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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Why does no one talk about how hard it is leaving the “good guy”

170 replies

CJCW17 · 22/01/2022 02:58

Me and my partner have been together for 10 years, we have a 5 year old, for the last year things haven’t been great.
He’s a great father and for all intents and purposes he’s a good guy, but for the last few years he has become less and less present, He became less tolerant of normal day to day things, work was awful for him, he would tell me how he just wanted to be able to be alone, so I would arrange to have the house empty but that day alone would never be long enough, I would come home and have comments like “I hate that because I was enjoying myself the day has gone too quickly” “I wish you would leave me alone more often”. Our kiddo was in full time childcare so he would only need to actively “parent” at the weekends and it would be too much for him. Last summer things came to a head when he said the thought of going into work made him suicidal. I immediately told him to get signed off, if he didn’t want to go back I would find a way to financially support us until he found something more appropriate, I helped him contact his doctors, referred him to therapy, I was his point of contact for work as the anxiety was too much for him, I then started paying for him to go to college so he could retrain and I asked him to start looking for part time work to help fund this, he didn’t really look, I would apply for things for him but he would conveniently miss the callback, or forget to email them something so everything was a non starter. One of the things I asked was that if I was going to be working 2 jobs so he didn’t have to have one is that he just picked up extra chores around the house, I don’t want to be coming home to a house that’s awful when I’m working 7 days a week.
This did not happen, when ever I had a day of annual leave I would be sorting out everything. I sort all the bills, all childcare is arranged by me, anything to do with school is me, anything for our son is planned through me:. It basically came to a point where I was mothering him, but he still wanted to be intimate, I really struggled with this - you want me to look after you like parent does but at the end of the day have sex with you? No. I’ve mentioned this to him, and nothing has changed, I don’t know what to do. He’s a kind guy and a great dad, he’s depressed so I can’t actively blame him and I look awful if I do but I am burning out and I’m burning out fast. I have no desire around him; I feel the ick when he wants to cuddle or hold hands. I don’t know what My point is I guess, I more just want to know am I being unreasonable? I want to support him but do I do it at detriment to myself? What do I do?

OP posts:
bonetiredwithtwins · 22/01/2022 04:01

Honestly I would leave him. Having mental health issues is all well and good but it's
Not an excuse for him to do sod all around the house and expect you do everything and pay for everything.

Examsrus · 22/01/2022 04:16

Slightly different and unsure of your financial circumstances especially if he is not working. I talked about my OH with a life coach with how she was not doing her fair share of parent and house duties. They suggested outsourcing and splitting the bills if possible for school runs and/or cleaning.

Also batch cooking on a practical basis too.

I am more vocal too within reason eg I've giving up on a tidy living room though ask her to tidy up the kitchen if she has made a bombsite if a mess. We have a child too , before a child I think I just used to do it as I had more time etc so she might be used to that though no excuse really.

What was his previous line of work?

NumberTheory · 22/01/2022 04:16

You seem to have taken the tack that because he doesn’t want to do things it is better for him if he doesn’t do those things. But often, with mental health, that isn’t exactly the case.

What help has he been getting for his mental health?

arcof · 22/01/2022 04:17

He doesn't sound like that much of a good guy!

Monty27 · 22/01/2022 04:20

Tell him to leave then. You're not his prison warden and he isn't your prisoner. Fuck that.
Take his keys back too. Make amicable arrangements for your child. Job done. Win win.

JumperJump · 22/01/2022 04:25

He doesn’t sound like a partner, he sounds like an emotional and financial drain. Think very very very hard if this is how you want to live your life.

And he’s not a “good guy”, at best he’s a lazy loser who’s opted out of parenthood and being an adult. He doesn’t need a partner either, he needs a mummy and that’s currently you.

No wonder you have the ick, it gives me the ick reading it.

Crazykatie · 22/01/2022 06:00

“Good Guy” he sounds more like a reclusive bum to me, a looser.
There is probably no cure for him, boot him out.

MiddleParking · 22/01/2022 06:04

Knew from the thread title that he would be a lazy useless prick. You should feel zero guilt about ditching this drainer.

jay55 · 22/01/2022 06:22

He sounds like a manipulative arsehole.

Not nice in any way at all.

