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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to have concerns about my husband's attitude to our children's safety?

278 replies

Kerals26 · 18/11/2020 11:27

Please can I ask whether you think I am being unreasonable to be worried about my husband’s stance/behaviour on these kid’s safety issues? When I’ve tried to raise these things with him I usually get told I’m being over-sensitive and very little, if anything, changes. Here goes:

  • Leaves dangerous things lying around – for example, antifreeze in a bottle without a lid on the other day (in a VIMTO bottle nonetheless, so very appealing to the kids). Other times – bottles of superglue, random car and or chemical stuff etc. When my eldest was a baby I asked him not to put a device with a button battery within reach in her room. He argued, put it out of reach and then moved it down a few days later without my knowledge. I then found her in said room with said item, with the button battery missing which resulted in an incredibly stressful 45 minutes on the phone to 111 and searching for the battery, worried that her insides could be being burnt by it, as per the BBC info-campaign I’d seen. I found the battery, but that wasn’t really the point.
  • Refuses to move his toiletries bag from within reach of the children – these contain his medication and scissors. On another occasion, our 20-month-old accessed his medication from his toiletries bag, after he pooh-pahed my concern about this. He then told me I was being paranoid about her holding his pills as she couldn’t get them out. I decided to let it run while watching her the whole time, to prove the risk to him – within minutes she had the pills out of their packaging and in her hand. He then had to come running through to get them away from her, as I was breastfeeding my youngest. Despite this incident, he still leaves his toiletries and medication in the same place, despite me clearing space for these items in an alternative place in the bathroom.
  • Leaves the children in the car alone – its hard to tell how long this is for and at what distance. I know he left both kids in the car when he was at a workshop recently. He told me he got my eldest out when she set the alarm off, and left the younger one sleeping. I think the car was in sight of the workshop. When they went of running errands recently my eldest also told me ‘Daddy left us in the car watching Peppa Pig’. I don’t know were they were or how long this was for but if it was for 2 minutes to pay for petrol while watching the car, I can’t see he’d have set Peppa Pig up.
  • Leaves fire starting materials in reach of the children – matches, firelighters, fire starting fluids (albeit with child proof tops), insecticide spray and poop-pahing me when I have said I want to move these out of reach.
  • Refused to get a fireguard when the kids were younger (and wont now, although there are older and more aware of fire safety).
  • Takes the kids to the park and leaves them in the enclosed area while he drives his monster truck adjacent to the park. The kids are 3 and 4 so I often end up ‘spotting’ or assisting them on equipment when I take them to the park. Him not being very nearby, to dive in if required, bothers me.
  • Installing locks on the children’s doors and locking them into their room to play, while he works in another room (‘supervising’ them on their babycam). I don’t like the ‘distance supervising’ or the psychological impact of them feeling ‘locked in’. They have told me they don’t like it.
  • Inadequate supervision when out – on several occasions my eldest has told me they got ‘lost’ or couldn’t find Daddy, when they were out. In the summer he had them all day at a public event and my eldest told me there were approached by a lady asking where their Mummy was. I feel they must have been out of his sight for a while on this occasion (he admitted to me they had ‘gone round the back of the tent’ at one point) as, as an adult, I tend to observe potentially lost children for a little while before approaching them , looking round for a parent who may be watching from a distance or frantically looking for them.

What do you think of these behaviours? AIBU to be really worried?

OP posts:
GalaxyCookieCrumble · 19/11/2020 19:11

I am also concerned for all the children he has come across in his job, I hope he has not failed to safeguard them like he has with your DC. The locks are illegal, take photos and video of them then remove them, I guarantee MASH at his station would be extremely concerned about him doing that.

Storyoftonight · 19/11/2020 19:28

@VeniceQueen2004

OP I'd like to know what you mean when you say he "won't tolerate" things like you taking the initiative and buying a fireguard/moving or throwing out dangerous shit/removing locks from doors. What would he do? What do you fear? You say he "tears a strip off you" for moving his things - does this mean he becomes shouty and abusive? Does he do this in front of the children? Does he threaten you physically either explicitly or implicitly (stamping, punching walls, throwing objects)? How does he respond if you ask him to stop/calm down?

Most importantly CAN YOU FILM THIS? Because if the outcome of you defying him is abusive behaviour, it would almost be worth "provoking" him into it and recording it to have evidence you can take to the police station (not his!!) and have him removed from the home. You can then keep him from the children unless he compels you to the family court, at which point all you can do is present as much evidence as you can that he is not safe to have the kids by himself.

Frankly I'd be surprised if he wanted much contact given he doesn't seem to give a shit about them except as a means to control you.

But it is important what you mean. If your anxiety/eagerness to please means you are appeasing him just because you can't tolerate conflict/disagreement, and you know he won't be happy if you for example move his washbag or take the locks off, but there won't actually be any consequences that rise to abuse, then you need to work on your own assertiveness.

This is terrible advice.

Firstly I can't believe you're telling OP she needs to work on assertiveness. Or to film herself provoking him. Apart from the fact any decent defence lawyer would rip that to shreds , are you aware how many people die at the hands of abusive partners when trying to leave them?

alexdgr8 · 21/11/2020 18:46

i think the children would be better off in foster care, at least until OP can sort out some safe environment in which to bring them up.
the children have no choice in all this.
the dangers are real, and continuing.

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