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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Partner turned off (My) wifi and upset my Son - AIBU

543 replies

candragonsbepurple · 21/03/2024 20:58

My partner is childless. I have two children (A son who is eleven and a daughter who is seven)

My ex husband moved to take care of his Dad six months ago but before that we had been divorced two years. Exes Dad has cancer and he's alone (Ex is an only child and his Mum died way before I met him) I'd have moved myself and my children to be nearer to ex so they could see each other but Ex was completely adamant they stay where they are for school and their friends.

One of the ways my children communicate with their Dad is through video games. I dont know how it works but they talk to each other while they play. They do this every sunday for a few hours before tea time. Sunday just gone my son wasn't well but really wanted to play games with his dad. I said that was okay and I'd save him some dinner (I made him some eggs and soldiers)

My partner cut the wifi when my son didn't come to the table. His reasoning was my son was being disobedient but I'd told him three times that DS wasn't feeling a hundred percent and I don't force my kids to eat big meals when they are unwell. My son was understandably distraught thinking his Dad had ended the game without saying goodbye and my partner kicked off.

He started ranting and raving how under HIS roof my son should have more respect. I reminded partner that we live in 2024, not 1924 and the house I owned was mine that my Mother left to me.

I ended up kicking my partner out - He went home in a huff and now I'm being put in the middle by partner's Mum saying that I should teach my children respect.

AIBU in thinking it's not my partner's place to parent my children - he's not a live-in boyfriend, we've been together ten months and that his Mum should keep her nose out

OP posts:
MaybeSmaller · 22/03/2024 13:54

You're kidding, right?

He did this to your son, in your house which he doesn't even live in?

He didn't just overstep the line, he shot past the line and ran all the way back around for a victory lap.

Get rid.

DodoTired · 22/03/2024 13:55

LTB

SoreAndTired1 · 22/03/2024 14:08

@candragonsbepurple Are you ever going to reply on here?

If it's your house, it is not your cockloging bludger's (sorry, 'partner's') house so how you parent is none of his business.

It sounds to me like the bludging worthless cocklodger you have, has no understanding of your parenting rules and has no right dictating anything.

His mother sounds like she didn't raise him properly and doesn't understand the nuances of your household either.

I'd get rid of that worthless bullying cocklodger and tell him to get to fuck. Don't let your children suffer because your 'partner' is a worthless bludging arsehole. Personally I'd give cocklodging bludger's mother an earful about how she failed to raise him properly.

PinkyFlamingo · 22/03/2024 14:25

My roof? Is he confused where he lives?

Runnerinthenight · 22/03/2024 14:27

Tell the pair of them to fuck right off!!

And tell 'partner's' mum that if she had taught him respect, the situation wouldn't have arisen!!

"Under his roof" - entitled fuckwit!!

theDudesmummy · 22/03/2024 14:34

Whoever's house it is, what an horrible man. You can't let him remain in your poor children's lives.

Geebray · 22/03/2024 14:47

Get rid of him, and his mother.

You seem to be parenting brilliantly with your ex. Don't let this idiot spoil that.

contrary13 · 22/03/2024 14:47

MonsteraMama · 21/03/2024 21:02

Ew, grown men who run straight to mummy when they don't get their own way should come with a warning label.

"Warning, may cause permanent vaginal closure"

Please dump this loser.

I absolutely agree that this boyfriend (definitely not partner - 10 months in, don't live together, already starting to display dominant/controlling/abusive tendencies to young children and their mother...? Not partner material in the slightest!) needs to be thrown to the curb, @candragonsbepurple, and with immediate effect.

However, it's not that grown men ought not to turn to their mothers for advice, or even just a bewildered "where did I go/what did I do wrong...?!" conversation. That isn't necessarily the issue. The issue is that the boyfriend's mother (not the MIL - partly because, hopefully, there's nothing in law connecting the two of you!) got involved. Took it upon herself to berate you, and then essentially belittle your parenting choices - especially when by doing so, she was displaying how poor her own are!

I mean, my DS (19) knows that he can turn to me and talk to/with me about absolutely anything. In the last few days, I have counselled him about a relationship issue, peer pressure problems, and heard far more than I want to about how his driving lessons are going. Last week, it was another relationship issue that looked like turning into a crisis if he didn't put a boundary in place. At no time during any of these conversations - and I'll admit, my maternal/protective streak is pretty strong, and I am still seething quietly about last week's - did I think to myself: "huh. I'm going to fire off an 'e'mail essentially telling DS' girlfriend what I think about her latest issue with him...". Partly because they are both adults, they are both at fault, I am merely a sounding board that has the capacity to tell my son when his head's up his bloody arse!

Again, there are faults on both sides here - but there should only ever be two people in a relationship. In your situation, OP, there's you, the (hopefully very discarded) boyfriend and his mother. Ten months in, and you can already tell how much worse it'd be two years in, five years in, ten years in...

And not only for you - but for your kids, too.

