Meet the Other Phone. Only the apps you allow.

Meet the Other Phone.
Only the apps you allow.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to feel 'Ouch'?

133 replies

winsomewoman · 26/02/2022 11:53

We had dinner last night with a couple of friends we hadn't seen for a long time and we were talking about all the things we'd been through over the years we've know each other.

When DP and I got together I arrived with a fairly clean slate. I'd already been through some of the more complicated things in life: my parents had both died young, I'd looked after my mum through the last year of her cancer and I'd ended up losing my home when my long-term relationship came to an end. So I was starting out fresh and unencumbered when DP and I met.

DP had been separated for a year and was about to start self-building a new home. We had a lovely first few months before the shit hit the fan and all the stress of a self-build, plus DP's acrimonious divorce, hit. We weathered that, with me providing support.

Then DP started a business and invited an old friend to be a partner. It took off quickly and they made serious money — at which point the old friend tried to take the whole business for himself and dump DP. The legal wrangling and civil court proceedings went on for four excruciating years, with the threat of bankruptcy hanging over DP. DP won, but it cost £150k, broke the business and left us both depressed and worn down.

Then DP's parents, in their late 70s, began to ail. Almost every time we had a holiday due, DP's dad would have a heart attack or a TIA: he had nine in all! DP's mum started to develop dementia. DP's family are in Scotland and DP was up and down most months for years. Until the mother died nearly three years ago barely a week went by without some new complication or emergency. This went on for more than seven years. We spent Christmas apart year after year. We'd organise Christmas with my family or friends, then there'd be an emergency with the in-laws and I'd be celebrating with the dog.

Throughout this my own life has been quite calm. I've been really fortunate to able to earn a decent living without much drama and we've had some lovely times when things have worked out well. I'm glad DP had such close, loving relationships with PiL and MiL. Although some of the things that happened to us as a result of OH's business and family have been a burden I don't feel resentful. I wish things had been easier, of course.

Anyway, last night we were having dinner with old friends who've known us for nearly 20 years and we all talked about some of the things we'd been through and one of them said, just fleetingly, to DP that it was lucky I'd been on the scene to offer support during the difficult times. On the way home in the car DP gave me a little speech about me not being the only one to have to put up with a lot. I was then told that I'm not the easiest person in the world to live with. Apparently many's the time DP has felt like leaving me. I asked for examples of why I'm so difficult to live with. The main complaint seems to be that I'm no fun.

Is it really much of a surprise that I'm not much fun (which I don't thin is true) when I've had years of worry about the business situation, all the hundreds of unpaid hours acting as builder's mate on the self-build, the Christmases spent alone because at the last minute PiL or MiL needed DP's presence, the holidays cancelled, all the sleepless nights?

All the times I've gritted my teeth and just got on with whatever's needed to get us through. I don't complain, I don't criticise. And now here we are. AIBU to feel really hurt? Anyone else out there with a partner for whom nothing ever seems to be easy?

OP posts:
Bonheurdupasse · 26/02/2022 11:55

Yes.

You've been taken for granted.

ClemDanFango · 26/02/2022 11:56

He’s an ungrateful, selfish arse and I’d be telling him so!

Frazzled50yrold · 26/02/2022 11:59

He's a shit and you need to tell him. Terrible behaviour

ISmellBurnings · 26/02/2022 12:09

That’s really hurtful and I hope you’ve told him this.

Fernhurst · 26/02/2022 12:15

What an unkind thing to say

Fernhurst · 26/02/2022 12:17

Maybe say that if he has felt like leaving you many times as you're no fun then he should go ahead and do so or shut up. Or maybe you should leave him

Imyourvenus · 26/02/2022 12:20

What an arse…

Disneysaurus · 26/02/2022 12:22

Very unkind. You won’t be more ’fun’ after that comment, will you. If he was more fun himself you would probably laugh more..

Avarua · 26/02/2022 12:24

Tell him how much that comment hurt you.

billy1966 · 26/02/2022 12:25

OMG

Well, well, well.

Now you know.

I would not be forgetting that.

What a selfish, self absorbed arsehole.

I think you would be very silly not to have a hard think.

All the years of your support he has thought of leaving you several times?.

