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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Husband is ready to leave me...

394 replies

allthingsbrighter · 10/01/2021 13:41

I’ve been with DH for 14 years (married 3)

Last year we had our first baby who is now coming up to 11 months old.

It’s been an incredibly tough time. I was diagnosed with post natal anxiety and I had 20 weeks of CBT.

I’m still not coping and it’s changing me as a person.

I’m struggling to focus on family life. I feel withdrawn from DC & DH.

My mind is completely consumed with negative thoughts and they’re all around Covid.

I feel like I have a death sentence looming over me, there’s this danger outside my doors and once it gets me, I’m done.

I’m coming up to 35 and I fall into the vulnerable category, although I’m not CEV / shielding.

I’m irritable all of the time, and it’s always with DH.
I feel annoyed by him. Wound up when he’s around.
He tries to have a conversation with me and I feel in a rush to finish it because my mind is so so consumed by thoughts of Covid and death that I can’t seem to concentrate on anything else.

I feel like I’ve become incredibly selfish.
DH is brilliant. He’s a great dad and husband.
He cooks, he helps to clean, I don’t think there is much more he could do.

He’s considerate of how I feel. He WFH and he gets up early during the week with DC so that I can have an hour extra in bed whilst he does breakfast.

All this sounds great but then overnight he gets uninterrupted sleep whilst I’m up feeding / settling DC.
I’m not sure if this is a fair arrangement, but I feel irritated when he’s laid there next to me asleep and I’m awake with the baby.

When it comes to weekends we both have one sleep in each, but when it’s his turn I again feel irritated and angry at him.
I will remind him not to be spending all day in bed, even though to date he’s never done that, and he’s never once said anything to me about how long I choose to sleep in for.

DC won’t settle with DH for sleep and it’s me that does the bedtime routine. (DC breastfed and feeds to sleep)
DH will sit with us upstairs until DC has gone down, but again I feel irritated by him like he should be doing more(even though I don’t know what)

I know my behaviour is really upsetting him, he’s spoken to me about it and I’ve told him how anxious and worried I am about Covid.

He keeps repeatedly telling me I’m irrational and my fears aren’t logical.
I feel like he’s just humouring me and he doesn’t understand that I’m vulnerable.

He’s shown me stats of the deaths for the under 40’s, told me they account for less than 1% of the total deaths.
But when he’s telling me these things, my mind is telling me to ignore him because he’s wrong and just trying to humour me.

I feel like a lot of the time I project onto DH.
I can spend the day playing and doing lots of activities with DC, but I know my mind is running elsewhere. It’s in the clouds worrying about Covid, going back to work, DC going to nursery, DH popping to the office, DH going to the supermarket....

When DH comes home I feel so emotionally fatigued that I take it out on him, I feel like he’s thinking I’ve been a crap mum for the day, I’ve not done enough around the house or I haven’t been focused enough on DC.

He’s never said any of this to me, but I’m conceived he does think it.

Today he’s told me he’s had enough and that living with me is too difficult for him.

He said he loves me but he’s really tired of trying and getting nothing in return.

I don’t want him to leave, but I can’t think of a reason why I want him to stay.
I know that I love him, but I know that he’s better off without me.

I don’t know how to make him happy anymore.

My life is such a mess. I’m completely stuck in my mind. 😔

OP posts:
Iminaglasscaseofemotion · 11/01/2021 11:13

@Draineddraineddrained I replied to you because you replied to me, not because I'm searching through posts ready to pounce on anyone who says something I don't agree with. I haven't actually read many of the other responses apart from the OPs. Once again you are being ott in your posts and projecting your issues onto the OP.
Why would I still be trying to push the OP towards giving up or cutting back? It has no bearing on my life what the OP does with her body or her child. Just trying to help her think of ways that would help her feel less anger towards her dp. Again, seems like you are projecting.
I also didn't say you were overinvested, I said using overly emotive language, and listing reasons why giving up bf would have a detrimental effect on the OP wasn't helpful. As I and another poster have pointed out, your experience isn't the experience every woman will have, and sometimes it does help. Again,the OP has stated she doesn't want to, and like I said that's great that she is happy to keep going. I'm just about to start breastfeeding my third child when she is born in a couple of weeks, so not sure why you think I'm determined to make another woman stop.

