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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Still Shaking Hours Later - DP: “You’re a fucking whore”

527 replies

Asw457 · 30/06/2019 04:24

It’s been over 12 hours now and I am still shaking at home.

Sorry for long post but do not want to drip feed:

For the last year, DP and I had our mobiles on the same plan that was auto debited from my checking account.

Shortly after we did that, I got a new job which provided me with a new phone and paid all costs associated with that phone and I essentially turned off my old phone and stopped using it.

Each month I would see that we were being charged ~£100. It seemed expensive but since my DP needed to use his phone, I couldn’t figure out a way to log in and check why that was the case, so just assumed that was the plan we were on.

It’s now been a year, and I asked DP if he could please pay me back for the mobile phone bill that had been coming out of my account. Given what I had seen coming out of my account over the last several months, I asked for 1,000 and then another 300 to take care of the next 3 months of mobile bills.

Today on the way to brunch, I decided to call the phone company while in the car to get my online username set up, make sure the June bill was paid and finally ask why it was so expensive. Midway through the conversation DP grabbed the phone and started talking to the customer service woman. I thought nothing of it as I had hoped it could get switched over to his name anyway.

After he hung up, he threw the phone at me, and started screaming at me, hitting the steering wheel, saying, you fucking cunt, you whore, you really thought you could get away with it didn’t you.

I was so scared as he was driving and I said, I don’t understand what’s happened? And he kept yelling at me, calling me a thief and a liar and a whore, saying I am no better than a common whore that sleeps for money. During this time he picked up a glass and a plastic water bottle that were in the console and emptied them on to my head and sprayed them on my clothes and then threw the empty ones at me and my face.

It turns out that of that £100 monthly bill I got charged each month, actually £75-85 was my phone because I had been on a more expensive plan and when he transferred me the £1300 to reimburse me for the last year he had overpaid me.

I kept telling him I was sorry and I had no idea that it was my phone that was so expensive, I hadn’t seen a real bill since last May. I was trying to tell him that it wasn’t malicious or scheming on my end but just an innocent mistake.

And he just kept yelling at me and telling me I was no different than his two major exes and I was just a money grubbing whore that thought she could get away with stealing money from him and taking advantage of him.

I was so terrified in the car that as soon as we got home I went inside and he drove off. He has since texted and said I was a liar and a thief and that he can never trust me for what I did and our relationship is off.

I am still shaking hours later and just don’t understand what I did which was so wrong. I could understand maybe feeling annoyed for having overpaid me, but I had always told him previously that I don’t have access to our online bills, it was just an auto debit.

I truly felt scared and could not make him see that it was just a mistake. If it were me, I would have gotten off the phone, had me set up the online login, figured out how much was owed to him and directly paid him.

We had been going through a rough patch but this was truly scary.

So AIBU to think his response did not justify what happened or reading this interaction do you think I am to blame for not having spent the time checking what the breakdown of the bill was? I truly did not even think about it that way as I hadn’t even touched that phone since last year.

OP posts:
Yabbers · 30/06/2019 11:04

Whether you were to blame or not, the reaction wasn't justified.

Whatever you had done, the reaction wasn't justified.

If he accepts it was a mistake and he apologises, do you still want to be with him? Because that would be a bigger mistake.

Nobody should be treated like that and I'm worried you think if this had been your fault, you would have accepted his behaviour.

yulet · 30/06/2019 11:06

Please get out now and escape: do not continue your relationship. Do not bury your head in the sand: this is not okay. He is not okay.

Nothing justifies that behaviour and it wasn't your fault.

Calmingvibrations · 30/06/2019 11:06

Some people are just so narcissistic they couldn’t possibly believe they’ve done wrong. Or own up to it. It’s all about them.

I once email snooped on a bf to find proof he was cheating. He was. I fessed up to him and said I knew and how I knew. His response? Scream at me that my snooping meant he had lost all trust in me and how he couldn’t trust anyone. Conveniently forgetting he was shagging someone else, and that kinda broke a bit of trust too.

You made a simple mistake over phone bill. You think his response was normal?
Go on, ask people in real life what their OH would do if they made the same mistake over phone bill.
I bet my first born none of them would say their OH would act that way.

ScrimshawTheSecond · 30/06/2019 11:06

My dear, OP, get the fuck out of that as fast as you can. Get as far as you can. DO NOT LISTEN when he apologises, explains. Get out, stay out. Ask women's aid for help if needed. Dangerous madman, abusive, violent, dangerous, dangerous, dangerous.

Best of luck. x

Densol999 · 30/06/2019 11:07

Has anyone seen this type of reaction before ?

Yes to the many murder victims of domestic violence I have dealt with

Leave
Now
Run
And do not look back

endoflevelbaddy · 30/06/2019 11:08

I've not read the whole thread but would just like to say that often on combined plans one contract forms the bulk of the cost (i.e. pays for the data / minutes) with the other line a small addition and 'sharing' the service. We have this for our daughter on Vodaphone so DH's bill is disproportionately high.

I know it's not the point at all but in all likelihood he should bare some responsibility for the costs you're incurring so you've not exactly robbed him.

More importantly, he is clearly a vile, abusive piece work who needs to be kept the hell away from other people. I'd have his bags on the doorstop awaiting his return.

Mayday19 · 30/06/2019 11:08

It's over.

