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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU - out last night until 2am

305 replies

Ostracod · 25/07/2020 22:40

After 8 years of being at home baby rearing (DS8, DS5) I'm finally feeling like I want to cultivate a social life again. Nothing flash, just visiting friends in their homes, attending hobby workshops and events and going to pubs when they're open again properly. My husband of 12 years recently gave up his career as a musician so we can start a business together. He is at the opposite end of the sociability spectrum as he says he has worked in pubs 3 nights a week for 20 years and wants to have some time at home relaxing.

My idea of a good time is sitting having a really in depth chat with a few friends and maybe watching live music or having dinner together. I have started to do this maybe one or two nights a month as well as dog walks with friends etc during the week, totalling maybe 6 things a month without him. We work, live and parent together 24/7 other than that. We also see family and mutual friends together a couple of times a week, usually at our house.

However, my husband seems to be putting up increasing barriers to me doing this. I make dinner before I go and clear up, so all he has to do is put the kids to bed, enjoy his solo evening and go to bed. He has asked me to stay until the kids are in bed before but I firmly said no to that. He's now said he worries if I'm out late and can't sleep, to which I said I would text the address of where I am if it's a friends house, and would send a message if I'm going to be later than midnight. Because me and my friends are the sort who chat a lot, sometimes if the wine is flowing it gets pretty late, like 2.30am. I always text when I'm leaving. He has now said he would prefer if I chose to be considerate with the time I come home, as after midnight disrupts his sleep. He insisted it wasn't a curfew but said it's ignorant to wake someone up in the night.

Last night, I visited an old friend of more than a decade in her home. The wine flowed, the chats continued until 1am. I sent a message home saying I'd probably be another hour, his phone was off. I wasn't drunk, we shared 1 bottle between us all evening.

Upon my return home, our dog barked once. Otherwise I was really quiet and got ready outside the bedroom. He was sitting up in bed, furious, saying I'd woken him up. It was 2.15am on a Saturday morning, neither of us had anything to do this weekend. I apologised and got straight into bed. He continued to berate me, saying it was really fucking selfish of me to ruin his sleep and go against what he asked of me. It got to 4am and he was still furious, he shook me awake and called me a selfish cunt for waking him, and that going out late is a sign of a midlife crisis. He dragged the covers off me and told me to fuck off downstairs. I didn't budge and just lay there. This happened twice more until 5am when he finally passed out. The kids came in at 7 and I took them downstairs, made breakfast and kept them entertained until 11.30 when he surfaced. I made him a cup of tea and he made lunch for himself and the kids before announcing he was going out. I asked if he wanted dinner later and he said "I'll say yes then swan in at 4am", then walked out. He took the car and is still out, no message or anything. So there you have it. Extremely detailed as I don't want to skip any relevant facts. Am I selfish and entitled or is that controlling behaviour from him?

OP posts:
FabbyChix · 25/07/2020 22:42

Thank god ive been single six years. Why do you women allow anyone to talk to you like you’re scum.

SideEyeing · 25/07/2020 22:43

He's being a petulant shit.

Happyheartlovelife · 25/07/2020 22:46

Oh. He was. I’ve never liked the c word. In fact I divorce my husband if he ever called me that!

TokyoSushi · 25/07/2020 22:46

Totally controlling and quite frankly horrible. I think he preferred it when you were the good little wife...

Disneyvillain · 25/07/2020 22:46

I would also have difficulty sleeping and/or would be woken up which is annoying. His reaction was very extreme though!!

yesterdaystotalsteps123 · 25/07/2020 22:48

You made him a cup of tea and asked when he'd like his dinner after he called you a selfish cunt? Why do you want to be in a relationship with this abusive man? He sounds awful and you don't have to live life like this

millymoo1202 · 25/07/2020 22:50

Sounds like he doesn’t like a wife who’s got a life!!

Inastatus · 25/07/2020 22:50

YANBU and he is v controlling

chunkyrun · 25/07/2020 22:51

He sounds horrid. What do you see in him?