Rangoon · 22/01/2022 06:22

He is absolutely not a good guy. You earn all the money, you do all the all the childcare, and the household stuff. You are paying for him to go to college to retrain. He just refuses to get a part-time job to help out with costs. He tells you that “I wish you would leave me alone more often”. He ignores the fact that you are burning out but he does want sex. It is hard to see what contribution he is making to you life.

I can't quite see why he is great dad. He doesn't earn money to support his child. He couldn't cope with being a parent at the weekend. All childcare is arranged by you, anything to do with school is you, and anything for your son is planned through you.

I wouldn't find it remotely difficult to leave this lazy, entitled, work-shy individual.

AlDanvers · 22/01/2022 06:28

I voted yabu. Because he isn't a good guy.

He isn't a great parent. He can't even be arsed on weekends.

His depression isn't a free pass. He is watching you drown under the weight of everything, is making no effort for you or your child, but has enough energy for sex? Nothing else though.

Nothing to improve your life?

People do talk about leaving good men, when it's just not working out. And there's alot of threads from women who do everything because their husband and has depression and does fuck all about it. Just watches the women act like their mother.

There's loads of threads about leaving the man who has basically set it up so the wife feels she can't leave without looking like she is abandoning her sick partner. Or me that guilt their wives into staying. Once the wife has had enough, they aw back x trol by wailing 'I am so useless...I hate myself. I want to kill myself' u til the women feel guilty and stay.

Their are not good men. They are abusive. Being abusive, is still abusive even if you have depression.

Loopytiles · 22/01/2022 06:34

Agree with PPs, not a ‘great father’ nor behaving like a ‘good guy’.

Stop funding him!

GiantHaystacks2021 · 22/01/2022 06:41

He's not a good guy.
He's a fucking twat.
Divorce this absolute and utter loser.

tara66 · 22/01/2022 06:41

Give him a time limit to pull his socks up or LTB.

Margotshypotheticaldog · 22/01/2022 06:43

I would have left him way before now. Why are his needs more important to you than your own? He is literally driving you into the ground. You have a responsibility to yourself and your child to look after yourself. You've done enough for him, more than enough. He needs to take responsibility for himself.

YetAnotherWalk · 22/01/2022 06:44

I left a "good guy" The problem was that everyone else thought he was but I was living with the reality.

He doesn't sound like a good guy at all. I have poor mental health and a few health issues too, but I still work PT, do housework and parent my children!

GiantSpider · 22/01/2022 06:51

Depression deserves sympathy and support. It does NOT mean that he gets a free pass to do absolutely nothing while you do everything. I can't believe that he is not working or doing any childcare, housework or admin and still gets to be described as a good guy!

AndItDoesntSeemToMatter · 22/01/2022 06:51

Leave. We all dislike being an adult sometimes, not everyone loves their job and bounces out of bed every morning, most of us have days where we want to fuck the responsibilities and shut the world out. But you have to pull your socks up and get on with it - bills need to be paid, homes need to be run and if you want to be left alone then don't have children at all. Depression obviously affects all this and you've been a great support but the bottom line is only YOU can help YOU and he's clearly not willing to start kicking. I wouldn't be wasting any further time or energy on this absolute man baby.

Somanysocks · 22/01/2022 06:52

Oh dear he isn't a good guy and clearly not a great dad.

He needs to go back to his parents as he hasn't learnt enough about life to leave home yet.

GoodnightGrandma · 22/01/2022 06:54

He is not a good guy, he’s using you.
My DH had/has MH problems and I should have gone then. I had the ick then, and I’ve still got it.
Leave. This is no life for you or your child.

CliffsofMohair · 22/01/2022 06:56

@arcof

He doesn't sound like that much of a good guy!
This will BELLS on
ViceLikeBlip · 22/01/2022 06:57

Sex is always opt in, not opt out. You don't ever need to justify why you don't want to have sex with someone (even your "good guy" husband).

Jobconfused · 22/01/2022 06:57

I’m sorry but he’s not a good guy and he’s taking the piss and you are enabling that.

bembridge11 · 22/01/2022 06:59

You are treating him like a child not a partner. He is an adult and he needs to start behaving like one.

Coldfingerstoes · 22/01/2022 07:04

He’s not a good guy.