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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:
Starfish28 · 28/07/2019 14:56

I think your husband is a controlling bastard and you need to leave him. He is ruining all your lives.

I just feel so sorry for you’re children as well. Living rurally without transport is horrendous. Particularly as a teenager.

We moved to a rural farm when I was 11. My parents went out of their way to drive me and my brothers everywhere we needed to go. We were immediately given driven lessons at 17 so we could then help each other. Can’t be arsed would never have been in their vocabulary.

StaplesCorner · 28/07/2019 14:57

BTW OP do you mind me asking how your vertigo was diagnosed and what causes it? Is it incurable? (Sorry to de-rail thread, mind you if we keep talking about it maybe some people will actually realise that's what you explained you have Hmm )

WhereYouLeftIt · 28/07/2019 14:57

Honestly, with what you've added with your last post OP; I think I'd just go straight to leaving him. He will block the house swap, so going down that route will do nothing but build in a delay. Fuck it, get packed and move in with your family. Get it out of the way during the school holidays so that next term you and the children will be better set.

KickAssAngel · 28/07/2019 14:58

Honestly - it sounds like he wants to keep you all locked up where he can keep an eye on you.

Leave - go to family, then look for a suitable house. He can either realize how horrifically controlling and selfish he is, and genuinely mend his ways, or you're going to end up separating anyway. Why prolong the agony?

whiskybysidedoor · 28/07/2019 14:59

Great, it's starting again just now. DD's friend's all off to a birthday party later. DH doesn't want to take her because "I've been busy all week."

Going to have to intervene before an argument breaks out. DD resents her dad greatly. What an absolutely thrilling Summer my kids are going to have.

I don’t understand why you have passively accepted this. And for all these years. Your children are going to resent you. If my DH said that and refused to drive he would be terrified he’d end up under the patio. Tell him to get off his selfish lazy arse and drive your child to her friends. What a wanker.

And yes you need to move. YANBU.

Whisky2014 · 28/07/2019 14:59

Ok, yes, leave him.

titchy · 28/07/2019 14:59

Right then do something about it. Pack this afternoon. Phone your relative if they're able to house you in the interim. Book a taxi and leave.

GrasswillbeGreener · 28/07/2019 15:00

Your reasoning sounds very very sound to me. Hope you can get a swap or move yourselves somehow. Agree though about getting your children on bikes and using good locks properly.

With your vertigo problems - is it triggered by head turning? Is it known what is behind it? Have you had a Hallpike test done at any point? (it involves a funny combination of lying down and turning your head while someone watches your eyes, IIRC). If you don't have any underlying diagnosis and haven't had that done it might be something to ask your GP about, as some causes respond to specific exercises.

Hope you can get your life and your children's improved one way or another.

cakesandphotos · 28/07/2019 15:01

Would an electric bike be an option? I'm not sure how vertigo affects a person so possibly not but might be good in the meantime

Nothingcomesforfree · 28/07/2019 15:02

I’d be surprised if they could move your DH out. It’s a secure tenancy. As long as he can afford the rent by himself it’s not an issue.

The tricky bit would be finding something you could afford with the two kids, especially with one at college. Are you on disability benefits? I’m sure that would help you be rehoused.

Jux · 28/07/2019 15:03

I saved up over £1000 to buy dd a moped for her 16th birthday, despite it being a risk. Like your dd, she was sotd from her friends and activities because public transport is so shit in rural areas (and we're in a small town not even a village!).

DH had always refused to agree to a moped for dd, but as her 16th approached and he found I had actually enough money for it, he started listening.

Like your dh, he could go wherever and whenever liked while dd and I were trapped in a tiny area. Half the time he was 'busy' and couldn't taker her anywhere, some of the time he simply couldn't be arsed, on the few times she though it was all arranged with him he would have forgotten and made a massive fuss when reminded.

I told him he either did his duty by her with good grace or I bought her the bike.

I didn't buy the bike. Good grace comes with difficulty in him but he does try.

I do wish I'd bought her the bike anyway, mind. Just because ...

KickAssAngel · 28/07/2019 15:03

How close are your family? Can someone pick the 3 of you up, get DD to the party & back (or get herself there if in the right place) and let you stay a week?

