keep my mouth shut when he appears controlling (and he is), down to whether I should give dc1 (3.5) a piece of cheese before she has a piece of ham first. He would look at me with stares then say at breakfast table “I have prepared ham for her her (pointing at his plate), I wanted her to finish her bread first” (unbeknown to me I had given her a piece of cheese as she asked for it, then he’d get annoyed.. I’ve stopped giving her food as he’s so controlling and bossy about it. It truly wears me down. Thing is, he’s very happy with our life. He says it quite often we have such a beautiful family and we have a nice house, nice life.

We got a job abroad (think Saudi Arabia like). We now live here. I feel restrained, like trapped in a golden cage. I love my DCs. I suppose it’s not a bad life, but I’m unhappy with our marriage.
In this marriage, I do all the domestic work (well actually I delegate them to housestaff). Anyhow, I try to explain to my husband I’m not that happy here but he thinks I’m ungrateful.

Every day I think of leaving him but never really get around to it.

I suppose I’m just ranting. I need an outlet.
The expatriate community is so small here, I wouldn’t trust I could talk to somebody (a friend) and it not being the gossip of town..

I suppose I also resent the fact that this summer we went back to Europe (we holidayed in France) to see his almost adult sons and he acted like a misogynistic sexist fool the whole time. He would say to his oldest son “check the girl out huh” (girl with revealing top) in a totally cringeworthy way. I’d constantly tell him off as our 3 year old is a girl and she’s started absorbing people’s way of speaking. He’d almost start racing with older ladies saying “look at this hag in a porche i bet i can race faster than her hahaha (with a cruel laugh) with my 3 yr old in the car. He’s a total disney dad, totally inappropriate, that’s because he wants them to like him and he’d never tell them off about anything.

I guess I don’t like him very much. It was a very very long two weeks holiday. I didn’t enjoy it one bit. I had also asked if his sons wanted to go diving, they said yes. So I did my research and contacted diving school emailed back and forth, paid etc.. only for them to say “I don’t feel like diving” only the day before.
In fact they didn’t feel like doing anything except for being on their phones all day.. in the beautiful south of France! They only wanted to sleep in to 12 and do nothing, and my husband said let them and told me off for booking so many activities for them. When I was that age I enjoyed sailing and doing activities, I don’t remember being so passive. Anyway, my husband told me off for pressuring them to go sailing when I simply wanted them to get out more than just staying in the Airbnb rooms all day! It created resentment as my husband was too scared to tell them to do anything.
He also not once told them to help us with putting dirty dishes in the dishwasher! Basically he expected me to do everything during the holidays!
His oldest has ADHD and aspergers so he can’t really read people so well. He was also mean on purpose to my 3 yr old (laughing cruelly, doing mean things to make her cry). He’s 17. I was quite stressed the whole holiday.

Now in September I just feel I’ve lost all respect for my husband.

Aibu to leave him?

OP posts:
DancingForTheDog · 27/09/2018 09:43

He sounds like the man who said, when asked about his marriage breakdown, "I was blissfully happily married for 10 years, and then my wife decided she wanted to be happy too".

TatianaLarina · 27/09/2018 09:44

OP you are entirely reasonable to leave this awful man.

What are your options for getting back home with the children?

Are you both British, were you married in the UK?

NotAnotherJaffaCake · 27/09/2018 09:47

Be very, very careful, if you are in the emirates. Can you contact the British Embassy for advice? Do you have any independent finances?

MyBrexitGoesOnHoliday · 27/09/2018 09:50

I agree. If you are in the ME, you can’t just walk out and leave your H like this.
Youll need much more preparation.

You need to contact a lawyer that can tell you what you can and cant do.
My first gut reaction wouod be to put some money aside on an UK bank account and to ask to go back to the uk for a week or so to see family. WITHOUT him.
And then stay in the uk with your dd and then ask for divorce.

But please don’t do anything rash just now. You would loose if you are getting divorced there. Your dd might have tomstay there with her dad. You might get into major trouble. Amd yoU dint want to be seen as if you have abducted your dd either (ie taken her into another country wo her dad agreement).

AuntBeastie · 27/09/2018 09:51

YANBU, he sounds awful.

Snowymountainsalways · 27/09/2018 09:52

Can you move back to the UK? I have travelled to Middle East extensively and you are not wrong when you call it a golden cage. That is precisely how it feels.

Do you think you would be happier at home with or without your dh?

You sound desperately unhappy with your so called lovely lifestyle. I would plan to move back and see if your marriage improves then.

Move back on your own if he does not want to come with you is another possibility.

I am afraid to say you are the prize bird in the cage unable to fly. It is tragic and a total waste of your life. Consider your options carefully before you do anything. The laws can be brutal when it comes to women.

