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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

DH should have told me how dysfunctional his family is

269 replies

daytimemom · 12/11/2018 09:25

Come from a very dysfunctional family myself. As a result always longed for a “normal” family. One of the things which attracted me to DH was that he and his family seemed pretty “normal” ie mum, dad, brother, parents had “good” jobs, own home, no addictions. In fact the opposite to my background. Told DH about my own family, the impact it’s had on my life, how if I had children I wanted them to have a “normal” childhood and family.

When DH & I started going out I met his family lots of times & everything seemed fine. DH never once mentioned what I now know; his parents don’t care about him, they are tight with money & let their son pawn all his possessions when he was at uni as he was so broke. They have no interest in their son and zero interest in their grandchildren. When we visited them this summer there was no food in the house for us to eat.

I asked DH if he had ever had any sort of relationship with his parents. He said no. They took no interest in him as a child, they didn’t do anything together, no days out, no holidays, no conversations about what he should do with his life, nothing.

DH has admitted he only felt able to visit his parents when I was with him as it offered him some sort of “protection” against them ie with me there they were less likely to shout or have a go at him.

My counsellor said I am so angry because with DH I thought I was getting the family I craved.

I am just so angry with DH. How dare he not tell me about how awful his parents are until we are married and have children. I feel so guilty that I have had children with a man whose parents have zero interest in their grandchildren. At the back of my mind I think if I had married someone else I would have given my children grandparents who would have loved them. I know there is no guarantee but they couldn’t have any worse grandparents.

I was honest with DH about my family so he should have been honest with me. It’s only now, when it’s too late that he shares all the horrible tales from his childhood!

OP posts:
RhiWrites · 12/11/2018 20:37

@daytimemom

Every family has their issues. I do think your husband should have been honest about his.

But I can help with the grandparent problem! Care homes are full of lonely old people who would love to be visited. Some with issues that may not make that appropriate, but many who would make great surrogate grandparents. Please consider this option to fill a void in your own life.

ButchyRestingFace · 12/11/2018 21:52

There's robust advice, and then there's being rude for the sake of it. The OP sounds pretty stressed out. There is an actual human on the receiving end of all this.

Yeah, her husband! I take your point but I suspect this OP has probably touched a raw nerve with a lot of posters.

Poppylizzyrose · 12/11/2018 22:36

Well this thread got out of hand, op is nowhere to be seen! Hmm

ScottCheggJnr · 12/11/2018 22:42

So you come from a dysfunctional family but god forbid you should have a partner who does?

FaFoutis · 12/11/2018 22:49

What do you people get out of this nasty pile-on?

Blondie1994 · 12/11/2018 22:58

I think you are projecting and being rather unfair towards your husband.

MeMeMeow85 · 12/11/2018 23:21

I feel sad for your DH. Try to show empathy towards him and focus on enjoying the family that the two of you are creating!

Camelsinthegobi · 12/11/2018 23:44

I wish I’d realised quite how disfunctional my DH’s mum was before we got married. It probably wouldn’t have made any difference as I was too young to think through the consequences of having a crackpot MIL. But I wouldn’t do it again...

ILoveHumanity · 12/11/2018 23:53

I personally wish I knew how dysfunctional my family in law are, so that I wouldn’t still married my husband but took all necessary measures to keep my distance from his family.

He knows I feel betrayed he didn’t warn me. But deep down I understand it’s not easy.

But deep down, I feel glad that he didn’t tell me. I was specifically at the time and foolishly looking for family in law as my priority to be accommodating and loving. And if I had known I wouldn’t have continued.... I had split up with someone before for his family and perhaps they why my husband didn’t tell me about his...

If I didn’t continue I would’nt have my husband who I love (isn’t perfect but he is my love ) and my Ds who is my world.

I don’t regret having those two in my life... and sometimes we need to be blind to make that leap of faith.

