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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Stuck between son and partner

126 replies

Gemma7899 · 06/11/2022 14:24

Hello. I need to know if IABU, I feel so stuck in the middle and cannot see clearly. I'm sorry it's a bit of a long backstory.

My ds is 13 and has entered a real teenager phase. He rarely helps out unless asked several times, is 80% of the time in his room and being grumpy, doesn't think properly about anything like his head is in the clouds.

My partner of 9 years gets on at him a bit saying he doesn't help enough he should do this he should do that. He shouldnt eat upstairs, he showers too long, he eats too much all of this kind of stuff.
In between all of this he is great he helps him with his bike and they watch football together and more. My ds doesn't see his real dad very much.

We've had an incident where my ds hasn't put his bike away in the shed very well and has scratched my partners racing bike.
At the time he was very calm about it and taked him through how to do put it away nicely ect. I felt awful for both of them, my son because he's done yet another thing wrong and for my partner as his expensive bike has been scratched but I thought he was being calm and understanding about it and put it down to an accident and all was forgotten.

I was wrong. A few weeks later my mum had brought my son a pc (off of my brother to help him out financially) and we talked together about how he can work the money off so he feels like he's earnt it and not just been given a pc. (I want to teach him the value of money and that you have to work hard to get what you want) however my partner has flipped out about it saying he's been waiting for my son to offer to pay for his damaged bike or to do some jobs to pay off for the damage. He's so cross that he's getting to 'buy' and pc but not payed for the damaged bike.
I've suggested my son doesn't get the pc until he's paid or worked off the bike damage but my parter doesnt want to look like the bad guy.
He's said he can wait til after Christmas then make him pay it off but I don't think this is fair. I'd rather resolve the problem now.

I feel like he begrudges my son of having anything good but at the same time I know my son needs to pull his finger out!

My partner has a son aged 17 and if he damaged something no questions would be asked. He gets anything he askes for and does nothing to help or to earn money (he doesn't live with us)

We've had massive arguments about it and I don't know if I'm being unreasonable or doing the right thing. I am terrified of pushing my son away and getting on at him the whole time but at the same time I want to maintain a happy household for my other kids and I don't want to push away my partner. Am I in the wrong? Should I be more harsh on my son? Or Should I defend him more? I feel so stuck and don't know how to resolve the issue. I cannot see a way out of it.

OP posts:
MuchuseasaChocolateTeapot · 06/11/2022 15:48

OP what would happen with your partner if you stuck up for your son as others have advised? You sound like you don’t want to because you have other children with him but I’m concerned that you are worried about taking your son’s side. Are you frightened or will you just have a massive sulking partner to deal with so you’re reluctant to engage?

your son is the outlier in your family with only you to defend him otherwise it could mess him up big time. His clumsiness and thoughtlessness go hand in hand with his age, it’s normal and he needs to not feel like a failure or burden.

Are you disengaging from this because you don’t like what you are hearing?

girlmom21 · 06/11/2022 15:48

Was the damage to the bike actually even your sons fault? Why isn't it your partners fault for leaving his very valuable bike in the path of where the teenager would put his?

user1471442488 · 06/11/2022 15:49

Another bad mother putting a POS man above her kid. Well done OP, your son won’t want to know you when he’s grown up.

Jamimas · 06/11/2022 15:53

I feel very sorry for your son. He's only 13 and that's a tough age anyway. He needs loving and supportive parents.

JennyNotFromTheBlock · 06/11/2022 15:57

Your 'D'P (9 years and he still won't commit to you by marrying you, btw? However, probably good because it allows you an easier escape now) is an abusive scumbag. If he expected my son to pay it, the P would have been told to get to fuck. Who does he think he is, and why are you allowing this scumbag to muscle in and treat your son so badly? When are you going to choose your so, over a man? Why are women so often desperate for any man they will accept their own children being treated like shit by the 'mums boyfriend' (not even husband). His behaviour is appalling, he's a real pig of a man. Raise your standards and choose your son and throw the P out.

