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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To tell DH me and the DC are moving and it's his choice whether he comes?

333 replies

VizzyWoo · 28/07/2019 13:53

We live in a tiny village of around 15 houses, basically a small estate in the middle of a field surrounded by farms. The village has no services, not even a shop. We've lived here since the DC's (now 15 and 12) were a toddler and newborn. The nearest shop is in another larger village 2.4 miles away, which may not seem like far but it's a lot when you don't drive (I suffer chronic pain that makes it difficult to drive). There are times when DH has been at work and I've had to walk an hour there and back into the larger village to get some milk. So 2 hours for a pint of milk. There is technically a bus that goes to the larger village one way and the nearest town the other way, but it's every other hour (and only turns up 50% of the time so more like every few hours) and stops at 4pm.

The DC's go to school in a town 5.4 miles away and it was a nightmare to get them in, we weren't in the catchment area and they didn't believe that they were the closest school. All of the admissions folk hadn't heard of our village. Eventually we got them in. Naturally both kids wanted independence when starting secondary school. We tried to let them both use the bus service in Year 7 but on the several times they tried the bus never turned up. So DH drives them on the way to work which they hate. Because the bus back to the village stops at 4pm (and never turns up in between them finishing school and 4) they have to wait around outside school until 6 each night for DH to get off work and pick them up.

DD starts college next year and it is 7 miles away. Bus again is completely out of the question. I have no idea how we are going to manage it as it's off DH's work route and DS's school route. We've actually had her in tears because she feels her social life is being damaged living here. If it's Saturday evening and all her friends are meeting up in town, she can never attend as DH CBA taking her. Her friends all go to the gym together and she can't go, DH won't take her. Friends eventually stopped asking her. DS is only 12 but he's starting to want to go out but can't. It's also my social life, I can't go to meet friends for a coffee etc and I am very lonely.

I have wanted to move for years, but DH always says no. His reasoning is that it's quiet and safe here, there is no crime. And that being here keeps the DC out of trouble. He also calls it his "Lovely quiet retirement home" (he's late 50s, is retiring in a few years). DD massively resents him for this. We have had many an argument about it. Personally, I think he is selfish. He has his car and can piss off whenever he likes, and he does. He gets to go into a city for work and is always down the pub in the larger village etc. While me and the DC are literally prisoner at home going out of our minds. He says I'm stupid for wanting to move into the nearby town, and that I'll be giving up our "lovely safe home". I think it's ridiculous. The vast majority of people in the UK live in towns/cities/suburbia nowadays and get on fine!

Me and the kids are becoming very lonely and depressed and he doesn't care or doesn't realize. I'm tempted to join a house swapper site (social housing) without his permission, and if we get someone interested then I will pursue it and he can either come with us or piss off. His choice, but either way me and the DC GO. I think I have a good chance of getting a swap, I'm sure the village is desirable to some. I know me and the kids need to leave this village, it's suffocating us. DD has literally been breaking her heart about it, 15 and going stir crazy. It's awful. I feel like we're being kept on DH's bloody compound.

I love DH but the kids come first. I feel they aren't going to thrive here and are lonely, isolated and depressed. As am I. I feel I need to take control here.

OP posts:
Alsonification · 28/07/2019 13:57

I don’t blame you for wanting to move & YANBU at all. I wonder how the house swap work if he doesn’t want to leave? Surely he will refuse to leave them house and therefore you cannot swap houses?

DifficultPifcultLemonDifficult · 28/07/2019 13:57

If you're both named on the tenancy you wouldn't get to swap without him signing too unfortunately.

It sounds like a nightmare for you and your dc.

I would sign up anyway and he might change his mind when it's a very real option to move.

VizzyWoo · 28/07/2019 13:59

Alsonification If he does that (wouldn't put it past him) then I would more than consider leaving him and moving in with family until I could get somewhere.

OP posts:
QueenOfPain · 28/07/2019 14:00

YANBU.

VizzyWoo · 28/07/2019 14:00

I am hoping he'll either come round. I'd also settle for him moving seperatr to us. If he refuses to leave the house then it's an act of selfishness that is literally ruining our kid's lives and I could not forgive it. Final nail in the coffin.