I wouldn’t dare think what my life would’ve been like if there was a loving family in law to accommodate me after my dysfunctional family background. I was just about becoming independant and it meant the world to me. It hurts to even go in that direction..

But it hurts more to visualise how lonely my DH must’ve felt as a child when he was being abused and manipulated. So makes Me connect with him on a deeper level.

CSIblonde · 13/11/2018 01:09

IME, most families have issues or some degree of dysfunction: and there is no 'normal'. In the nicest possible way, you can't expect that a partners family fills the hole your family left. You should be with someone for them, not their family set up.

dragonflyflew · 13/11/2018 01:41

Poor bloke. Sometimes people don't want to admit what cunts their parents are. Especially if you've told him all about your Crappy childhood, maybe he felt you think you have the monopoly on shit childhoods.
This is your chance to create the happy loving and nurturing home you both never had.
Maybe that's your reason for being together and having children.
Be kind to him.

Antigon · 13/11/2018 07:31

What do you people get out of this nasty pile-on?

Funny how the nasty posters have so much sympathy for the DH but precious little for OP, FaFoutis Hmm

@ILoveHumanity yours is the kind post OP should be reading but I'm afraid it's lost in a tide of drivel from the posters piling on to the OP.

MyBrexitIsIll · 13/11/2018 07:36

I suspect this OP has probably touched a raw nerve with a lot of posters.
In which case they are reacting exactly like the Op and therefore really have no room to behave the way they are....

Compassion seems to have disappeared from MN on the ground of ‘robust advice’. I ouldnt want to post on here when I am actually vulnerable (except your DH has cheated - THEN you get lots of support etc etc)

Idontbelieveinthemoon · 13/11/2018 07:42

I had a shitty childhood and always thought I'd found my 'family' when I met DH. Turns out his family are as batshit as mine - in fact I'd say possibly even more so.

We built our family together. He's my roots, our DC are my roots. The rest of them can behave like arseholes and do as they please - our little family is the focus for me and I couldn't be more proud that DH and I have broken those cycles of unhappiness we grew up in.

Focus on your unit. Maybe look for some support and work through your grief at not having the family you wanted and deserved. But don't push away someone who loves you because of the shitty choices his family have made.

CoughLaughFart · 13/11/2018 11:32

OP, I think you’re getting a hard time here for two reasons. One - your opening post is all about how mad you are at your husband for ‘concealing’ this. There doesn’t seem to be much sympathy for the fact that someone you love has been through this. It makes it seem all about you. However, as you point out in your second post, this is an anonymous forum, which makes it easier to say things you perhaps don’t feel you can say to your husband. We’re seeing the angry part, but there’s probably a sympathetic part too.

Two - many, including me, are perhaps finding it hard to fathom that you managed to not only get married, but have children (plural) before this came to light. Given how important this was to you, it’s surprising you didn’t dig a little deeper beforehand.

One thing I can tell you categorically is that your children would NOT have a better set of grandparents if they had a different father. How can I be so sure? Because your children wouldn’t exist without your husband. You may well have had other children with someone else, but they wouldn’t be the children you have and love now. To wish they had a different father is to wish they were different people. What would you rather have - involved grandparents with a different set of children, or the children I’m sure you and your husband already love very much?

QuackPorridgeBacon · 13/11/2018 16:02

Your poor husband. You can’t love him because if you knew about his dysfunctional family you would have left him. I think you are going to ruin your family and continue the cycle of dysfunction. What I do t understand is how you didn’t know, you’ve had multiple kids with him, how did you not know what his parents are like?

Antigon · 13/11/2018 16:06

Quack - I disagree, the fact that OP is venting her so she does not vent to her husband shows that she does love him.

Antigon · 13/11/2018 16:07

I suspect this OP has probably touched a raw nerve with a lot of posters.
In which case they are reacting exactly like the Op and therefore really have no room to behave the way they are....

Well said MyBrexit.

QuackPorridgeBacon · 15/11/2018 21:50

Antigon That’s a fair point.

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