BabyClubYEEAAH · 06/11/2022 15:59

Mumsnet is not the place to post about this OP it’s just going to make you feel so much worse. Blending families is hard work but you do need to find the voice to stick up for your son when needed.

PumpkinSeason · 06/11/2022 16:01

Nope. He shouldn't even think its acceptable to criticise your son so frequently to you.

I have dc and I'm married to their stepdad. DH knew from the off that I am the only one that decides any discipline or telling off conversations. He's not like that anyway, but I wouldn't stand him being negative about/to my child in any instance. It actually works very well for us.

Your son doesn't have a dad around and will feel incredibly isolated if his stepdad dislikes him and his mum permits it.

GoldIsMyBirthMetal · 06/11/2022 16:03

I think you partner is wrong to hold onto the issue, especially pretending it’s resolved when he doesn’t think it is. You are right it also should get resolved now. A 13 year old cannot really pay back damage as the money they are using was given to them at some stage.
The PC is separate and I think your plan reasonable

Galaktoboureko · 06/11/2022 16:10

He probs didn't say anything as he didn't see any feasible way your son could pay it off. However, now he's seeing that for 'important' things like a new toy there is money and feels he's been treated like a mug. Or maybe he's just an arse.

Hard to ultimately know the situation. I do know my brother was a lazy little shit and would absolutely force a bike or whatever into a shed rather than spend ten seconds making room for it properly. He scratched the neighbours car with his bike on three separate occasions due to being too lazy to walk across the lawn and instead squeezing between cars on the drive.

UnshakenNeedsStirring · 06/11/2022 16:11

You are being a shit mother. For goodness sake, get rid of this POS and support your son. But you wont do that will you OP?

melj1213 · 06/11/2022 16:12

Regardless of the overall situation, in which your DP needs to be more consistent with how he treats all of the children, the time for your DP to say he wanted your DS to "pay" (whether actual money or in chores) was when the damage happened (or at the very latest at the point he had the scratch fixed and knee the total cost) not weeks and weeks later.

If my DD damaged something of a family member then I would automatically offer to pay for the damage (and would probably be refused) at the time, but if I didn't and the other family member didn't ask for repayment then I would consider the matter settled. If they tried to get me to pay for the damage, or was upset weeks later because DD hadn't offered to pay, then I'd tell them to fuck right off as they don't get to hold the incident over everyone's heads until they decide what future incident they want to resent us for.

Derbee · 06/11/2022 16:13

Bintymcbintface · 06/11/2022 14:26

Why are you with someone who's so horrible to your son? I'd let DS have the pc (why does he have to pay for a gift?) and tell DP to fuck off

Yep

endofthelinefinally · 06/11/2022 16:14

"My partner has a son aged 17 and if he damaged something no questions would be asked. He gets anything he askes for and does nothing to help or to earn money (he doesn't live with us)"

This is very telling OP.

billy1966 · 06/11/2022 16:14

Poor lad.

His mother has had more children with a bullying piece of shit that picks on him.

What a life he has.🙄

He'll be out the door as soon as he can.

This bike issue is just another stick to beat him with.

One standard for HIS son while he bullys your son in front of you.

Your gut is telling you that your son is being picked on.

No wonder he spends 80% up in his room away from that nasty prick you have had children with.

Poor boy.
Second class citizen in his home.

Azerothi · 06/11/2022 16:18

Why haven't you wanted to marry this boyfriend after, you say, 9 years together?

Do you have other children with other men other than the son you mentioned and not with the current boyfriend?

girlmom21 · 06/11/2022 16:18

UnshakenNeedsStirring · 06/11/2022 16:11

You are being a shit mother. For goodness sake, get rid of this POS and support your son. But you wont do that will you OP?

Considering she's got other children with the man, no she won't just get rid of him. There are lots of steps she can take before that. Namely, standing up for her son.

