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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:
Innersmellbow · 30/06/2019 07:47

Beware OP - he'll be smarming round you later all sweetness and light and performing the 'perfect partner' routine - this is to draw you right back in again - to make you believe you were mistaken and that it was all your fault.

Wise yourself up unless you prefer to stay on this roller coaster that's only going round in circles down and down and down.

Just as an aside - its most likely he's been using your phone [ie he's the liar/thief/cunt] and having contact with sex workers. [ie whore - not a word I would use but just using what he said]
His abuse of you was to cover the probability of him being found out.

Be careful where you choose to step next.

slipperywhensparticus · 30/06/2019 07:48

You turned your phone off and left it but has it been used by him?

Leave him before he hurts you badly

Dont become another statistic

AquaPris · 30/06/2019 07:48

Also he's gaslighting you and trying to make you think you're crazy. Eventually you will believe him... you're already making excuses. Once or twice a year becomes every day and then you think you're insane, you're trapped and he will break you.

THIS IS HOW ALL ABUSIVE RELATIONSHIPS START. YOU ARE WALKING RIGHT INTO IT.

Why would he randomly empty water bottles and throw them generally at the footwell in the middle of an argument? He threw them at you. Purposefully. And now he's lying purposefully. He's texting you those things to make it seem like he's innocent because he knows what he's doing and so that you never have written evidence. I bet he abused his 'crazy exes' too. That's why he calls them crazy - any way you could contact one of them and ask what happened?

The police can't prosecute him for it but they will keep it in file and believe you.

You're being so so so blind and manipulated already.

vampirethriller · 30/06/2019 07:50

Yes, something like this happened to me- in a relationship so bad I still have PTSD seven years later. He would have reacted exactly the way your partner did.

Whisky2014 · 30/06/2019 07:50

What the fuck.

It doesn't matter if you made a mistake. His reaction is completely over the top.
I see it worked because you're questioning if you had done something wrong. Even if you had the correct response would be "ah I think it was your phone that was expensive so you'll need to reimburse me"
What shouldnt happen is a screaming, shouting, aggressive hitting whilst driving and pouring water on your fucking head and calling you names.

Even if you made a mistake why is that acceptable? Leave now ffs.

CorBlimeyGovenor · 30/06/2019 07:50

Write a letter to him. A very rational letter and return the extra money (if he paid it) to you.
Explain again why you made that error and apologize for it. Give examples to demonstrate why you are not a thief.

Then, very calmly explain to him that his behaviour was frightening, intimidating and amounted to assault. He verbally and physically assaulted you. Tell him that he needs to get help for his anger issues. Arrange a time for him to collect all his belongings. Make sure you are not alone. You should also make clear that if he gets in contact again you will seek a restraining order against him. Make sure that you keep notes etc of any behaviour.

FermatsTheorem · 30/06/2019 07:53

Leave.

As pp have said, why he did it is utterly irrelevant, it's the fact that he did do it.

He assaulted you - grounds in and of itself to walk away from him without looking back.

He did it while driving - he could have killed you (and other people if he'd crashed into another vehicle).

This man is unhinged and highly dangerous.

Get out.

LittleDoritt · 30/06/2019 07:53

Get out of there OP. Don't let him minimise this. Pay him the money back and walk away.

Shoxfordian · 30/06/2019 07:54

Transfer him the money back and dump him
He's shown you his true colours and they're ugly.

JessicaWakefieldSV · 30/06/2019 07:55

I wish I knew the magic phrase to say to a woman who is being abused but is still in denial. Still ‘trying to make him understand she loves him’. I really do.

This is how it starts. It doesn’t start with serious assault, that’s what it ends with.

Get away now. Never go back. Stop looking to explain anything rationally, narcissists won’t see reason. Don’t be another statistic.

Get. Away. Now.

CarolDanvers · 30/06/2019 07:57

Has anything like this happened to anyone else?

The most abusive and utterly enraged two of my exes every got was over money. My ex H found a letter telling me my credit card limit had been increased and a statement showing I had recently made a large payment. He demanded to know why he hadn't been informed of this access to more credit and where had the money come from to pay it? The rage and entitlement was completely out of proportion to the issue. Another ex had been paying for joint gym membership each month - council gym so hardly catastrophically expensive. We broke up and he didn't do anything about stopping it. I just carried on going to the gym until they told me that month hadn't been paid whereupon I set up my own DD. Was about three months. Ex rang up screaming and demanding the money and because of his abuse I told him to FRO and hung up. Never heard him angrier.