I'd be done.Flowers

Totalwasteofpaper · 26/02/2022 12:26

☹☹☹
Ouch is the least of it....

What an awful thing to say.

BluerThanRobinsEggs · 26/02/2022 12:29

What does he bring to your relationship?
And is it enough to get you past the realisation that he doesn't appreciate you at all?

It doesn't even sound like he likes you that much - just think, his friends were positive about you and rather than join in or stay silent, his go-to was to put you down, to put you back in your place in case you felt special or appreciated at all.

GreenFingersWouldBeHandy · 26/02/2022 12:29

Honestly? I would just end it.

He does not value your support yet it sounds like you have bent over backwards.

He's stupid enough to let his business partner almost bankrupt him and ruin the business. And you supported him through this.

I'm sorry his Mum passed away but this happens as we get older. Does he support his Dad or is this down to you too?

Honestly, get your plans in place and just leave the miserable bugger. Find someone who deserves you, not uses you.

Disneysaurus · 26/02/2022 12:32

It doesn't even sound like he likes you that much - just think, his friends were positive about you and rather than join in or stay silent, his go-to was to put you down, to put you back in your place in case you felt special or appreciated at all.

This. Your friends complimented you, you probably well deserved it, and instead of being proud of you he puts you down as soon as your friends can’t hear. Nice.

Jovanka · 26/02/2022 12:32

That would be me done, OP. What a dick.

wtfisgoingonhere21 · 26/02/2022 12:32

Wow what a prick Sad

I'd be asking for some seperate time while you decide if that's how you want to continue and to give him time to give his head a fucking wobble Hmm

I would be livid

TillyTopper · 26/02/2022 12:34

Wow, firstly OP I'm really sorry. That's a shocking thing for him to say, especially coming out with it like that after an evening with friends. It seems you have been through a lot together too. I honestly couldn't forget that and it would make me question the whole relationship. After all, you'll surely be questioning yourself in future, I am can imagine myself thinking "Am I being enough fun?!" Seriously, think if that's what you want, he sounds an ungrateful twat tbh.

newmumfeb21 · 26/02/2022 12:34

What an awful thing to say. YANBU Thanks

winsomewoman · 26/02/2022 12:35

'He' is actually a 'she'. We're both female. I didn't start out trying to write it neutrally, but got about halfway through and realised I had so carried on.

I think we've both changed quite a lot since we met. I think if I'm no fun it's partly because I feel as if I've taken quite a pounding stress-wise over the last 18 years and most of that stress came as a result of DP's bad luck and choices. Not saying she hasn't been through the mill, but strangely I don't think she's suffered as much as I have. I'm always been a bit less extravert and a bit more self-contained and I think those differences are now more marked.

I don't want to be a martyr or a victim. I'm neither, I could have taken the decision to get out at any time. And she gives me a lot in her own way, and I let her know that.

Not sure where we go from here. At the moment I'm very sore and wondering why on earth I absorbed all the shit and stress. I'm about to retire. Perhaps it's time to start a new life all over again.

OP posts:
ThinWomansBrain · 26/02/2022 12:35

TBH he sounds like a twat - and more stress than fun himself
leave, have fun

WouldIwasShookspeared · 26/02/2022 12:38

She's been an absolute arse over this.

You have supported her. A normal response would have been yes, she's great. We are a strong team and we are very fortunate.

Her reaction is something that would concern me. She resents you. For what? Being there? Helping her?

ThinWomansBrain · 26/02/2022 12:39

sorry, cross posted

TBH she sounds like a twat - and more stress than fun herself
leave, have fun
TBH they sounds like a twat - and more stress than fun themselves
leave, have fun

... the gender makes no difference,

winsomewoman · 26/02/2022 12:40

It's sex, not gender. She's female, I'm female.

OP posts:
MaryasBible · 26/02/2022 12:40

What a prick. He couldn’t stand your friends paying you a compliment so counteracted that by negging.

Urgh. I’m so sorry you’re going through this.

GreenFingersWouldBeHandy · 26/02/2022 12:43

The fact she is female is irrelevant. She has still very much taken you for granted.

Would couples counselling help? If just some time out to figure out what's best for YOU going forwards? It sounds as if she has been first and foremost for the past 18 years and that's not fair.