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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To be feeling so let down by DH

109 replies

KittyWitty · 14/05/2023 16:10

I will try and explain this without it becoming overly long - but sorry if it is a bit of an essay.

it is DHs birthday in the coming week. I work in a school, so cannot take days off during term time, so we agreed to have a nice takeaway on the night of his birthday and then do things with family at the weekend. DH was rubbish at telling anybody what he wanted to do for his birthday and for weeks I have been trying to get him to organise something, but he kept saying he didn’t want to make plans because my sister is due around now and he didn’t want to make any plans for them to just be cancelled (when my sister goes into labour, we will be looking after her daughter). In the middle of last week, so just a few days ago really, he decided he wanted to have a birthday tea party lunch with my parents, sister and family. I asked if he wanted his parents to come and he said no, he would do something another day with them. On Friday he decided he wanted to pottery painting with them on Sunday (today).

Yesterday, I was up early and had to go and buy, then make his birthday tea party lunch. So I spent the whole morning cleaning the house, making sandwiches and preparing food. When our guests arrived, I was left alone to do all the serving and tidying up also. Then my DH decided he wanted to go to the park with my niece, which involved going to my sisters house to get my nieces bike. I got the house as tidy as I could, but had to leave all the real cleaning and go. When we got there, my DH announced he wanted to watch Eurovision that night as part of his birthday, so we ended up out until 1 am this morning.

I am currently dealing with a lot of personal issues, so I have therapy every Sunday at 2pm. I have been doing this time for a few months now and am about halfway through my treatment. I know that it’s a bit of an awkward time, but working in a school, I was just thankful to get a regular appointment outside of work time! DH arranged with his family to do pottery painting followed by lunch out, starting at 11am. I was only made aware of this plan this morning. So I woke up fairly late from the late night and had to get ready and go. I also was pressured into cancelling my therapy, as there wasn’t time to go to the painting place, do the activity, eat lunch and get to my appointment.

On the way there, I explained to DH that the house was still very messy, I hadn’t had a chance to do any laundry or other chores all weekend and this upcoming week was going to be very stressful for me as GCSEs start. So I really wanted to be home by 3pm, so I could try and get on top of things and maybe have a moment of time for me before a hectic week. My in-laws also have a dog who they bring everywhere and I said I really wasn’t comfortable with them coming back to the house if the dog was with them because it upsets our cats, they end up weeing everywhere and with the house already in disarray, I just couldn’t cope.

Within 30 mins of us arriving, DH has already told his family that after we are done painting and eating, they can come to ours for tea and leftover party food with the dog. I felt like I couldn’t disagree, as he had already invited them, so kept quiet and carried on painting. When we sat down to eat at about 2pm, my phone rang and it was my therapy calling to see where I was. I had emailed and lied saying I was poorly, they explained that I would still be charged for cancelling with less than 48 hours notice and it would count as one of my sessions, so I would also get one less session. I got really upset and started to cry, just as the food came out. I said I couldn’t eat and walked off to sit outside. I called my therapist and she agreed to do the session over the phone. I texted my DH and told them to carry on and eat and I would have my session and then come back to see them (45 mins).

After my session, I called DH and he said they had just finished and had wrapped up my food, so I should meet him by the car. I did and when I got to the car, he asked if his parents could still come round. I agreed and explained if it was just for an hour then it was okay because otherwise they would blame me for ruining the day (my MIL always complains that we never see them because I am always ill/busy). DH text them to tell them to come back to ours and we drove home. When we got back home, he got a text to say they’d changed their minds and were on their way home because they needed to sort some things out at home.

DH then get very upset and told me I had made them feel uncomfortable by walking off and doing my session. I explained that either way I would have been charged for it and I would have just sat at the table and cried instead, so thought taking myself away was the best option. He also said while I was gone they were discussing how little they get to see us because my therapy is always getting in the way of them seeing us because they only like to see us on Sundays. They are both retired, are always going on holiday and in the last month we have seen them almost every Sunday - including driving hours to meet them at places for days out.

AIBU to be feeling so let down by DH? I feel like no matter what I did in this situation I would be seen as a problem. I have exhausted myself spending every moment this weekend trying to make it nice and just fell apart from the strain. Which makes me the bad guy, yet again.

OP posts:
FictionalCharacter · 14/05/2023 18:44

CatchYouOnTheFlippetyFlop · 14/05/2023 16:26

Jesus Christ. Pottery painting for his birthday ffs. He sounds about 10 with all his birthday demands.

He is giving me the ick.

Exactly what I was thinking. He’s like a spoiled, demanding child. Utterly selfish.
Having a child with him is a terrible idea. You’ll have 3x the work to do and he’ll continue spending his time entertaining himself and appeasing his family.

diddl · 14/05/2023 18:46

It really is heartbreaking reading this Op.

A selfish, demanding husband.

Beyond awful ILs.

Possibly non supportive parents if you decide to get away.

Religion also in the mix making you feel that you can't get away & must put up with this.