A certain kind of man is very triggered by money and the perception that some money grabbing bitch woman might have access to too much of it or be trying to take him for all his piles of gold Hmm. Sure some women might be but in my opinion men who think like this by far outweighs women who actually do it and that all women are money grabbing bitches is a message that many boys learn at their fathers knee.

ConfusedNoMore · 30/06/2019 07:57

@Wallywobbles has it spot on.

My ex nearly ripped the steering wheel off the car in a rage once. Also behaved like this when driving to scare me and make me 'behave'.

A decent partner might have queried the money but no way at all they would react like your man has done. He's disgusting.

User8888888 · 30/06/2019 07:58

Leave. There is something very chilling about what you described. He may not have hit you but it sounds like he has the potential to be very dangerous indeed. This wasn’t an alcohol fuelled incident. He was cold and calculating. He is the type that will eventually kill.

OldUnit · 30/06/2019 07:58

He hates women. As hard as he tries to hide it, this isn't far from the surface and will come out time & again.

You have to leave him. I'd be off. Boom. Gone.

TestingTestingWonTooFree · 30/06/2019 07:59

He’s an abusive prick. The phone is a minor side issue.

BoudiccaKate · 30/06/2019 08:00

He's been using the phone/sim. Don't pay the money back. Instead use it to pay for your own place and get out as quickly as you can get your stuff together.

AnotherEmma · 30/06/2019 08:01

He is textbook abusive. Verbal abuse, physical aggression, denial, blaming you, gaslighting.

Signs of emotional abuse
The Abuser Profiles
Am I in an abusive relationship?

Yellowroses27 · 30/06/2019 08:01

Op from what I've seen you are trying to understand his actions. Why was he so angry? Did you really do something so wrong? Has this happened to anyone else? Why would he jump to the conclusion that you were trying to deceive him?

None of that matters. At all. I'm usually wary of telling people to Ltb on here but based on what you've said I feel very frightened for you and truly believe you need to be away from someone capable of acting like that. Stop thinking about the whys, think about how you can get away. There is no chance I could ever forgive and forget behaviour like that.

Provincialbelle · 30/06/2019 08:02

I have long had a few tests for relationships (developed through bitter experience). The most important of all is the crisis test - how your OH behaves when something is apparently badly wrong. Do they: (a) assume a default position that you didn’t try to wrong them / cause problems, so they give you the chance to explain; (b) discuss in a rational fashion; (c) trust you to implement the resolution; (d) go on to implement their side of it themselves. If the answer is no to any of those, it’s a deal breaker. It says everything about a person how they react in a crisis. My DB has left what was essentially an abusive relationship because his ex found it simpler to shout abuse at him, and explained that she “just couldn’t cope” so he shouldn’t take it personally. Your OH is far worse, LTB

HillRunner · 30/06/2019 08:02

LTB

He's a nasty piece of work.

Ali1cedowntherabbithole · 30/06/2019 08:03

OP if you are not in the UK and I’m guessing not, if you tell is which country you are in I’m sure posters will try to signpost you to the right helpline numbers.

I agree with everyone else.

A normal partner would have laughed off a partner trying to overcharge them and come to an arrangement over the money.

This isn’t normal.

And he’s done it to previous partners too. Hasn’t he?

You don’t need to change you and you can’t change him. So leave him.

madcatladyforever · 30/06/2019 08:04

I'm so sorry OP that must have been a horrible and frightening experience for you Flowers
At least you know what this man is capable of now when he is crossed and thank goodness he is out of your life.
What you did was just a mistake which could have been resolved amicably without him assaulting you. You are not in the wrong.

shitwithsugaron · 30/06/2019 08:06

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

CrunchyCarrot · 30/06/2019 08:06

I've been in an abusive relationship. Your experience is indicative that you're in one too, and it will get worse, not better. He'll make you doubt yourself, you'll feel like you're the one to blame. His reaction was way, way over the top. It's not right to verbally and physically abuse someone! Leave him whilst you still can, and before you lose any more of your self confidence and self esteem.

Happyspud · 30/06/2019 08:06

Forget about the phone issue. He’s a violent, aggressive and dangerous bastard with no respect for you.