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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Has anyone moved to be with their DP whilst having DC?

27 replies

junipertressel · 03/08/2020 19:34

DP and I are both mid-twenties, I had DC1 when I was 18. We've been together for 18 months but there has been one issue that has plagued our relationship; he owns a house on the outskirts of London and I rent in the countryside. We live 1 hour and 15 minutes drive apart. I specifically moved to the country side from the outskirts of a city because I did not want DC1 to be brought up in that environment.

DC and I live in a rented 2 bedroom house in an idyllic village. DC attends a village school, we are close to my parents and his cousins who also attend the village school. For DC I feel like this is the perfect place to grow up worry free. On the other hand, there have been times when I have felt very low. I find the little village life boring at my age, I feel very stuck in a rut, wondering if this is all life has to offer. Single parenthood is hard. All of the other mums are at least 10-15 years older than me, as such it is difficult to find common ground outside of our children, and it has taken me almost 3 years of living here to make one mummy friend.

Mine and DP's relationship has been plagued by the 'living together issue'. He has all of his extended family living close by as well as a huge friendship group. He also has an easy commute to work (he lives near a London underground station). He has come to stay here for weeks at a time, but he finds the commute difficult, it is all trains and very packed, more expensive and takes longer. He also finds it difficult being here with no friends/family close by to interact with, and there have been times where he has had to take a breather because he finds being cooped up in my rented house with no 'escape' difficult. Whilst we have had some other minor issues between us and our relationship, for the most part I love him to bits.

We have just found out that I am unexpectedly pregnant. He was initially a real arsehole about it (I think from shock), and began listing off all of the reasons why he doesn't want the baby and broke up with me. I booked an abortion in for next week because I couldn't bare the idea of having a baby with an unsupportive partner and being a single parent again. A couple of days later he has come round, profusely apologising, saying he was very selfish and acted like an arsehole. He has said he will support me whatever I want to do, and he knows that I will find an abortion extremely difficult emotionally.

He's said his preferred option after giving it thought, is to go through with the pregnancy but that he wants me to move in with him. He owns a house with enough bedrooms and space for all of us, he earns a very good salary, so I would not need to work or would have the option to work part time if I'd like to. This would allow me to visit my parents and family very regularly so I would not be isolated from them. My parents are also young retirees so there would be plenty of options for them to visit me, as well as stay over in the spare bedroom. He has also said that he would put the mortgage 50/50 in my name, so it would mean financial security for me and that extra reassurance from him. We would have the eventual view to move back to the village in a few years.

I'm so at odds of what to do. It would mean moving DC1 away from my family, away from the lovely school, growing up somewhere that I didn't envisage. I can see the benefits as well, I'd have financial security, a wider friendship group, I'd be living somewhere with a lot more going on. At times I want to keep the pregnancy, at other times I don't. I don't think I should go through with an abortion right now when I am not 100% set on it. Has anyone had similar circumstances where you have moved to an area for your DP and how did it work out?

OP posts:
Mydogisthebestest · 04/08/2020 07:52

I wouldn’t. If it goes tits up you’re fucked, especially if you aren’t married.

SkiddySkidz · 04/08/2020 08:12

My friend was in a similar situation except she did not already have a child. She was over 40 though, so had fears about not having time to find someone else and settle down in her prime.

I saw the same red flags, they had great adventures and a laugh together. But then something would happen out of his control and his reaction was unacceptable towards her. Wish she had ended it the first time he flipped out, but he was all full of apologies and offered her the world. She gave up her life to live with him on his terms. Yes she doesn't have to work unless she wants to, and yes she is entitled to half the house now. Yes she has made a friendship circle in a more happening place in the country. But the cost has not been worth it. She has essentially over the years lost all freedom. He financially controls her, giving her money only when she asks for it and she has to tell him what it is for. He seems okay sometimes but any ounce of pressure and he is insane and takes it out on her and their daughter. We all wish she could get out but also we can see feels trapped now.

She doesn't care about the house, the security, the not having to work anymore. She just wants her freedom back.

I'm not saying that this is going to happen to you, all I am saying is when you start letting someone have all the say in a relationship, then this is a pattern that is only going to get worse.

There are more than two options here. The pregnancy is a decision you can make whether you stay with him or not. You can also decide not to move right now, have some more time. It is uprooting yours and your child's life so no hurry, not even an impending pregnancy, needs to be made.

And if it doesn't work out with him, there are men out there that would be happy to have you and your child in their life, happy to build a life with you and give each other security. There are so many single parents out there all worrying the same as you, but don't let the fear of being alone for a while be a factor in your decision to start a life with someone that isn't quite right.

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