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.

Am I being unreasonable? Getting annoyed with boyfriend’s golf/football hobbies.

180 replies

DaisyKG · 04/03/2022 09:26

Hi guys,

Just wanted some opinions on this as sometimes I feel as though I’m being completely unreasonable and not quite sure what to do for the best.

I have been with my partner for 5.5 years. We have lived together for the past 2 years and our relationship for the most part is great. He is completely football mad, and I knew that when I started a relationship with him. He usually plays 2-3 times a week (trains one weekday evening for 1.5 hours and then has a game on a Saturday - usually gone from lunchtime until 6-7pm depending on where he is playing. He sometimes has another midweek game where he leaves at 6ish and gets home at 10-11pm - he always stays after his games to have a beer with the lads which is fine. We always agreed that Sundays would be “our” days to go out for a nice dog walk, head into town etc, but I have found that more frequently he would rather spend his Sunday watching football.

This has always been something that has bothered me and I’ve always felt as though I come second to football. I have opened up this conversation numerous times over the past 5 years to let him know how I feel and he always tells me that he won’t be able to play forever and it’s a hobby that he enjoys.

In the last year, he has developed a new love for golf. Now, when he first started playing, I have to admit that I hoped it would free up a bit of time and allow us to spend more time as a couple. In fact - things have gone in the opposite direction. On the evenings where he is not playing football, he either visits the driving range or has a golf lesson and will occasionally play golf on a Sunday now (usually gone from 9am till 4pm).

I really don’t want to stop his hobbies as he really enjoys them but it is putting a strain on our relationship from my point of view. This summer, he is going on a 4 day holiday with the football lads to Spain, on a stag do for 3 days with some friends and going on a golf holiday for 5 days. It’s meant that he has very little annual leave left for us to have a holiday together.

Last time we had a holiday together, we had to go on the Sunday and come home on the Friday as he wouldn’t take Saturdays off football. He has since apologised and wished he never did that but he is still so focused on football that we can’t plan weekends away at all because he refuses to take Saturdays off.

Am I being completely unreasonable? Should I let him enjoy his hobbies whilst he can still do them?

I should have added that we both work full time - he works pretty standard hours (7-4) and I work from home but my hours are more like shifts. Because I’m at home all day, I do all the housework, walk our 2 dogs everyday, food shop etc. Sometimes I work until 12am and I’ve asked him if he would mind getting up 10 minutes earlier to run the dogs out for a quick toilet break at 6am to allow me a small lie in and he refuses and says he won’t have time.

My worries are that in the next few years we will hopefully have children and I’m not sure I want to be in a relationship with someone who is always out or reluctant to share the responsibilities with me.

I would appreciate any opinions or thoughts and advice as I really do love him and see a future with him but not sure whether he just doesn’t realise what he’s doingConfused

OP posts:
CandlesBlanketsandTea · 04/03/2022 13:49

I'd book a night out with friends on your birthday and dump his sorry ass, what is point of this relationship if you don't even feature in it as an after thought.

Newestname002 · 04/03/2022 13:49

@DaisyKG

My worries are that in the next few years we will hopefully have children and I’m not sure I want to be in a relationship with someone who is always out or reluctant to share the responsibilities with me.

You are right to be worried about this, OP. It really is poor behaviour now, when you have no children and, perhaps, he will feel tied by their needs as well as yours. He won't even compromise a tiny bit to help with the dogs now - what hope for the future when funds are tighter because you are in maternity leave, or working part time or just need him to step up and be the responsible adult, which he's not being now?

I know you love him, but you really need to love yourself first and make the right decision for your future. Given his current actions and negative responses, perhaps that's a future without him in it. 🌹

Pugfostermum · 04/03/2022 14:03

You can’t force someone to want to spend time with you. It comes naturally or not at all.

TravellingFrom · 04/03/2022 14:08

He doesn’t want to spend time with you. He doesn’t really care about you, time with you etc…

I’d cut my losses tbh.

TravellingFrom · 04/03/2022 14:08

Dont have children with him.
He won’t be there anymore than he is there with you just now.

DaisyKG · 04/03/2022 14:10

Hi everyone,

I’m really overwhelmed by the responses. Thank you all so much.

I guess I have very expectations and low self esteem. We’ve had this conversation countless times and he always makes out that I’m nagging and it makes me feel awful and I guess I’m worried that maybe I wouldn’t find someone else. I think I know what our future holds, I just needed an outsider’s view to solidify that how I am feeling is justifiable.

I really do appreciate everyone’s comments, thank youBlush

OP posts:
Aquamarine1029 · 04/03/2022 14:11

Are you going to stay with him, then? After all this?

DariaMorgendorffer · 04/03/2022 14:13

You are very much justified op. To add to the chorus here, please tread very carefully, as if you did have a child with this man he will 100% find even more excuses to be busy, and you will be left bringing up the baby. You deserve better than that.

curlii103 · 04/03/2022 14:16

He wont change if you have children mine didnt! I used to resent it now i dont care if hes around, neither are ideal situations so i dont know what the answer is!

MurmuratingStarling · 04/03/2022 14:24

YANBU. What IS it with men and their bloody hobbies? They get obsessed, and loads of their free time gets eaten up by their hobbies. They often come before their wife, and their kids, and any other family.

It's such twatty behaviour really. Imagine if women spent as much time (and money) on hobbies that their men do? There'd be no-one to look after the kids, and the family would be bankrupt within half a year.

Funny how lots of their hobbies take them away from the home and family too. Hmm

No advice sorry @DaisyKG as there is nothing you can do really. No way can you stop him pursuing his hobbies. You need to either A) suck it up/tolerate it, or B) take up some hobbies of your own, or C) End it with him. Most other men will be exactly the same though. Most men are inherently selfish, and will often put themselves before anyone else. Not all, but most men are like this...

