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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU To Not Want to Pay for Step Children?

217 replies

Humal93 · 18/12/2021 13:59

My husband has 3 children prior to our marriage and we have just recently had our own child together.

We have been married almost 3 years now and over these few years have realised how much I am spending on things like almost everyday on snacks and sometimes toys, stationery and in-game purchases for Robux and Xbox. The 2 youngest always want to come to the shops with me so they can choose something as it seems and me being soft, I say yes.

I do not work as I look after the children, but husband does and as he is the breadwinner and the first 3 being his children, I feel like he should be paying these expenses. What if we were to break up and instead of saving what bits of money I can from benefits, I'm spending on children that aren't biologically mine who will obviously stay with their dad and I would be stuck trying to make ends meet for my little one. I feel as though I am spending my child benefit more on our other children when it is really meant for the youngest. It would be different had they not had their mum around or if I was actually earning, but she is so they have both a mother and father that can provide for them.

I have bought the majority of things for their rooms since we moved house and countless other things for the home. I have brought them Xbox games, clothes and many toys and things. And the thing that bugs me even more is I feel they don't respect what they have and take it for granted by leaving things lying around and their rooms are a mess - that is an understatement. I hate living in mess, it feels chaotic and miserable and have stopped tidying up their rooms as it drains me, but still find myself going in there once in a while as it just looks terrible and dislike the thought of them waking up to that. Now when they say they want something from the shops that is not edible, I say only when they tidy their rooms. But this feels wrong as I wouldn't be plying my daughter with gifts in return for her respect in tidying up after herself. I would expect our youngest daughter to tidy up once she is older and not do it for something in return or be rewarded with something other than praise at that age as I grew up a fairly clean and tidy person which I think should be the norm, but isn't? and want to raise her the same, sorry if this sounds cocky.

With Christmas around the corner, I have spent over £200 on things they have asked for. Is this something a lot of parents do as I remember when growing up, we just got what we were given and were grateful for that. I apologise for the long rant, this is my first post and have wanted to get these things off my chest for a while. Thank you.

OP posts:
starfishofbethlehem · 18/12/2021 16:58

You are married so should have family money and sort out a budget which includes things for all of the children.

And it does sound like you might be claiming benefits that you are not entitled to....

loislovesstewie · 18/12/2021 16:58

@tara66

I am nor sure if Islamic marriages are 'legal' marriages without going to registrar as well - because they are potentially polygamous (that used to be the case).
If the marriage is registered it;'s legal. I have met second wives who have the nikkah and are happy with that, but clearly that marriage is not legal.
NumberTheory · 18/12/2021 16:59

@Snog

All DH's children should be treated equally surely?
Surely DH should treat all his children equally. OP isn’t obliged to fund someone else’s children at her loss when her own financial situation is precarious.
ChargingBuck · 18/12/2021 17:01

I feel sorry for his stepchildren as you don't sound like you like them and begrudge them being there.

Bullshit.

OP is so concerned for the children's comfort & wellbeing that she sorted out their unacceptable bedroom situation herself, paid for their furniture etc, regularly treats them out of her own limited income, & has spent £200 on their xmas presents.

I feel sorry for the stepchildren because they have a father they seem to rarely see, who has so little input that he does none of that for them.

2bazookas · 18/12/2021 17:02

@PrincessNutella

Is he your husband or is he not your husband?
They are not married, therefore he is not her husband.

She needs to stop pretending otherwise.

StaplesCorner · 18/12/2021 17:03

*I'm reading this differently..... as far as I can tell the couple have separate finances. OP has no access to the money he earns, and is paying personally for the step children's costs..... (both necessities and treats in an I'll-advised attempt to please them). Meanwhile her partner, who has not legally married her, continues to accrue his own money in his own name, and not pay towards his own children.......

So in the OP, he has found a partner to have further children with, to look after and pay for all four, while he doesn't do anything to sort out the house, clearly doesn't do much disciplining or parenting of his own kids, or cleaning of their rooms, and keeps all the money he makes for his own use..... *

Exactly how I am reading her posts but so many people piling on saying she's lucky he allows her live in his house with their child she may well start to believe it. Fucking outrageous.