ThumbWitchesAbroad · 11/01/2021 14:12

@allthingsbrighter - did you manage to call the GP and get an appointment?
I really hope you did, and I hope you've shown your husband this thread as well, so that he not only gets a better understanding of why you're being the way you are with him, but is able to support you in your need to be seen by a GP. Thanks

Sakura7 · 11/01/2021 19:30

@allthingsbrighter Hope you're doing ok today

Royalbloo · 11/01/2021 19:35

If you get help you'll not only feel better but he may not leave if you are trying to help yourself

Royalbloo · 11/01/2021 19:35

Either way the help will be invaluable

Anothermother3 · 11/01/2021 22:04

I don’t think you would need an admission but I hope you contacted the GP. Medication can be really helpful with postnatal anxiety and it might shift things. If you are vulnerable to anxiety it would have been something else if it wasn’t covid. Covid is just where it is focused (I get some of that is rational but the extent to which it’s affecting your demeanour and relationship is not). This isn’t about you being bad it’s about you being unwell but it is only you who can get the support you need.

Anothermother3 · 11/01/2021 22:05

Also as I said up thread no need to stop feeding. And if you do stop try and stop gradually when you are ready as a sudden stop can actually effect mood negatively because of the change in hormone levels.

Plussizejumpsuit · 11/01/2021 22:12

I have just read your op but wanted to comment I have anxiety and depression which I take citalopram for. I don't have children but really identified with lots you were saying. I really think this soundsike its gone from normal concerns and stress of a baby and the pandemic to a mental health issue. Please see your GP.

Aghhhhhhhhhh · 11/01/2021 22:22

I had post natal anxiety NOT depression and I was very much like you. I'm on antidepressants and 3 years later I'm OK again, you need medication if you don't your going to lose your partner and possibly your child if your partner thinks you can't cope with him/her. Get help NOW and if it means stopping breastfeeding so be it. Your health is more important than breastfeeding especially when formula is just as good (both my kids have been formula fed and are 100% healthy)
Would you be able to cope without your partner? My partner left me because of my anxiety and how I was but thankfully after I got help we managed to get back together and we are engaged now.

Bluntness100 · 11/01/2021 22:24

Op did you speak to your gp? Your lack of comment on that is a bit concerning.

BlackberryandNettle · 11/01/2021 22:27

I can totally relate to your description of being unable to drag yourself away from your thoughts. Been there OP with dreadful anxiety/obsessive thoughts. I did recover from it and it's never come back but it took counselling, CBT and a course of medication. Try to get to understand everything you can about how anxiety works and force yourself to be in the present moment/converse with DH. It's very difficult/tiring to drag your mind away when the pattern of thoughts is so engrained but you need to fight to break out of that cycle. Anything you can do to get more sleep would help although I know that's easier said than done!

user86329 · 11/01/2021 23:06

This whole thread is so fucking frustrating to read.

A ton of posters telling OP to stop breastfeeding. You'd never see posters telling an OP to stop formula feeding. The politics of breastfeeding is crazy.

Posters telling OP she needs to go into a mental health unit.

@allthingsbrighter OP if you need to talk my inbox is always open. I don't think this thread is helping. Thanks

KathleenTurnerOverdrive · 12/01/2021 01:23

I have been there, my 'obsession';was with Brexit. I was and am a remainer, but from about 4 months before the referendum, it coloured my every waking thought. I am UK born and haven't been abroad in nearly 1p years, but I remember having a total breakdown over Passport for pets and how people would transport their dogs (I don't have a dog or know anyone who was thinking of taking a dog abroad) I would alternate between doom scrolling for bad news and avoiding all news programmes (and the TV and radio full stop as I was worked about an emergency news broadcasts) I also had a panic attack in a taxi, of timed the journey so I would get to the destination before the five o clock news on the radio and the taxi got stuck in traffic and I was so panicked by the prospect of bad Brexit news on the radio. At that point, after nearly two years of this, I went to the GP and requested antidepressants and enquired about counseling. I got five sessions via a charity, nowhere near enough ask couldn't afford to pay privately. But the SSRIs helped not in an, everything is great now, but the gap between thinking about Brexit gradually got longer and the worries less intense.

I still suffer from depression, I am withdrawn and passive and not the person I was. The prime casualty was my marriage, it was awful for my wife, I became a person she didn't recognise. It wasn't the only problem in our relationship, but it certainly hammered a fair few nails in. Like you, I never set out to marginalise my wife or make her feel unwanted, I was never aggressive or angry with her, but living with someone who is like I was. This has dragged on, but I would urge you to talk to your husband, keep in him the loop, explain however hard it is, why you're acting this way and how it isn't him.

Bananahana · 12/01/2021 04:48

Breast feeding is great, but two parents living together in harmony is even better for your baby.

Go to GP see what meds they can offer.