MurmuratingStarling · 04/03/2022 14:25

Also, as has been said, he will NOT change if you have children with him. If anything, he will get worse/more selfish, and you and the kids will NEVER come first.

carmenitapink · 04/03/2022 14:35

Read so many posts when sadly I conclude that some women will love anyone who is willing to be with them so they're not alone.

OP I can't see one redeeming factor in what you've described that makes him a good partner or further father of your children. He scores poorly on both counts.

Please don't get pregnant by him as I could write what your post would say when he doesn't do anything for the baby & continues to prioritise his hobbies...

LampLighter414 · 04/03/2022 15:53

All these after-sports beers at the pub he is having, how does he get home? Driving over the limit after having a couple? Knobhead.

FlowerArranger · 04/03/2022 15:56

@DaisyKG

Hi everyone,

I’m really overwhelmed by the responses. Thank you all so much.

I guess I have very expectations and low self esteem. We’ve had this conversation countless times and he always makes out that I’m nagging and it makes me feel awful and I guess I’m worried that maybe I wouldn’t find someone else. I think I know what our future holds, I just needed an outsider’s view to solidify that how I am feeling is justifiable.

I really do appreciate everyone’s comments, thank youBlush

Very low expectations and low self esteem You need to address it yourself, rather than expecting a man - any man - to fix this. Read a few books on self-esteem and boundaries, and consider counselling. Women Who Love Too Much is a very worthwhile read.

We’ve had this conversation countless times
You can talk to him till the cows come home......... he will NOT change.

he always makes out that I’m nagging and it makes me feel awful
Accusations of nagging are the go-to excuse for men who know what they are doing is wrong but who do not have the slightest intention of changing. The fact that it is YOU rather than him that ends up feeling awful attests to your low self-esteem. For him it's just water off a duck's back. He KNOWS this makes you feel awful and he consciously uses these 'discussions' as a means of controlling you.

I’m worried that maybe I wouldn’t find someone else
That's never a good enough reason to stay with someone, and you know it. You most likely WILL find someone else, someone who values you and wants the same things as you. But even if you don't you'll be infinitely happier than if you were to stay with this awful man.

Everything comes back to your low self-esteem. You need to fix this to be happy. Read that book and find a counsellor! Flowers

Erinyes · 04/03/2022 16:01

One of my first questions when dating was ‘Do you, or have you ever, played football and/or supported a football team?’ If yes, they were binned. Ditto golf, which seems to attract an unusually high proportion of assholes.

Shade17 · 04/03/2022 16:15

Typical football wanker, whatever you do, don’t have kids with him!

MurmuratingStarling · 04/03/2022 16:28

@Erinyes

One of my first questions when dating was ‘Do you, or have you ever, played football and/or supported a football team?’ If yes, they were binned. Ditto golf, which seems to attract an unusually high proportion of assholes.
See also, CYCLING.
iPaddy · 04/03/2022 16:31

RUN and don't look back!

LightSpeeds · 04/03/2022 16:43

Blimey, I feel sorry for you. Ditch him and let him get on with his football, golf, and whatever new thing he's going to start next.

You are not a priority and never will be. Don't ask him to change, don't marry him, and don't have kids with him as you will be DOING IT MOSTLY ALONE.

It's difficult to see when you are actually having a relationship around all his football and golf 'commitments'...

CandlesBlanketsandTea · 04/03/2022 17:15

What exactly is stopping you from dumping him? Do you rent or own the house? Can you afford to live alone?

FindItStrange · 04/03/2022 17:36

End it OP.
My ex was obsessed with football. We once had an argument about it and he said to me "football was here before you, and it will be here when you're gone"

Well that's true now. But after I left him I met my now husband (who doesn't like sports!) And we have 3 children and make the most of our weekends together.

I'm definitely so relieved that I didn't stick around and end up starting a family with someone so football obsessed that it came before everything and everyone else.

There's better out there for you OP. You're just not compatible

Merryoldgoat · 04/03/2022 17:41

Why is it mostly men who have hobbies to the exclusion of all else? I don’t know why women who can’t balance family life and outside interests.

KLH87 · 04/03/2022 17:56

I should have added that we both work full time - he works pretty standard hours (7-4) and I work from home but my hours are more like shifts. Because I’m at home all day, I do all the housework, walk our 2 dogs everyday, food shop etc. Sometimes I work until 12am and I’ve asked him if he would mind getting up 10 minutes earlier to run the dogs out for a quick toilet break at 6am to allow me a small lie in and he refuses and says he won’t have time.

He's taking the absolute piss and you should not consider having children with him atm.

Why the fuck shouldn't he get up 10 minutes earlier? Why are the dogs, the housework, the shopping etc your sole responsibility?!

How old are you both?

SaggyBlinders · 04/03/2022 18:00

Reading your OP reminds me of my friend's ex husband. He used to leave her sobbing with a newborn to get to football training, cos he "couldn't let the lads down" Hmm. Prick.

Fireflygal · 04/03/2022 18:01

Op, you sound lovely and have so much going for you. You deserve better.

Please believe that you don't need to accept the scraps that this man gives you.

At a minimum stop the household chores that benefit him. He has to realise that he can't take advantage of you. Cook for yourself unless he prepares a meal for you and then take it in turns.

Do your own laundry. Don't shop for his food.

Tell him he has to walk the dogs at least half the time. Get tough so you don't feel so walked over.

You might not be able to plan a good birthday this year but make sure next year is a better one.

Swipe left for the next trending thread