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.

To stop feeding DD’s boyfriend

363 replies

tobatz0220 · 07/09/2023 11:13

I know I'm probably BU

DD and her bf are 18, and they were in an on and off ‘relationship’ since they were 12, but have been together without breaking up for 2 years. For many reasons, he lives with us. Not sure if they're relevant.

DD finished sixth form this year and she's due to start uni in a few weeks. Boyfriend however hasn't done anything since he finished sixth form. He didn't go most of his last year and as a result, failed his A levels. He told DD he wasn't enjoying what he chose and is due to go and do a course at college, I'm not sure if he will stick to it. DD’s room is a mess and I know it isn't DD as she's very tidy but she (rightly) refuses to tidy up after him. In his defence, he is helpful around the house.

My reason for posting is he doesn't eat meals, he constantly snacks. He eats chocolate, sweets, cakes, yoghurts, fruit, cereal etc. I buy the chocolate and sweets as a treat for my DCs and the other things for their lunchboxes, if he eats all of it he goes and buys his own. He used to be underweight and has gained weight but I don't think the constant snacking is good for him. He doesn't eat dinner even though he would previously eat it so I know he likes what I make. DD asked him why and he doesn't really give a reason, just that he isn't hungry.

A few cupcakes were left over from DD’s birthday and he ate all of them yesterday, which led to the DC’s being upset as there would've been enough for all of them to have one each.

WIBU to hide all of the snacks from him and not feed him?

OP posts:
Strawberryboost · 09/09/2023 07:56

How on earth did he get on to college when the op said he basically dropped out of A levels and failed them all

Strawberryboost · 09/09/2023 08:01

@Neodymium you lock up all snacks otherwise your children and your DH would eat them all

you children will be one of those I see in the mornings walking to school.. stopping at the newsagents to buy a load of junk and scoffing mars bars down their throat at 7.30am if you don’t address this

Moomoo75 · 09/09/2023 08:03

Hi this boy has been through a lot . Could he have developed an eating disorder. Binge eating or disordered eating? I'd chat to a gp.
I wouldn't hide the food but I would talk to him

Mummyoflittledragon · 09/09/2023 08:04

Strawberryboost · 09/09/2023 07:56

How on earth did he get on to college when the op said he basically dropped out of A levels and failed them all

He will be doing a btech or something, which is posts GCSE.

Mummyoflittledragon · 09/09/2023 08:07

borninthe80esss · 08/09/2023 21:42

Couldn't agree more.

Regarding snacks I wouldn't lock them away, just sit him down and have an adult conversation about his eating habits.
I wouldn't be surprised if there was a bit of depression going on.
As for his family.. It's disgusting that his mother has allowed this and is now stopping him having a relationship with his sibling. Once he is in college you could speak with there safeguarding team, just to make them aware that he is a vulnerable young adult and see if they can help.
There was a boy in my sons college who was sofa surfing after stepdad kicked him out at 16, they helped him get a housing association flat and he's now a apprentice electrician. Thank god for people like you who has shown him kindness, awful to think what could happen to teens like this otherwise.

In this scenario, the college helped him to access a HA flat, which is the sort of thing op should be doing. She can still offer him support. And it would be both in his interest and that of his dd.

Strawberryboost · 09/09/2023 08:08

Mummyoflittledragon · 09/09/2023 08:04

He will be doing a btech or something, which is posts GCSE.

He dropped out
Did no revision
failed all his alevels

and now he will likely do the same at college. Unfathomable he’s been accepted

SpanieAttack · 09/09/2023 08:13

Strawberryboost · 09/09/2023 08:08

He dropped out
Did no revision
failed all his alevels

and now he will likely do the same at college. Unfathomable he’s been accepted

Not that unfathomable. Colleges just want bums on seats for funding, and need enough students to keep running a course.

Riverlee · 09/09/2023 08:13

crawfy86 · 09/09/2023 07:33

She posted above that he regularly cooks the meals for the family x

But also said he doesn’t eat family meals, so a slight contradiction. Does he eat main meals, or not?

FattyGonzalez · 09/09/2023 08:19

Riverlee · 09/09/2023 08:13

But also said he doesn’t eat family meals, so a slight contradiction. Does he eat main meals, or not?

Op said he cooks meals for family but does eat them himself

FattyGonzalez · 09/09/2023 08:22

Did you speak to him OP? FWIW i think you sound a kind person giving him a roof over his head. Youve done the best you could. I would have done the same, anyone with a heart would have

Strawberryboost · 09/09/2023 08:34

SpanieAttack · 09/09/2023 08:13

Not that unfathomable. Colleges just want bums on seats for funding, and need enough students to keep running a course.

What a waste of people’s time, effort and tax payers money

Strawberryboost · 09/09/2023 08:35

FattyGonzalez · 09/09/2023 08:22

Did you speak to him OP? FWIW i think you sound a kind person giving him a roof over his head. Youve done the best you could. I would have done the same, anyone with a heart would have

Where to start?

i don’t have the energy beyond 🤫

Rounee · 09/09/2023 08:39

tobatz0220 · 08/09/2023 09:35

This will be my last post on this thread, thanks everyone who actually answered my question and I will talk to him and only have the snacks out that aren't for lunchboxes.