Yabbers · 30/06/2019 11:08

What if my idea of water bottles being thrown on me was him just throwing in the general directions of the passenger seat after he emptied them and not specifically at me?

Gaslighting. Making you doubt what you absolutely knew to be true.

You. Need. To. Leave.

ScrimshawTheSecond · 30/06/2019 11:08

Also - this may have seemed to come out of nowhere, but I can promise you that when you are out, safe and away and look back, you will be able to identify a long, gradual pattern of abuse. This is standard shit, he's not any different from any other abuser. I'm so sorry, OP. xxx

summerofresistance · 30/06/2019 11:11

He's abusive. There is no point trying to understand how his mind works as that way madness lies.

There is no excuse for his behaviour, none. He attacked you and is now pretending he didn't even do it.

Please, run. If you stay, it will get worse.

Horsemenoftheaclopalypse · 30/06/2019 11:12

None of this is your fault.

Stop trying to understand explain and rationalise his behaviour.

echt Gave you all the advise you need. LTB.

AnneKipanki · 30/06/2019 11:12

Not RTFT.
Do not waste time trying to reason.
Go .

uggmum · 30/06/2019 11:15

He is an abuser, you cannot excuse this behaviour.

You mustn't try to justify it. He will try to minimise it.

The verbal abuse is disgusting let alone throwing water and bottles at you.

You must leave him. Next time he may physically hurt you. Get out now whilst you still can

GenuineKlatchianPottery · 30/06/2019 11:16

You're not going to leave him THIS time OP. You've taken the blame, made excuses for him and you still love him.
You're scared and looking for reassurance that it won't happen again. It will, and next time it will be worse. he will escalate his behaviour.
I really do hope that you do leave now, report him to the police and get as far away from him as possible, but I don't think you will this time.
Just know that when you are ready to leave, there will always be a hand hold and someone to help and support you here. Flowers
This is not me in any way victim blaming, sadly too many women stay in abusive relationships for far too long, myself included.

TitsInAbsentia · 30/06/2019 11:22

In an attempt to show you just how unreasonable and off the ledge his behaviour was, if it had been me and husband:

he’d have said something like oi you dingbat, it was your phone that was most expensive, and we’d have laughed and carried on our day (and I would have transferred money back if he had already sent it).

So how ok/normal/acceptable does your situation feel now? I wouldn’t mind betting if you do report him to the police you’ll Find out this isn’t his first time.

Please leave, please stop trying to justify his utterly despicable behaviour, there are far more worthy men to be with.

catontherun · 30/06/2019 11:24

I've never said this before on MN but L.T.B.

If you live together, plan your exit carefully because he is an abusive male who will either go apeshit on you or will apologise, suck you back in until the next explosive situation arises.

Don't even think about pursuing the relationship to the point of marriage and kids because, unless you are spectacularly lacking in intelligence, you must see that he is a dangerous individual who will cause his wife/kids to have a miserable existence treading on eggshells IN FEAR of upsetting him.

femfemlicious · 30/06/2019 11:26

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krustykittens · 30/06/2019 11:28

If you can justify that level of verbal and physical abuse over a simple mistake then you are in for years of abuse that will only get worse. He might even kill you. All it will take is something as simple as putting the TV on downstairs while he is sleeping upstairs. Please, please leave , OP. At the very BEST you are going to lose years of your life to a vicious bully who will destroy your self esteem and leave you a shadow of your former self, carrying mental scars for the rest of your life. AT BEST. This is not a normal reaction. If you stay with him now, he will know you will put up with abuse and things will only escalate.

daisychain01 · 30/06/2019 11:32

You're not going to leave him THIS time OP. You've taken the blame, made excuses for him and you still love him.

How about you stop the negative comments, predicting what you think the OP will or won't do this time or any future time. It isn't always easy to suddenly switch off the tap', so at least give support rather than placing even more doubt in their mind.

Just because they've questioned themselves over this, doesn't mean they won't take on board the comments and almost unanimous vote that it isn't their fault.

kateandme · 30/06/2019 11:33

i dont understand why you keep replying with the words or his blaming you or thinking you have done wrong.you keep switching by the fact he then abused you and attacked you.this is the point hear not whether you did wrong with the phone or not.he then attacked you!

daisychain01 · 30/06/2019 11:34

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snowbear66 · 30/06/2019 11:35

He is calling me a liar
If you stay then facts and truth don’t matter anymore and he will rewrite history to suit himself.
Don’t bother fighting for justice or truth of what happened because he doesn’t care.
All you can do is get yourself out of there.

FermatsTheorem · 30/06/2019 11:37

If OP is in America, as seems a possibility given her posts, then she's probably still asleep.

In any case, most abusers do such a number on their victims psychologically that it takes a hell of a lot of work, repetition and support to "deprogramme" the victim and enable them to see that they are being abused, and htat this isn't normal behaviour.

HobbyIsCodeForDogging · 30/06/2019 11:38

It might be helpful to imagine what you would say to a friend, mother, sister, daughter if someone said and did those things to them in a relationship. Sometimes it becomes crystal clear when you remove the "love" you think you have for someone and imagine the situation is someone else's - then you can see what you have to do.

Gilead · 30/06/2019 11:41

femfem Do you really want to display your complete ignorance and lack of empathy on a public forum?