Fraaahnces · 14/05/2023 18:54

Oh Darling, you don’t need therapy to tell you to please reconsider having a baby with this man. He is already a baby. (Potentially controlling and narcissistic tendencies coming out to play.) He couldn’t handle it if your attention was on your baby and he would be jealous. He would also be telling you that the baby must fit in with HIS life because he isn’t going to work around this baby’s needs. (Plus it Will be all your fault for “ruining his day/experience” because the baby cried or needed feeding, etc when it didn’t suit his plans.) You shouldn’t need therapy to be shown that he has some pretty selfish behaviours - expecting you to drop everything and do what he wants, when he wants it, because he’s the Birthday Diva Fairy Princess. He knew how you felt about his parents coming over and he put you in the position of having to listen to him override your feelings on this subject or risk being accused of being a party pooper if you stood up for yourself on the spot. He already had these arguments stored to use against you when the parents cancelled because he was setting you up for
this. Life with him is not going to be a functional, happy, nurturing one for a child to be raised in.

Pixiedust1234 · 14/05/2023 19:01

know I am incredibly passive and that is probably part of the issue. Unfortunately being assertive is not something I have been raised to be, or am very good at!

Been there, done that. Served 37 years with a similar man. It broke me to the point of suicide several times. Only I thought it was me. My illness, my depression, my bad health. But it wasn't, it was my marriage and having to quiet my inner voice, squashing myself out of existence. I'm now trying to find my way out and its so hard because so much of me has been lost. Please don't be me, please put yourself first for a change. Find a way out, now, for future you.

OriginalFloorboards · 14/05/2023 19:03

I can’t believe a 28 year old man wants to do pottery and make this a full day including his parents and the dog.

No wonder you need therapy.

I’m stressed reading your post OP.

Please say no next time. It will carry on if not. I’d end up burying him. Sorry not helpful.

MrsDanversGlidesAgain · 14/05/2023 19:03

THere was, a few months ago, a thread from a woman who had broken away from her church because the pastors wanted her to stay with her abusive husband. If anyone can find that it might help OP.

DelphiniumBlue · 14/05/2023 19:08

I think you need to stand up for yourself, be more assertive.
If you have already made a firm commitment to something ( your Sunday therapy), why were you even debating not fulfilling that commitment?
Look in the mirror and practise saying "No, I've got a previous arrangement, I'm not/ can't cancel it".
You say DH is rubbish with planning and forgets about pre-existing arrangements- well that's for him to worry about. You don't have to keep re-arranging everything around him, stick to your guns and say no, he will have to work around any plans you have already made. Don't keep being so flexible. It's no good for you being so compliant and then feeling resentful. You would have been perfectly in order to have said that you could do the activity before or after your therapy, or he could go without you.
But why are you having therapy at 2pm on a Sunday? That does actually rule out things like days out, can't you change it to earlier or later? Or a different day?
And think about organising yourself so that you are not cancelling fun stuff in order to do laundry and housework- there are only 2 of you. You can do your own prep during weekday evenings, get a cleaner if you can afford it, and let him deal with his own washing/ eating. If you work in a school weekdays will be hard, I know, but you can still manage to bung on a load of washing. Don't be a martyr, but think about how you can arrange things so that you don't always pander to him.

Cantstandbullshitanymore · 14/05/2023 19:24

Eleganz · 14/05/2023 17:02

I think your husband is getting a pasting on here and not sure it is entirely deserved to be honest. He is obviously someone who likes to spend time with family on his birthday and I don't see anything wrong with that.

However it is clear that you have a very different approach to planning and communicating and that is making things very stressful for you. It seems that you need to have a good plan, well in advance and that you don't really like mess and disorder in your space. Your husband doesn't care for planning in advance, likes to do things as he feels and isn't bothered about mess and disorder.

I'll be honest I think happiness lies between those two extremes. Whilst I'd also be pissed off if we had nothing at all planned in advance, someone getting worried about doing housework on my birthday would also earn my ire to be honest.

You need to find some common ground here or this relationship won't work out.

Oh cut it out, the husband is a childish idiot who doesn’t care how his actions affect his wife as long as he gets what he wants and pleases mummy and daddy.

sweeneytoddsrazor · 14/05/2023 19:26

I think you both need to make some changes for this marriage to work. A marriage where one partner has OCD and the other is really laid back and not great at planning is just never going work. He needs to learn to be more organised and you need to learn to say no. No to all his plans and no to all the household stuff you feel you need to do.

Manichean · 14/05/2023 19:42

You sound such a generous soul, surrounded by a bunch of takers. DH is a bit of a big ole baby. Pissed myself at the pottery painting - thought it was for little kids.

wetpebbles · 14/05/2023 19:44

Buy a pram for this great big baby's next birthday, put him in it and watch him throw all his toys out.

aloris · 14/05/2023 19:47

If I read it correctly, therapy is only for 6 weeks, so being unable to plan outings on Sundays is a temporary thing.

It would be one thing if he was just someone who liked to do things spontaneously whereas OP is a planner. But he expects that OP will move mountains to rearrange her day so that he can be spontaneous, and he is assuming that she will do all the prep and cleanup. Like she's his servant, not his wife.