OP posts:
brassbrass · 28/07/2019 14:03

YANBU at all he isn't considering the needs of his family at all. Your poor kids too. Hope you get a better location OP.

user1480880826 · 28/07/2019 14:04

He sounds like he’s keeping you prisoner. I would leave if I were you.

Alsonification · 28/07/2019 14:04

Well for what it’s worth I think you’re dead right wanting to move to make yours & your children’s better. Life is too short to be unhappy. Hopefully he will move with you but if not don’t be afraid to put yourselves (you & kids) first. To be fair, you’ve lived there many years, you’ve given it a fair shot.

Greeve · 28/07/2019 14:07

Not unreasonable at all

VizzyWoo · 28/07/2019 14:07

user1480880826

It feels like that sometimes. It's awful one a Summer's evening when DD is upset because she can't see her friends and DD is bored out of his mind. It causes tension and then the 3 of us row. DH can just drive off to the pub or to his mates. I feel like he gets to control every aspect of our lives.

OP posts:
Tavannach · 28/07/2019 14:08

Can the kids go to a library to do their homework while they're waiting for the bus, or would the council lay on a taxi?
Is there anyway you could be re-housed without him? Tell the council/HA you're leaving and you need somewhere to live. It sounds borderline abusive to keep you all isolated like that.

Frazzled2207 · 28/07/2019 14:08

Yanbu at all.
Am surprised you've lasted this long tbh.

Is renting yourself out of the question? If not then yes move in with family. But take steps now so that he is absolutely clear you are serious. Unless you don't want to be with him in which case it doesn't really matter what he thinks.

FWIW I grew up rurally and although it was a pain my parents always ferried me to and fro. And funded driving lessons once I turned 17 and gave me use of a car when I passed a few months later. They always said that it wasn't my fault I lived in the middle of nowhere.

HennyPennyHorror · 28/07/2019 14:09

Perhaps a silly questions but why don't you learn to drive?

Floralnomad · 28/07/2019 14:10

YANBU but why have you never learned to drive ? Also your dd could have a moped for college commutes .

sackrifice · 28/07/2019 14:10

I feel like he gets to control every aspect of our lives.

That is because he is.

Frazzled2207 · 28/07/2019 14:10

Btw your dh is acting totally unreasonably, that he CBA to give your children lifts when he's not working is horrid!

titchy · 28/07/2019 14:10

Move! It's not a nice safe home it's a prison for all of you.

But you can also be pro-active in making the situation better until you can move. Dcs should be getting free home to school transport for a start - if the public service isn't any good then your LEA needs to provide a taxi.

You all need a taxi account generally - not fair you are kept prisoner while your dh is free to jump in the car.

Bikes - can you cycle rather than have to walk 2.5 miles for a pint of milk? Electric bike even? Can the dcs cycle to the nearest village?

Is a moped an option for older one once she's 16? Can she stay overnight with friends rather than miss out?

But move. The sooner the better.

loveyou3000 · 28/07/2019 14:10

Ooh sounds like my teenage years. Small village, 2 bus journeys that collectively took 2 and a half hours each way to and from college, no phone signal, buses to town rarely turned up, no social life. It impacted my mental health so badly, I ended up lashing out at my parents as I felt so isolated and felt as if I were going insane. I left home at the age of 17 because of it.
I had an amazing childhood there, awful teenage years.

EC22 · 28/07/2019 14:11

I don’t think you can force him to move so you either leave him with the children or convince him to go with you.

Frazzled2207 · 28/07/2019 14:11

@titchy I might be wrong but I thought compulsory transport was only a thing for primary school children

HennyPennyHorror · 28/07/2019 14:12

Sorry missed the chronic pain bit!

Zebraaa · 28/07/2019 14:12

YANBU. Sounds suffocating. Does he actually realise how big of an issue this is to you all?

00100001 · 28/07/2019 14:13

Not sure why you/kids can't use taxis....

VizzyWoo · 28/07/2019 14:14

@titchy; DS had a bike and the second time he used it, it was nicked outside the village shop.

OP posts:
RubbingHimSourly · 28/07/2019 14:14

YANBU.

But can't the elder daughter get a moped in the meantime ?? Loads of kids round here have them, a lot travel to the better college 40 miles away on them.

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