If you are going to fly home, do so as a holiday and never return. I would be very careful about telling him anything if I were you.

starbrightlight · 27/09/2018 09:52

You need to make a plan and get yourself and your daughter away from this horrible man ASAP.

PixieCutRegret · 27/09/2018 09:52

You need to be very careful and seek advice from people that know the legal situation in the country you reside.

This!

It's not as easy as just LTB in the Op's situation. I second the poster who suggested speaking with the embassy.

Flowers for you and your DD, I hope you can make an easy escape from this horrible man

AGHHHH · 27/09/2018 09:54

He sounds like a fucking waste of shit.

Bin him.

SundayGirls · 27/09/2018 09:55

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

pasturesgreen · 27/09/2018 09:56

Get proper legal advice.

His sons are a red herring, they're late teens and will soon start doing their own thing and won't want to holiday with their father anymore.

Fairenuff · 27/09/2018 10:00

Where are your family OP?

Gazelda · 27/09/2018 10:03

Leave him. This sounds so unhappy and unhealthy.

charlestonchaplin · 27/09/2018 10:04

If you divorce, would your divorce be according to the laws of the country you are in? If so, I would be very careful and get good legal advice before doing anything.

ScottishInSwitzerland · 27/09/2018 10:05

Depending on the country you are residing in, there is a reasonable chance it is not a signatory to The Hague Convention on International Child Abduction. You can find a list of signatories online.

Assuming your country of habitual residence is not a signatory, what I would do is tell him you want to go home to see your family / escape the heat / whatever. And then once you are home, then tell him you want a divorce.

Justanothernameonthepage · 27/09/2018 10:05

In your shoes, I would very carefully and quietly start making a plan.
Get a UK bank account (if you have right to reside) with contact address at a family members you trust. When you are next home (can you manufacture a family emergency/hospital stay that requires you to fly back?). Set up an email he doesn't know about (clear cookies and delete that email page from internet history) and send photos of documents to that.
He's happy and not going to change as he sees nothing wrong with his behaviour.
Also read'why does he do that' electronically. (Unless you share Amazon account). Don't confide in anyone that you're leaving, until you have. If you have someone you trust implicitly in the UK, ask if you can send some parcels to be kept. Shop online for 'gifts' for UK friends and get a supply of clothes/basics/or gifts that can be returned for store credit towards basics.
Gift cards are ideal.

Branleuse · 27/09/2018 10:07

run away. Fake a reason to come back to the UK with your ddaughter and stay here

ScottishInSwitzerland · 27/09/2018 10:07

Here’s a link to the signatories. It occurred to me that if your home internet and devices are set up like ours, then your husband could see what you’ve searched for. And it’s probably best He doesn’t see This search.

www.ag.gov.au/FamiliesAndMarriage/Families/InternationalFamilyLaw/Pages/HagueConventionOnTheCivilAspectsOfInternationalChildAbduction.aspx

gendercritter · 27/09/2018 10:07

He sounds skin-crawlingly awful. Please be very careful about how you leave him so you can't be accused of abduction.

Vanessatiger · 27/09/2018 10:10

My family in the UK

I only mentioned his teenaged sons because I just couldn’t stand the way he us around them, acting “cool” to gain their approval.. laughing at old ladies, staring at young girls and speaking cruelly about other people .. the list goes on

But he isn’t a bad person. He loves our daughter, he can be a nice person just not a nice husband.
He chain smokes (lights one up then finishes and lights another within 2 min) so DD never gets the chance to play with him outdoors.

OP posts:
Angelil · 27/09/2018 10:13

It sounds like a modern version of Ibsen's "A Doll's House". That's not a good thing.

LTB.

Fairenuff · 27/09/2018 10:16

What are the laws regarding divorce and custody of children in the country you are in?

Vanessatiger · 27/09/2018 10:20

I think he’ll go above the law here

OP posts:
EK36 · 27/09/2018 10:20

Do you want to keep your lifestyle or to be happy? Something you need to think about. Would it be difficult leaving him due to where you live? Would he have the law in his side for keeping the child? I would think very carefully about it and seek legal advice. If you do leave then you would have to plan it very well to get a clean getaway with your child.

Allegorical · 27/09/2018 10:21

I take it you are a younger model second wife. He is obviously agist from the things he says and sees women as there to be pretty things and discarded when they are past their best.
If that what you want your daughter to grow up seeing?
Take it from the daughter of a man with a similar attitude. I grew up with a lot of issues because of him. My poor mother was downtrodden for most of her life. We were also expats and that lifestyle gives the men a lots of freedoms - for instance expat men visiting prostitutes is rife. Get out while you still can.