Then you and he can have a talk about what the future looks like.

C8H10N4O2 · 28/07/2019 15:04

OP: if you are at home with the kids does he also control the finances?

Just wondering if you even have the option to buy bikes, mopeds, magical taxi firms, freezer loads of stores or all the other things suggested by people who always know they would manage so much better than people stuck in these situations.

StaplesCorner · 28/07/2019 15:04

I'm just wondering if OP rang Shelter tomorrow to get advice, might she be able to tell him to go, a case for coercion/control?

Anyway, I am voting for getting advice tomorrow morning but you know if OP came back and said she'd called a cab and they were all off for good I'd be cheering and waving!

lyralalala · 28/07/2019 15:05

Forget him moving. He won't, and it sounds like you'd all be better off without him.

If you live rurally with kids then you have to accept an element of being their taxi driver.

He quite clearly likes having you all isolated. Move with family, sort yourself out and leave him to his life as he is obviously quite happy having his own social life without any consideration for any of you

RandomMess · 28/07/2019 15:06

It sounds like it has all been about control. How utterly miserable of him not to drop DD off to her friends when he pisses of out with his mates as and when suits him. Threatening a custody battle if you moved out etc.

Angry
lyralalala · 28/07/2019 15:07

It's also funny when people intantly say taxis when you live rural. I don't live quite as rural as the OP and you have to book a taxi a minimum of 48 hours in advance as there only is three

Waxonwaxoff0 · 28/07/2019 15:07

YANBU at all, living somewhere like that would be my worst nightmare. I don't drive and wouldn't live anywhere other than a large town with good transport.

Ellie56 · 28/07/2019 15:07

plan was to go to family member, file as having left him and get rehoused

If this is still an option, I would do this OP. Your DH sounds like a selfish twat.

IAskTooManyQuestions · 28/07/2019 15:09

@saraclara - if you read properly you'll note I highlighted TWO of the OPs posts - the crippling pain/cant drive and the walk for 2 hours to get a pint of milk.

Cant have it both ways Im afraid. One of those statements is an exaggeration. And I am going to directly ask - what illness is this that you cant drive 10 minutes to the next village, but apparently you can walk for two hours for a pint of milk

it's a lot when you don't drive (I suffer chronic pain that makes it difficult to drive).

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.

Hmm

So as I said before - either take your coffee black or learn to drive.

billy1966 · 28/07/2019 15:09

OP, you have allowed him to control you for too long.
Your poor children.
They are going to resent you too for not stepping in.

He sounds like a mean selfish controlling man and you are allowing it.

You need to take control and move on this asap.
Can you send your children to family for a break from this horrible atmosphere and get yourself into the council and tell them you are looking to be moved due to his unreasonable behaviour.

Stop allowing him to control all your lives.

ALittleBitAlexis · 28/07/2019 15:11

If you can find a practical way out of this (not sure if the house swap would work if he's on the tenancy too), I think you and the kids should just leave as soon as you can.

He sounds perfectly content with his life, with no regard for his family, so why would he change? And if he actually did agree to move, you know he'd be resentful and a misery to live with because he's lost his retirement home.

Agree with PPs about getting some advice from Shelter etc if you need it.

Willow2017 · 28/07/2019 15:14

I know you said you can't drive because of pain but surely if you can walk for 2 hours you can sit for 10 minutes?

FFS! RTFT.

Just because a person can walk doesnt mean that they arent in pain doing something else! There are so many types of pain that affect people in different ways doing different things, why cant people understand that.
Op doesnt need to explain what her condition is, although she has stated clearly how her vertigo affects her, if she has other conditions she doesnt have to tell the world about them. Saying I am in pain when driving is enough.

Smelborp · 28/07/2019 15:16

I think he’ll block any attempt at a house swap so I think you need to speak with the council / shelter about options to move and be housed without his permission. You so sound like prisoners. Are there any parents you could ask for a huge favour that might get your DD on this occasion?

Dippypippy1980 · 28/07/2019 15:16

Leave. Your husband doesn’t sound like he cares about anyone else’s happiness, and is simply using you to keep his council house.

This is relationship make or break time. Look into your housing options if you leave with them he children - he is controlling.

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