Justmuddlingalong · 06/11/2022 16:19

I fear it'll be a self fulfilling prophecy. DP treats SS like shit, SS feels useless and not worth support even from his own DM and becomes either mentally unwell or goes off the rails. DP thinks he's been correct all along that SS 's a wrong un and the DM agrees.

romdowa · 06/11/2022 16:19

Do the scratches affect the use of the bike ? I highly doubt it does. Your partner needs to grow up , take better care of his stuff and stop bullying a 13 year old boy in his home. I don't understand how you need to even ask partner or son. Your children come before any man

deeperthanallroses · 06/11/2022 16:24

If you have other children with your dp it will be even more obvious to your son that he is treated differently from both his siblings and dps son, and you need to be really careful to protect him. If dps son weren’t getting in trouble for anything then mine wouldn’t be either.

MRex · 06/11/2022 16:25

3 different issues:

  1. Get your partner to fix the bike scratch with your son. It isn't expensive and it isn't difficult. Here are some options, more exist: Mishaps should become "how we fix things" at your son's age, and no teenager in the world would be offering to pay up when they have no idea what this stuff costs, nor probably have a clue how to fix scratches!

  2. As for the computer, it's your mum's problem if she's got over-stretched helping your brother, and is not your son's issue. Let your son save up to get a cheap secondhand machine, rather than paying top whack to pay off the uncle's poor spending choices by proxy. I don't know why you are letting your son get dragged into that mess, but it's clearly not his responsibility.

  3. Your partner moaning at you is one thing, but is there actual unfairness between the kids or over-reaction to your son just being a teenager? You need to think hard about that and address it if so, no adult should ever come before your child's happiness.

MRex · 06/11/2022 16:28

Sorry, excuse random unrelated video that was inserted in that, that isn't the bike fix, which is this:
m.youtube.com/watch?v=XLolVm7sY-k

(Or scratch repair kits from Halfords are £5.)

Jamimas · 06/11/2022 16:34

He probs didn't say anything as he didn't see any feasible way your son could pay it off.

That he's even thinking that a 13 year old should 'pay it off' is shocking Shock

AhNowTed · 06/11/2022 16:40

Jamimas · 06/11/2022 16:34

He probs didn't say anything as he didn't see any feasible way your son could pay it off.

That he's even thinking that a 13 year old should 'pay it off' is shocking Shock

Agree. The guys a total bellend.

Merlinsbeard83 · 06/11/2022 16:50

Please start sticking up for your son . Once he is an adult you will lose him . He won't forget and probably will limit his contact with you . My dh had a very similar situation with his step father . And as soon as he could he left at 17 and never looked back .Its very sad

Unseelie · 06/11/2022 16:59

Shallysally · 06/11/2022 14:41

The scratch was an accident. If your P wanted for your DS wanted for him
to contribute to the repair then that conversation should have been had at the time.
Children always don’t have the initiative to offer to do this.

That said, I wouldn’t ask DD to contribute towards accidental damage that she had caused. It’s part of having children.

Maybe re read your OP. If this was your friend or one of us, what would you be advising?

What @Shallysally said.

It sounds to me like your partner is resentful and jealous of your son now he’s getting bigger, ans actively trying to come between you and your son. This is so sad. Of course your son is hiding in his room, being grumpy etc, he’s being made unwelcome in his own home and his mum isn’t standing up for him.

Your partner is 100% blaming your son for the damage to the racing bike. But the damage could have equally been your partner’s fault for leaving the racing bike in the way. If he wanted payment for accidental damage - from a thirteen year old!! - he should have raised that with you and your son at the time. Is he really going to spend money on having a little scratch repainted?! Why not just ride a scratched bike? If the family can’t afford a computer I don’t get why the family would spend money on making a bike look brand new

The PC is a weird one. At 13 your son shouldn’t be pressured into buying something from his uncle that the uncle can no longer afford, that’s so weird. Either buy him the PC as a present, or you shouldn’t have offered it in the first place. But selling stuff to your 13 yr old son is not right.

Your son is still very young and needs you to support him against your DP who is bullying him.