WhenISnappedAndFarted · 18/12/2021 17:05

@NumberTheory she isn't funding it, the child benefit and UC are. The UC which is based on the whole household including the SC.

jimmyjammy001 · 18/12/2021 17:07

If your married then you should have joint finances, if not what was the financial plan that you planned as part of having children together? If you didn't discuss financials then your have to have a conversation and hope he changes, if not, and it bothers you that much you would have to leave with your child and leave him to parent his 3 children, the step children are not your responsibility

IHateCoronavirus · 18/12/2021 17:08

The key here is that you sit down as a couple and sort out your finances together.

Asi1 · 18/12/2021 17:11

@tara66

I am nor sure if Islamic marriages are 'legal' marriages without going to registrar as well - because they are potentially polygamous (that used to be the case).
I have a marriage certificate which confirms my marriage is legal. I used it for my husband's spouse visa. If it wasn't legal they wouldn't have been accepted. Also, the certificate is from Pakistan
Terribleluck · 18/12/2021 17:12

@Asi an Islamic marriage is legal in Pakistan making it legal here. However, if you marry in the UK under Islamic law, the British government wouldn't produce a certificate so that marriage isn't legally valid.

WrongWayApricot · 18/12/2021 17:12

I'd be more concerned about the benefit fraud.

JumparooSavedMyLife · 18/12/2021 17:13

How can you get universal credit when he is self employed? You aren't legally married but had a ceremony? Something isn't right here? Surely if he owns a business, works long hours he's making more than the benefit threshold? You are living together and shouldnt be claiming in that case.

I don't really understand why you'd give your job up in the first place when you aren't really legally married and I really don't get why you'd be fine without being on a joint account in these circumstances?

Twolostsoulsswimminginafishbow · 18/12/2021 17:13

If you’re one household with four children then the UC will be a joint claim for everyone but your child (or possibly the third SC if born after 2017) so maybe they should be resentful of you spending that on the baby. You aren’t operating like a family. If you have two claims running with UC then that needs sorting ASAP because at best there’ll be a massive overpayment from when you moved in and at worst it is benefit fraud.

immersivereader · 18/12/2021 17:14

You need to be legally married

What is a 'religious marriage' anyway? Jumping over a broom?

FallonCarringtonWannabe · 18/12/2021 17:15

@immersivereader

You need to be legally married

What is a 'religious marriage' anyway? Jumping over a broom?

Thats pretty ignorant, dont you think Hmm
Simonjt · 18/12/2021 17:18

@immersivereader

You need to be legally married

What is a 'religious marriage' anyway? Jumping over a broom?

Why are you pretending you don’t know that many marriages are based on religion.
Meadowbreeze · 18/12/2021 17:18

@immersivereader how rude.

maryzx · 18/12/2021 17:20

Oh dear.

I haven't got any thing useful to say about benefits - or in fact anything useful to say at all, other than "get married, OP" - but what a can of worms.

ThrobbingToothacheOfTheMind · 18/12/2021 17:21

So he’s still married and you’re the 2nd wife? Do the DWP know about your complicated situation?
The money is both of yours, try to budget better if you’re running out of money before the end of the month.

funinthesun19 · 18/12/2021 17:24

Your child benefit and the child element of UC you receive for you child shouldn’t be going on his child with his ex. So if anything needs buying for that child then he’ll just have to wait for payday.

NumberTheory · 18/12/2021 17:26

[quote WhenISnappedAndFarted]@NumberTheory she isn't funding it, the child benefit and UC are. The UC which is based on the whole household including the SC.[/quote]
Her savings are funding it (OP mentioned them near the beginning of the threat in response to questions about income).

She’s also funding their childcare by providing it, along with childcare for her own child, so that her DH can work for money he apparently isn’t spending on the children. This may just be a matter of sitting down and making sure all the money flows into the right accounts. But at the moment OP is in a very unequal and unjust situation.

ToughTittyWhompus · 18/12/2021 17:26

You are “married” in a religious sense.

You live together as a married couple.

But you’re obviously claiming benefits as a lone parent, or you’d be getting nothing but CB.

Fuck sake.

IHateCoronavirus · 18/12/2021 17:27

Does sc mum contribute anything if sc live with you?

Flowers500 · 18/12/2021 17:27

Sorry but you’re committing benefits fraud from the sounds of it