Passthebubbly · 25/07/2020 22:53

You do not deserve that type of treatment, nobody does.

Thehop · 25/07/2020 22:54

He’s a cock nostril who’s hoping to make it not worth the hassle of going out so you just stay in.

Staplemaple · 25/07/2020 22:54

He sounds disgusting, who does he think he is talking to you like that?

Aquamarine1029 · 25/07/2020 22:56

Is he your dad and are you 12? What the fuck is his problem?

Aquamarine1029 · 25/07/2020 22:58

He’s a cock nostril who’s hoping to make it not worth the hassle of going out so you just stay in.

Exactly this. He's trying to train you by beating you down so much you never go out again. That way you can deal with the children and he can do fuck all.

DavetheCat2001 · 25/07/2020 23:00

Seriously OP..do you really need to ask.....?

Alexa1990 · 25/07/2020 23:00

This is abuse. It isn’t normal, it isn’t ok. If he has such an issue with sleep then he needs to bring it up kindly and thoughtfully another time.
I hope you find the strength to walk away from this man.

Queenest · 25/07/2020 23:01

You could stand up to him. He doesn’t get to decide what time you come home does he.

It will almost certainly get worse.

WineAndTiramisu · 25/07/2020 23:01

It sounds like he wants you to choose to stop going out by making life difficult for you if you do. It's up to you what happens next, I'd talk to him and state that you're not going to stop. If he insists it disrupts his sleep, is there anywhere else you could sleep? Or suggest you stay over at the friends house instead, that might change his mind! But whatever happens, don't change what you are doing just because he's making things awkward.

Merryoldgoat · 25/07/2020 23:01

He’s a nasty shit.

I’d be having a very frank conversation after that little episode. And I’d tell him he’s the problem and he can either sort himself out or fuck off.

So many men love to ruin women’s fun.

RiftGibbon · 25/07/2020 23:01

Why has anyone voted yabu?
I sleep terribly but whenever I have been woken by noise I haven't ever felt the need to keep waking the person responsible, swear at them and behave horribly.
If I know DP is going to be late home I will suggest he sleeps in another room. If I can't sleep, I will go in another room.

OP he is being deliberately difficult and it snacks of trying to keep you in your place.

WorraLiberty · 25/07/2020 23:01

He's now said he worries if I'm out late and can't sleep

So many Mumsnetters pull that little stunt about 'worry' and 'anxiety' to try to control their partners. The onus is on them to deal with it though and no-one else.

So two nights a month you're going out till after midnight and he can't cope?

Tell him to suck it up. He's trying to control you massively here.

PatsyDahling · 25/07/2020 23:02

Occasionally I'll roll in pissed as a fart. Not often. Maybe a handful of times per year. I try to be quiet in the way that all drunk people try to be quiet...ie loudly. My dp sometimes gets a bit annoyed about being woke up but he'd never talk to me like that and in the morning he always makes me a bacon butty and a cuppa while smugly smiling at my hangover.

Your dp sounds very angry and controlling. There's nothing wrong with having friends and hobbies outside of the family unit. He clearly has an issue with this.

Ostracod · 25/07/2020 23:02

This is making me cry, I know this isn't ok. He's mostly really kind and thoughtful, but me going out with friends makes him uncomfortable and it's so difficult to align the stars and ensure I do it all right I often cancel or refuse invitations now

OP posts:
Runbitchrun · 25/07/2020 23:03

Well, honestly I wouldn’t like someone coming in in the early hours of the morning 6 times a month, but his reaction to you was completely out of proportion. I wouldn’t tolerate my partner speaking to me like that. Maybe that’s why I’m single.

Merryoldgoat · 25/07/2020 23:04

@Runbitchrun

Well, honestly I wouldn’t like someone coming in in the early hours of the morning 6 times a month, but his reaction to you was completely out of proportion. I wouldn’t tolerate my partner speaking to me like that. Maybe that’s why I’m single.
She does 6 things a month without him - only 1 or 2 a month are late nights.
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