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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To think this is relatively normal behaviour for children?

805 replies

user124765 · 01/10/2021 23:27

Name changed for this, and also posting here for traffic.

I have three children from my marriage that ended a few years back. They are aged 10, 8 and 5. No learning issues with the kids or anything else to note, they are (to my mind) all NT.

The issue is that DP (who is hoping to live with us very soon) seems to take constant issue with their behaviour. This evening the children were upstairs getting ready for bed and I'd asked my 8 year old to have a quick shower before he brushed his teeth etc. We've just moved in to this house in the last few days so everything is quite new and different for the kids. I turned the shower on and checked it was the correct temperature for him before I left the bathroom instructing him to wash his body and not worry about his hair for tonight.
I get downstairs and sit on the sofa next to DP and almost immediately DS shouts 'Mummy!' from upstairs. I get up and head up to see what he needs, but he can't hear my reply to hang on... I'm coming, because of the noise of the shower so continues yelling 'Mummy!' and getting increasingly louder.
Once I've sorted DS out, which takes about 3 minutes, I head back downstairs and take my place back on the sofa. Immediately DP starts having a go at me about 'letting him talk to you like shit'. His tone is quite aggressive actually and I just feel like a bit of support from him rather than a bollocking for lacking as a parent wouldn't go amiss at this stage.

It's almost constant now, whenever we're together as a 'family'. DP's need to micromanage my children and his insistence that they behave badly. I feel like I'm on tenterhooks all the time, waiting for something to kick off and I'm stuck in the middle trying to mediate the drama.
The kids are fine! They are children and full of joy and they do get excited from time to time. They sometimes push boundaries and behave badly...but isn't that normal? I feel like he's trying to turn my kids in to what he believes children should behave like, when as someone who's never had children himself he just doesn't know how kids really are!

Tonight I just lost my shit a bit and told him that I refuse to live my life walking on egg shells and I'm not going to change my parenting to suit him. I choose my children, every time. He said something like 'do you want me to fuck off then?' to which I replied that yes, him going home would probably be for the best right now. He was visibly upset and stormed out slamming the door behind him. He called me a 'fucking prick' under his breath too, which shocked me. That in itself is unforgivable to me I think. I felt sad when he'd gone but also incredibly relieved.

But now what? Do I end this? If I don't then I guess I have to keep him separate from my family, I can't risk him screwing my kids up with his controlling behaviour. Or is it me? 🤷‍♀️ Is he right that my children need pulling up on this behaviour. I just think it's normal...but who knows? Giggling in restaurants, being daft at bedtime when they've been told to settle down, shouting Mummy! over and over until you drop everything and go running. Isn't this all normal?

OP posts:
Mistressofnone · 17/10/2021 09:36

That's so hard for you OP. Well done staying strong. You have got through the worst. Presumably you protected your children from a lot of the things he said about them so they are probably curious as to what happened.

Keep going. Give Maid on Netflix a watch!

BiLuminous · 17/10/2021 09:41

For one, hes not even respecting your boundaries by posting that through. Its not a rom com.

I agree that I wouldnt let my children be guinea pigs to any proposed healing he needs.

Colleen92 · 17/10/2021 11:16

All normal and all things you will certainly miss when it's gone. If your child is 8 and in a mew shower at a new house on his own he's bound to need a bit of help, even if only for reassurance. My eldest was similar age and I still have to sit on loo seat while she showers as she gets anxious and I don't want her trying to leap out wet and slip! Your boy sounds very mature tbh.

Honestly can't see how it's talking to or treating you like sh!t, I mean, "Hey b!tch get up here and scrub my back woman!' would be that...!! Calling for Mummy is natural when you need something at that age and it's sweet Smile

Plumbuddle · 17/10/2021 11:16

@mathanxiety

He talked about his childhood, his faults and what he proposes to do to deal with them if I give him another chance, and basically just said how sorry he is and how much he loves us all. He signed off saying that if he doesn't hear from me in response then he respects my decision and will leave us alone.

Bin this, or burn it in the back garden. Stay strong. He doesn't mean a word of it. He is trying to get back in because he has nowhere else to go that is quite as comfortable.

Hopefully he will find a good therapist to talk to about his childhood, or whatever. Your home is not the place for him to work through his problems, and you and your children are not guinea pigs.

I'm quite confused if I'm honest.

Bingo! This is the result he was hoping for.

Keep it as evidence. You might need it later. He is a coercive controller.
billy1966 · 17/10/2021 12:37

How are you OP?

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