I think your ex-husband is commendable for having found a way of communicating with your children where he probably knows more about their lives than he would if they weren't distracted by the online games. At the very least, having put their educations and burgeoning friendship groups before his own needs as a parent, he is still present in their lives. He probably could tell you other instances where your boyfriend has undermined your authority as the actual parent and perhaps made your son, at the very least, feel like shit. Because this, I'd stake my life, won't be the first time. Low level abuse ramps up into shit like this "my roof" and "your kids are rude brats: do better" bullshit, And then it ramps up again. Also, at the end of the day, your ex is losing his father, but your kids are losing a grandparent - and possibly the first one that they know (as in the first death). When you're the ages your children are, and your Dad moves miles away, and your grandparent is dying - and then suddenly you've got some cocklodger who's been on the scene for less than a year throwing his weight around in your family's home... Yeah, that's a scary emotional ride for them.

Fair enough, you never moved him in with your kids - but you were contemplating it if he's already been introduced to them (and far too early, unless there's a drip feed where they've known him their whole lives...? In which case - doesn't matter; still far too soon). I really hope you don't continue any sort of a relationship with you, because he (and his mother) really have told/shown you who they are with this escapade.

Listen to/believe them the first time.

Daffodil

(Edited to add that I would tell the mother precisely what she could do with her parenting tips and how she's failed in raising a man, rather than an entitled and arrogant cocklodger... I wouldn't be tempted to do so. I would. But I detest women like this who give the ones who listen to and advise our sons, smile nicely at their awful girlfriends/wives... and keep our mouths shut and our fingers off the keyboards, a bad reputation.)

Scrambledchickens · 22/03/2024 14:48

Wow you need to get rid of him, he wants to rule you all, cocklodger

SpringtimeBunny · 22/03/2024 14:52

Why has he even met your DC if you've only been together 10 months??? That's absolutely insane

Walker1178 · 22/03/2024 15:00

He sounds like a Prince 🙄

He’s right though under HIS roof you should show some respect and live by his rules. Maybe he needs reminding that actually you’re under YOUR roof and he needs to show that respect and tow your line!

extrasushiplease · 22/03/2024 15:12

You did the right thing. Anyone who lacks that nuance with kids, especially to put their ego first (and that was what this was about) shouldn't be around. He also repeatedly ignored you and your authority as the parent, which is unacceptable and could potentially be very dangerous in the future.

Plus, the mom butting in gives you a preview of what you'd be up against if you stayed with him, especially with marriage. Keep him out!

Brotherstogether3 · 22/03/2024 15:48

If you let him back in this is just the start. You’ll be sending a message to your child that their welfare is second to his. Honestly alarm bells are ringing and this guy has a bad temper. Do not let him worm his way back in.

MrsKeats · 22/03/2024 15:49

What's it got to do with your partner's mum?
That's so weird.

SharedAccountWithMySister · 22/03/2024 16:05

gamerchick · 22/03/2024 12:32

Dudes the OP hasn't been back. You're wasting your time.

OP can’t come back, the WiFi’s been switched off.

WeatherwaxOn · 22/03/2024 16:18

This sounds like my friend's husband. Except the children are older. All about "His house" and "His rules" and "Showing him respect".

If the aim is to alienate the children, this is the right way to go about it. You'd explained 3 times why your son wasn't eating at the table. It wasn't his decision to apply any perceived punishment for wrongdoing.

bombastix · 22/03/2024 16:26

Fool. What has he gained from this? Eventually he will crawl back or pretend it never happened. Up to you OP

pavedwithgoodintentions · 22/03/2024 16:31

YOu're dating, only 10 months in, and he doesn't even live there.

Dealbreaker.

I'd be telling him to get to fuck.

And don't introduce your next boyfriend and have them there are all the time so soon.

You're embedded enough too early in a time when you have children ... telltale sign being that his mother felt free to get involved.

Too much too soon. Don't make that mistake again.

KomodoOhno · 22/03/2024 16:33

SharedAccountWithMySister · 22/03/2024 16:05

OP can’t come back, the WiFi’s been switched off.

😆 🤣 😂

TimetoPour · 22/03/2024 16:35

Good for you OP!

While under YOUR roof he can have some respect for you, your kids and your rules.

It would be a cold day in hell before he was allowed back under my roof.

Penguinfeet24 · 22/03/2024 16:37

You're right, he's a dick and that would be the end of that relationship for me.

cordeliachaseatemyhandbag · 22/03/2024 16:47

He's abusive keep him away from your DCs and you!

QueenBitch666 · 22/03/2024 16:49

Change the locks. And in future keep your shags away from your children

BotterMon · 22/03/2024 16:51

Ex-Partner!

iwafs · 22/03/2024 16:53

Arrogant wanker. Not his house, not his kids, not his anything really.

Get rid of him, get rid of his mum.

Let your kids live in their home without some random twat telling them what respect they need to have for him.