For example, the Saturday party for which he gave her so little notice, required her to clean and cook to host while he presumably just enjoyed his birthday. Then he spontaneously made them all stay up late so OP couldn't tidy up. The Sunday outing with his parents required her to be out of the house all day, doing activities dictated by him, knowing that she would have to come home and clean up afterward, before a full workweek.

And that's without even talking about the issue of him expecting her to simply no-show for her medical treatment, which is always a risky thing to do in terms of destroying the relationship with the medical provider. And then the cherry on top, his parents criticising her for needing therapy because it interferes with their right to control the Sunday social schedule of OP and her husband. I mean it's so over-the-top invasive, I can't even!

cansu · 14/05/2023 19:48

He sounds like a child. Who makes a this fuss about their birthday?

endofthelinefinally · 14/05/2023 19:50

Goodness. I was exhausted and stressed just reading that OP.
I couldn't live with a man who was so inconsiderate and lacking in empathy.
His family sound just as bad, although it is primarily your husband's responsibility to maintain some boundaries.
He doesn't want you to have your therapy because he wants to keep you in a state of lack of control over your own life.
He doesn't want you to know what is happening because he wants you in a state of anxiety and guilt.
He really doesn't care about you.

Modda · 14/05/2023 20:07

Was it his 18th? He sounds like it might have been

Tuatara22 · 14/05/2023 21:56

It sounds like your husband has made no attempt to accommodate your autism. Changing plans last minute, springing things on you and disrupting your routine are sure to stress you out, and he ought to know that. Does he really understand your needs and how things that don't seem like a big deal to him can really throw you off?

YoucancallmeKAREN · 14/05/2023 22:39

Bloody hell, you have a man child not a husband. Time for an upgrade.

Babymamamama · 14/05/2023 23:00

Sorry haven’t RTFT but…..if your DH isnt Peter Pan then he really needs to grow up. What adult wants a tea party with sandwiches plus going pottery painting with their parents. Is this actually for real?

mrlistersgelfbride · 14/05/2023 23:54

@MiddleParking I totally agree!

OP, I'm so sorry you are in this position, bending over backwards to accommodate people who don't deserve it. It's time you put yourself first. Finish your therapy if you can, I hope it helps.
Sorry to hear about the ties that are keeping you with this man. All I will say is you are late 20s (I'm guessing). It's so young and you don't have to accept this as your fate, no matter what your parents think or what your religion dictates.
You have one precious life. So sorry for your infertility, it must be so difficult for you. Whatever path you choose, I'd urge you not to have a child with a selfish self centred man whose parents are a nightmare. Take it from someone who knows.
You are young enough to turn things around. Sending you strength and love Flowers

Nightlystroll · 17/05/2023 14:50

What's wrong with men doing pottery or painting or pottery painting? Wedgewood and Spode were both men and no one called them 10yo sissies!
MNers love to preach tolerance but are loathe to show it.

Daffodil92 · 17/05/2023 19:37

Nightlystroll · 17/05/2023 14:50

What's wrong with men doing pottery or painting or pottery painting? Wedgewood and Spode were both men and no one called them 10yo sissies!
MNers love to preach tolerance but are loathe to show it.

It’s the combination of pottery painting plus a lunchtime tea party with mummy and daddy for me. Ick ick ick.

MsAdoraBelleDearheartVonLipwig · 17/05/2023 20:01

Woah. Back up.

Your in-laws were cross at you for missing a party when you were having a miscarriage?

And you still speak to them?

They are arseholes of the highest order. That must be one of the most cruel and selfish things I’ve read. Absolute fucking cunts. And if your dh lets them get away with such atrocious behaviour then he’s a cunt too.

I’m so sorry you’re involved with these godawful people and I hope you find the strength to stand up for yourself and get the fuck far away from them. And their appalling man child.

Flowers
Nightlystroll · 17/05/2023 20:11

Daffodil92 · 17/05/2023 19:37

It’s the combination of pottery painting plus a lunchtime tea party with mummy and daddy for me. Ick ick ick.

A tea party is just finger food like an afternoon tea, though. What's icky about eating that with your parents?
Is it because you don't like men using the phrase "tea party"? (Did he even use that phrase?) Is it because you think it makes him sound effeminate? Maybe he should have said a lunchtime afternoon tea.
I dunno. Maybe I'm missing something here because so many people find it offensive. 😆

ThereIbledit · 17/05/2023 20:24

No reasonable adult wants a takeaway on their birthday, a tea party and a pottery party, especially not when it's not a big one!

No reasonable partner would ask you to skip therapy for that, either, by the way.

and no reasonable person would hold it against you that you had to miss occasions due to covid and a miscarriage - that's horiffic.

unsync · 17/05/2023 21:30

Oh dear, you married a manchild. You're his mummy not his wife. This will be one of the reasons your MIL is like that, you have stepped on her toes. 'Her boy' now has two mummies, she is competing and winning. 🙄