FellowFlipFlop · 12/01/2021 07:25

@user86329

This whole thread is so fucking frustrating to read.

A ton of posters telling OP to stop breastfeeding. You'd never see posters telling an OP to stop formula feeding. The politics of breastfeeding is crazy.

Posters telling OP she needs to go into a mental health unit.

@allthingsbrighter OP if you need to talk my inbox is always open. I don't think this thread is helping. Thanks

Yes - because she's scared the antidepressants will pass into her milk and affect her baby (which they won't) but if it prevents her seeking help then she should stop breastfeeding. She's on the brink of losing everything - is continuing to breastfeed worth it when that's the trade off? That's the point people are getting at I think
PuttyIn · 12/01/2021 07:33

A ton of posters telling OP to stop breastfeeding. You'd never see posters telling an OP to stop formula feeding. The politics of breastfeeding is crazy

If formula feeding was preventing someone from seeking the help they very obviously needed then yes, I'd suggest it too.

Y67b · 12/01/2021 07:50

I am very pro breastfeeding but honestly the hormones made me so crazy, it was the same for a lot of my friends, and we felt normal a couple of weeks after stopping. No need for antidepressants. This is legitimate advice

Indecisive12 · 12/01/2021 08:25

Agree - I only mentioned potentially stopping breastfeeding because OP is reluctant to take antidepressants because she’s breastfeeding. The breastfeeding at night whilst she enjoys feeding is causing resentment towards her husband. What is wrong with advising stopping breastfeeding (if she wished) so that she can prioritise her mental health. She won’t be able to breastfeed if she deteriorates and is no longer here or if they separate and baby goes to DH overnight.

Monkeypeas · 12/01/2021 08:31

@Indecisive12

Agree - I only mentioned potentially stopping breastfeeding because OP is reluctant to take antidepressants because she’s breastfeeding. The breastfeeding at night whilst she enjoys feeding is causing resentment towards her husband. What is wrong with advising stopping breastfeeding (if she wished) so that she can prioritise her mental health. She won’t be able to breastfeed if she deteriorates and is no longer here or if they separate and baby goes to DH overnight.
What is wrong with it?

It’s wrong because it was totally unwarranted and unnecessary.
Breastfeeding wasn’t remotely the issue. OP was worried she couldn’t take medication because she was breastfeeding, the Correct response was reassurance that there is medication which is fine.

Stopping now would be harmful to the OPs mental state.

PuttyIn · 12/01/2021 08:35

Stopping now would be harmful to the OPs mental state

How would you know this?

As has been pointed out a few times, the hormonal impact of breastfeed can have huge detrimental effects on mental health, as has been experienced by posters here.

It's not unreasonable to suggest this may be contributing to the way OP is feeling. Not to say she should be doing X or Y but there's nothing wrong with suggesting it may be a factor given how many have experienced the same thing.

There's no need to take it as a personal slight against breastfeeding.

AnneLovesGilbert · 12/01/2021 08:43

She won’t be able to breastfeed if she deteriorates and is no longer here or if they separate and baby goes to DH overnight.

The second part of that is particularly unhelpful as no judge would make a breastfed baby have nights away from its mother so it sounds like a threat.

Indecisive12 · 12/01/2021 08:46

Didn’t mean it to sound like a threat, they might not go to a judge though and could come to the agreement of overnight contact themselves.

Monkeypeas · 12/01/2021 08:56

@PuttyIn

Stopping now would be harmful to the OPs mental state

How would you know this?

As has been pointed out a few times, the hormonal impact of breastfeed can have huge detrimental effects on mental health, as has been experienced by posters here.

It's not unreasonable to suggest this may be contributing to the way OP is feeling. Not to say she should be doing X or Y but there's nothing wrong with suggesting it may be a factor given how many have experienced the same thing.

There's no need to take it as a personal slight against breastfeeding.

Yes it can have an impact but stopping suddenly when she doesn’t want to is very likely to have an impact.
KathleenTurnerOverdrive · 12/01/2021 12:26

Mumsnet"s law in action. Any thread, whatever the topic, will eventually turn into a bunfight over breast feeding or trans rights.

user86329 · 12/01/2021 14:39

@Indecisive12

Agree - I only mentioned potentially stopping breastfeeding because OP is reluctant to take antidepressants because she’s breastfeeding. The breastfeeding at night whilst she enjoys feeding is causing resentment towards her husband. What is wrong with advising stopping breastfeeding (if she wished) so that she can prioritise her mental health. She won’t be able to breastfeed if she deteriorates and is no longer here or if they separate and baby goes to DH overnight.
Unbelievable