Meet the Other Phone. Child-safe in minutes.

Meet the Other Phone.
Child-safe in minutes.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

DS not happy - I have to end the relationship don’t I

279 replies

GeoRicks · 05/02/2024 15:26

I’ll start with a little background, DS is 17, Y12. 6 years ago my husband passed away, it was sudden and DS and I were understandably devastated. It has been a long process of healing and really we will never fully heal, he was an incredible loving man and our life will always be worse off for not having him.
About a year after he passed we sent to a group for children who had lost a parent, all the kids were around 9-14 and well DS hated it!! We persisted with going for about a year and I met a dad who had a daughter who was little older than DS. Neither of them were really responding to the group, but for opposite reasons. DS was very much the world is awful and baking cakes with other kids like me won’t make that better. This man’s DD was very much the opposite, in she just said she was fine and didn’t feel the need to go.
We both stopped attending but kept in close touch, occasionally meeting for coffee as it was so lovely having someone who understood. I don’t drive so he had taken DS and I down to Manchester to go shopping a few times, he and DS went off together and I went with his daughter etc.
About June last year the nature of our relationship changed and we began dating. I approached it tactfully with DS and he seemed ok with it. We don’t live super close so initially we would just spend Sundays together. We both work 4 days so after a few months it progressed to all day Sunday and most of Monday together. We alternate who’s house we stay at. Over Christmas we spent a little more time together and took the kids out for a meal and bowling, did similar in October half term. In the holidays we always stayed at mine, DS and his DD are a little over a month apart in age but she is Y13 and DS Y12. She is more independent and doesn’t seem to mind her dad being gone for a few days. DS would have struggled.

Skip a head to yesterday, we were staying at my house this weekend and yesterday afternoon DS expressed he wasn’t well and asked if my partner could leave. Total non-issue he left no fuss. DS has seemed out of sorts but not really ill as such. Today he decided to stay off school too.
This morning he told me he doesn’t like my “boyfriend” staying the night. He told me the reasons are that he still views this as his family home as in his dad, him and I. He said it made him uncomfortable. I asked if he would prefer I went to his every Sunday night and he said not really, he doesn’t like being home alone much. He told me he doesn’t like that things have changed. He hasn’t outright said he wants me to end the relationship but it’s clear he doesn’t want me to be with this man around him and he’s my son so that makes it very difficult!!
I’m now thinking I need to end the relationship which is actually really upsetting; I do love him (although this is a relatively new feeling and of course I love my son more). I’ve found opening myself up to someone new really difficult and we have so much in common and he is a genuinely good lovely man. I tried so hard to approach this gently with DS, didn’t force him to do anything, didn’t rush in etc.
Partially thinking I need to wait until DS has moved out, he doesn’t plan to go to uni, but wants an apprenticeship which is local, so he would be at home for a bit longer then and I worry that if I got into a relationship just as he moved out he’d feel pushed away.
I’m feeling a little conflicted as while DS is my priority, I’ve really enjoyed this relationship and worry If not now - when?
I know realistically I just have to end things, DS comes first, but AIBU to be wondering if there is a way around this, that allows me to prioritise DS and have a life of my own?

OP posts:
ChunkyTofu · 06/02/2024 09:34

SoreAndTired1 · 06/02/2024 08:09

"He doesn’t want to be alone overnight" @GeoRicks

To be honest, he sounds a bit developmentally delayed? It's not at all normal for a 17 year old boy to be clingy like that. I've never known a 17 year old teenage boy to be too afraid to stay on their own overnight. Most 17 year old boys are DESPERATE to get rid the parents for a night, even have a party while the parents are away. Does he have many friends? I am wondering if he has ASD aor may possibly need therapy. Because his clinginess rings alarm bells.

Tone deaf post. Maybe the desire to "get rid" of your parents is missing in someone who lost his father suddenly around the age of 11?

yellowjump · 06/02/2024 09:44

I was going to suggest that his view has changed because he is seeing a change coming.
Although the girl may be a bit embarrassing, I would think the biggest thing is he is worried you are going to permanently move in together in the relatively near future.
I would be really clear about what your plans are and give as much notice as possible if things start to change. It sounds like you have given him some reassurances and found some solutions so just keep doing that.
His home is his home (and his security) and it must be scary for him thinking that might change (even if you don't think it necessary will). 17 is still very young and he needs to feel safe and secure for a bit longer.

Member984815 · 06/02/2024 10:00

I think your son probably just needs more time to adjust , you deserve to have happiness again I wouldn't end things

RantyAnty · 06/02/2024 13:24

1offnamechange · 05/02/2024 20:25

given your update I think you need to have a bit of a chat about how he interacts with girls generally. Asking someone out once, fine, repeatedly pestering her after she's already said no several times, and then punishing a different woman for him being rejected is erring on the dodgy. Completely understandable if he didn't want to see partner's dd himself, but stopping you and partner from seeing each other just because he's embarrassed from the result of his own actions isn't okay. If he'd only asked her out once (presumably some time ago) then the initial embarrassment would have faded by now, it's his fault he's kept trying! Also the fact he doesn't say anything that suggests he liked her personality or felt they had losing their parents in common - no reason for asking her out other than her being "the fittest girl he knows" 🙄

I appreciate he said it jokingly and am not suggesting he's some sort of incel in the making, but it doesn't sound great in terms of respecting women's boundaries. It's interesting that your partner's dd hasn't said anything about her not wanting the two of you together - it sounds likes she has potentially a lot more reason to complain than he does.

So much this I'm mortified for his DD as how uncomfortable for her to being creeped at while Mum and Dad paid no attention had no idea.

Maybe that's why she's being seriously independent because she doesn't want to be around DS?

DS needs to grow up a bit and become more independent as in going out with friends and doing things not just hanging around the house mooning over being rejected by DD. Does he have regular chores or a part-time job?

New posts on this thread. Refresh page