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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Not to tell DH that DD at uni has Covid?

158 replies

Saracen · 30/09/2020 09:34

Our eldest went off to university a couple of weeks ago and just told me she has tested positive for Covid-19. She feels okay so far, with just cold-type symptoms which she's had for four days. She's in halls and has flatmates who can push food in to her room etc. Of course I wish she hadn't caught it, but I'm not particularly worried about her.

I don't want to tell DH until she has recovered. He worries about this sort of thing. In March when our eldest was still living at home, we (probably wrongly as it turns out) thought she might have CV, and he was beside himself. Our younger teen has a learning disability and was extremely anxious at that time about her sibling, and of course her father's behaviour made her even more frightened. He is quite incapable of keeping secrets from her even at the best of times, so I can't tell him without her finding out.

I asked my older DD's permission to keep it quiet and she agreed. I said I didn't expect her to lie, I just wasn't planning to mention it to DH. But now I am wondering whether this is fair on DH or on her. I don't know whether he'll feel I should have told him. There have been a few times in the past when he's said to me "if you do such-and-such dangerous thing please don't tell me until afterward", but he has never said he didn't want to know if DD was ill.

Plus I've realised it may be tricky for her not to tell him, because it's her birthday in a few days. No doubt we'll skype her to wish her well. He'll be asking her about her plans, whether she's going out, whether she'll celebrate at home with her flatmates, and of course the truth is she's got to stay holed up in her bedroom all alone for some time to come. It isn't so simple to avoid the subject. This may push it from "we won't mention it" to actual deception.

Should I try to keep it quiet?

OP posts:
Flossie44 · 01/10/2020 12:34

So he’s made this all about him?

Sugarbeanie · 01/10/2020 13:25

So he's angry rather than deeply concerned. Healthy anxiety is a genuine thing, but it's not a reason to opt out of being a parent and supporting your family. It probably is nice for him not to hear about stuff so he doesn't have to worry/do anything to try and help or offer support, but if he is actually struggling then he needs to get some help himself; it's a way to opt out if he doesn't.

Sugarbeanie · 01/10/2020 13:25

Health anxiety*

Candleabra · 01/10/2020 13:39

It's an odd dynamic where he's absolved of the responsibility for dealing with unpleasant things. I wonder what these dangerous things are that he'd rather not know about? It places an large burden on your shoulders, not just to worry alone about the problem itself, but to worry whether he should be told (and the potential consequences of doing so). Sounds very unhealthy.

corythatwas · 01/10/2020 14:43

It places an large burden on your shoulders, not just to worry alone about the problem itself, but to worry whether he should be told (and the potential consequences of doing so).

This.

I have a limited form of anxiety (enough to get a lot of tooth and face pain at times of stress and need betablockers, but not really bad). I have two family members with really bad anxiety. One who probably wouldn't be alive now without medication as anxiety makes her suicidal.

I am totally open to the idea of anxiety being experienced as severe physical pain.

The way I see it is, there is a certain amount of pain to go round.

The pain of your daughter if she doesn't feel she can ask for support at home or speak openly about things that worry her.

The pain of your daughter if she becomes seriously ill (at any stage in her life, not necessarily Covid-related) and can't access support. Having to soldier through whatever comes to her, because her family must be protected. What if the poor lass ever contracts pleurisy or even, heaven forbid, cancer. Is she just to pretend she's totally fine?

Your pain if you have to worry about who should say what when.

Your dh seems to think that you and your eldest daughter should carry all the pain so he doesn't have to carry any. Ever.

And to me, that can't be right.

willitbetonight · 01/10/2020 14:45

I think it is awful that you are hiding something like this from her father and asking her to be complicit in it. Who made you god?

ChodeOfChodeBall · 01/10/2020 22:50

@Aridane

To clarify about my daughter's preference: she'd rather her dad knew, but she doesn't feel strongly about it. I'm the one who's inclined to keep it quiet

Not nice, OP, not nice. If I were your partner, your behaviour he would be a red flag

The red flag is the father's behaviour, not the mother's. If he were reasonable, none of this would be an issue. I'd think the fact that he's now wanting to pin the blame on someone for giving his daughter Covid was another red flag. Blaming the mother is verging on victim-blaming here.
Frazzledbutcalm · 02/10/2020 13:54

Honestly, shielding ANY adult from family/health/important/normal news is weird and bizarre. Just why?? An adult, especially your daughters FATHER is more than capable of knowing and dealing with this news. Even if he/you all seek help and support ... he still needs to know. I honestly cannot understand why people try to ‘protect’ other adults. Deceit and lies will affect him far worse.

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