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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to not want to commit to DP...yet

85 replies

BSmart · 29/12/2018 00:18

I know I’m going to be told I’m BU but here it goes.

DP is really upset with me and is currently not taking to me. Last night, we don’t live together by the way, DP asked me “...so BSMart, what are your plans for the future ?”. I relied “Well... I want to open up my own business-“. He then cut me and said “Not career wise but in terms of our relationship. I would really like us to start saving up and buy towards a house so we can all start living together as a family”. I told him “Honestly, I can’t think of that right now when I feel there’s still issues and after what has happened between us during the years I will be stupid to consider living with you now and rushing to buy a house with you”. DP got upset and said “Your childish, that’s why I can’t consider having mature conversations with you”.

Before I get flamed. DP and I have been together since teenage-hood. The first 2 years of our relationship was great, after that, it was horrible. Very abusive, physically, emotionally and sexually. It took a lot of mental strength to come out of that. DS was born shortly after, he was inconsistent with contact, refusing to pay maintenance and I was literally a single parent for a huge number of years. DP and I broke up by that point.

He came back again but soon left and didn’t have any contact with DS for 6 months. After that, he came back in contact realised his wrong-doings and has been having a consistent relationship with DS since then (including paying maintenance).

This now brings us back to the present. It has only been recently that DP and I have gotten back together. We have never lived together because I didn’t want to put DS through living 24/7 in an abusive household. Now, DP really wants to make a go, he has his own flat has been persuading us to live with him or save up for a deposit for us to buy our own house. But I still have this niggling feeling, I’m scared to go back to that low confidence, broken down little girl. Even though he hasn’t been abusive for a number of years (we were both young). I’m worried he will turn abusive again and DS will become mentally scarred. I have my own flat, with DS living there of course. It has been drama free for a good number of years. Noscreaming/ shouting, no police turning up at our door and no revolving round of social workers coming in and out of our lives. I’m currently studying on a vocational course which will hopefully lead to good employment. I’m worried if I go back there with DP, it will disrupt all of that.

I have told this to DP and mentioned to him that it has taken me a good number of years to get to this point after all the abuse. But I feel he is not taking this on board. I also don’t feel a year and a half is enough to prove to me that he’s changed and that he’s soon not going to be dipping in and out of DS life any time soon. Also he says some things which makes me think, do I really want to go back to that again ?

Oh I don’t know. I’m prepared to be told that IABU.

OP posts:
Merryoldgoat · 01/01/2019 19:39

OP - I’m not trying to be mean, but how can you consider staying with this man?

He’s controlling, abusive, and he doesn’t even have strong enough feelings for his child to maintain a relationship with him if you split.

I honestly am baffled that you think staying with him is a good idea.

My DH would walk through fire to see his children if we split, but he wouldn’t have to, because he’s decent so I’d make it easy for him.

His assertion that families stay together no matter what is just another way for him to exert power. He’s telling you it’s his way or no way.

FFS - open your eyes and see him for the piece of shit he is.

Would you want your daughter to make a life with someone like him?

JennyHolzersGhost · 01/01/2019 19:44

Jesus fucking Christ.

Sashkin · 01/01/2019 19:49

The issue is, if I don’t have a relationship with him, I don’t think he will want to make the effort to build a relationship with DS

So he doesn't love your DS enough to want to stay in contact with him for his own sake, but he'll put up with playing Daddy if it gets him laid/keeps you in line?
ShockShockShock

That is totally fucked up OP.

Nanny0gg · 01/01/2019 20:24

The issue is, if I don’t have a relationship with him, I don’t think he will want to make the effort to build a relationship with DS

Win-win as he's no kind of role-model for his child.

BSmart · 01/01/2019 21:33

SadWell, you are all right. He hasn’t changed. After a disagreement and telling him some home truths. He called me an ugly, Jewish- big nosed something something and he hopes deaths comes knoecking at one of my family members doors. Sad

OP posts:
ThatsNotNiceRoger · 01/01/2019 21:33

He should want to make an effort with DS because he is his child, and if he isn’t interested in doing this because he’s not with you then he’s a fucking twat. It’s also controlling and manipulative. To be honest he’s a fucking abusive bastard regardless and you and your DS shouldn’t be anywhere near him.

Merryoldgoat · 01/01/2019 21:34

So what are you going to do?

ReanimatedSGB · 01/01/2019 21:37

This prick is still abusive. He still thinks that he owns you, and needs to train you like a naughty dog into absolute obedience.
You and your DC will be much better off if you chuck him out of your lives as much as possible - keep him at a distance from yourself and be careful about contact with DC, stopping it if there is any abuse.
You can do better than him.

ReanimatedSGB · 01/01/2019 21:43

OK, now block him from contacting you, ignore ignore ignore and hope he fucks off for good. You need firm barriers in place against a shitty man like this - are there other people in your life who care about you? A mum, siblings, friends? I know sometimes women stick with abusive pricks because they are isolated and vulnerable - or have been raised to think that being abused and controlled by men is something women just have to put up with...

bookwormsforever · 01/01/2019 21:53

i do feel valued but he calls me childish or stupid if I don’t agree with what his saying.

He’s not changed. He’s being nice until he gets you where he wants you, then I bet the abuse will ramp up again.

Op, that nagging feeling you get is there for a reason. Your brain is telling you not to trust this bloke, not to commit.

Him being a dad and paying for his son us not amazing - it’s what a dad should do. I think your bar is set much too low. That’s because this bloke is your only exoerience of relationships.

I’d leave him. Then I bet you’d feel more relaxed and that nagging feeling would go away.

Do the Freedom Programme and read Lundy Bancroft’s ‘Why does he do that?’ before you get into another relationship.

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