Not sure why people are making assumptions, I do have saving, a mortgage and I don't have a low paying job. And no, I don't just want a man around the house. I have a DP that doesn't live with us but if that was the reason, he would be living with us.

I'm not sure how it's “creepy” that I want to help him.

And still you just talk about the cupcakes. 🤦‍♀️

Strawberryboost · 09/09/2023 08:49

The op clearly is rather fond of cupcakes

MamaAm · 09/09/2023 08:59

He sounds as those he may have an eating disorder and perhaps depression? He definitely needs to be encouraged to see a gp. A lot of adolescent boys suffer in silence. He might be stuffing his face but is he keeping it down?

Ohhoho · 09/09/2023 09:16

Oh dear. Facts are then that he is now an adult, messed up school, not able to go on to higher Ed. will fFE college accept him? Who pays the college? He’s had his two years further ed… he’s been living with you since he was a child…
so how can he buy snacks? Does he sign on? What advice are the authorities giving him? Where are his parents? This boy has messed up who has been guiding him? Your daughter?
This is very serious. I can see how day flips into day but this guy needs more help than you or your daughter are (very generously) giving.
Pretend he’s your son. What would you do next? Your half hearted approach is not helping. You can’t in all humanity just throw him out (assuming he has no parental home) so you better take control and do some interrogating. It’s your house take control

CleptoCleoCookoo · 09/09/2023 09:30

So many blurry unhealthy boundaries here.

Op feels maternalistic/parental but has no actual ability to parent a lazy teen as he's not her child but is having boundary issues you'd normally address if it were a tenant, flatmate, boyfriend of her own

The DD is so young and doesn't actually have any breathing room from a relationship when she has not had a chance to develop as a young adult - she will be feeling a mix of obligation and worry if she wanted to end this relationship because her mother has invited her to become responsible for another adult at such a young age!

What a damaging mess for everyone

I can understand a couple of weeks on a sofa in an emergency but inviting an educationally failing adult to tie around your daughter just about to head off on her own university journey is utterly irresponsible

Thinking with the heart rather than what's best for anyone

Mikki77 · 09/09/2023 09:30

Hi OP - I got to the post late.

Just want to say hide the snacks and talk to him to encourage him to have meals with you.

And finally you are a fucking awesome mum for welcoming him into your family. He needs good family and love. ❤️👍🏻

Longtimelurkerfinallyposts · 09/09/2023 09:40

Why aren't his mum and dad paying towards his living costs?
You said he moved in with your family 8 months ago, when he was still 17 and (technically) still attending school.
Even if his father now lives abroad, he should still be contributing towards his son's upkeep.
Who gets/ got the child benefit etc and does/did any of that come to you? Who buys his clothes and shoes?
It's a shame that you didn't do more to signpost him to the help available 6+ months ago, while he was still in full-time education and under 18 - social services would have been more likely to support him in various ways, and he would have become more eligible for a secure social housing tenancy in the future - but it's not too late to do some research and actually help him sort his life out (as you seem keen to parent the boy, and part of that is encouraging young people to become more capable of living independently)

Bignanny30 · 09/09/2023 09:42

Don’t hide the snacks, just ask him not to eat them. Tell him they’re for packed lunches etc. If he has his own money, ask him to get his own. Also he sounds like he might be suffering from depression, have a chat. Maybe he needs help.

JudgeRudy · 09/09/2023 09:51

Just wanted to clarify...is your daughter going away to uni or will she be studying locally and continuing to live with you? I ask because you need to decide if he's family or a lodger. It sounds like you view him as family and its almost as if you have an extra child. So let's look at it as if it's your son behaving this way. You've had a discussion about the snacks, you've then 'spoken to' and you've 'nagged'. If you're accepting him as a package, you'd be perfectly reasonable to hide stuff. You shouldn't have to, but it's really not so unusual.
I think I might use the cupcake incident as an opener for a broader conversation. I don't know if you had CB for him but I'm assuming that will stop now. At 18, his free ride is over. Maybe ask him if he wants to have his own snack tub etc so he can keep his stuff separate. Say if he let's you know he's welcome to join you for meals but you need to work out a system so you're not all taking each others food. I think that might let him know that going forward you are expecting him to be a bit more independent and buying his own food. He can also let you know if he wants to 'book' the kitchen for meal prep (for him and daughter). The other alternative is he pays board 'when he starts work'....

MuddlerInLaw · 09/09/2023 10:04

The OP said above that her daughter would be attending a university close to home - so not moving out.

At 18, his free ride is over.

What ‘free ride’? He’s been a child until very recently. And 18 year olds still need a lot of parental support, financially and emotionally.

FattyGonzalez · 09/09/2023 10:20

Strawberryboost · 09/09/2023 08:35

Where to start?

i don’t have the energy beyond 🤫

Whatevs 😂🤷🏻‍♀️

Allyliz · 09/09/2023 10:36

Why are you putting up with this slug in your home ? He sounds completely disrespectful and is using you shamelessly... boot his lazy arse out and feel no guilt

Thelnebriati · 09/09/2023 10:39

I think people are missing the problem - by taking him in, OP has cut him off from support that would otherwise have been available to him. Just putting a roof over his head isn't enough, he's a young person who needs support starting out in life. She meant well but hasn't actually done him any favours.