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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

When does someone change from a boyfriend to a partner?

124 replies

Samlewis96 · 12/04/2024 08:04

Thought of this when reading another thread. Ones of the replies was that " you don't live together so he's not your partner" So when does someone become a partner. Is it only relying on living together?

OP posts:
DyslexicPoster · 12/04/2024 11:58

I have no idea but partner seems to imply some kind of commitment and a role of support. Your boyfriend might not support you when your ill, but a partner would. I'd think a partner to me would be an established relationship, but it isn't to others I know. My friend has a partner after three months and no Co living.

It's all just words that really as a dyslexic person arent set in stone. It's open to interpretation and the strength of feeling to that individual.

RuthW · 12/04/2024 12:08

When it's long term.

I have never lived with my partner (now husband)

BibbleandSqwauk · 12/04/2024 16:42

Saymyname28 · 12/04/2024 10:21

When you become partners in life. When your lives are knitted together and your future plans and present plans involve eachother. When you're financially and practically bonded. When your life would change when you split beyond just not being with that person.

If you could break up tomorrow and never speak again then you're not partners. No matter how long you've been together. My dad's been with his girlfriend on and off probably nearly 15 years. They could split tomorrow and nothing would have to change in their lives. That's not your partner.

My partner of 8 years and I have a relationship just like that. Having been cheated on and left for ow and had the entire infrastructure of my life upturned because of it, I will never put myself in that position again. If partner decides he wants to sleep with someone else, that's the only thing that changes. I'll still have my house, my job, my routine and childcare that I have now. But we message daily, are there for each other in good and bad times and plan ahead to when our kids are grown up and we can build a more permanent life together, but even then I will retain independence. He is absolutely my partner and it's not for anyone else to judge that he isn't.

Loopytiles · 12/04/2024 16:45

Financial ties.

menopausalmare · 12/04/2024 16:47

When you both start sagging.

CallMikeBanning · 12/04/2024 16:48

I have never used the term 'partner'. I lived with a boyfriend for a few years. He was always my boyfriend. My husband went from being my boyfriend to being my husband.

Dacadactyl · 12/04/2024 16:48

I personally don't like the term partner. To me, it means nothing tbh.

He was a boyfriend til he married me.

CurlewKate · 12/04/2024 16:50

@JaninaDuszejko
Or maybe we should change the word for someone you live with but aren't married to. Live in lover? Bidie-in?"

Here's a thought! How about partner?

Riverlee · 12/04/2024 16:51

I always thought partner was adopted as it seemed wrong to refer to an older man as ‘a boyfriend’ , as they’re not boys. It’s a term that I don’t recall used much back when I was a teenager (80s) and its usage has increased over time.

Auburngal · 12/04/2024 17:01

IMO boyfriend turns to partner when you move into the same property together - could be one of your existing ones or a new one. If you spend evenings and nights at each others' homes, its still boyfriend.

BibbleandSqwauk · 12/04/2024 17:06

I think the reason it's usage has increased is because there are far more women in their 30/40s, with dependent children who are rightly wary of financially entangling themselves. They are perfectly able and willing to have a romantic and emotional relationship with someone and can manage their own finances and household bills. To me, the fact that there is ONLY our feelings binding us together makes it a more legitimate relationship than one where people really can't stand each other but it's too difficult or expensive to separate.

SecondHandFurniture · 12/04/2024 18:01

I think a lot of the comments are when someone (often younger/first proper relationship) on here says her "partner" has done something shitty or controlling when it's some jackass they met on a dating app 3 months ago. There's a bit of convincing herself that it's going to be for the long haul in that. It is not.

CurlewKate · 12/04/2024 18:33

@Dacadactyl What if you never got married?

Dacadactyl · 12/04/2024 18:39

CurlewKate · 12/04/2024 18:33

@Dacadactyl What if you never got married?

That's not the sort of relationship I'd ever entertain (never getting married), so I'd still think "boyfriend" rather than "partner".

IncompleteSenten · 12/04/2024 18:45

Big life event eg moving in together or having a child,
or doing something together financially that's a long term commitment eg investing in something together
or length of time together.

CurlewKate · 12/04/2024 18:45

@Dacadactyl I'm puzzled! What do you think I should call the man I have shared my life with for nearly 40 years, and have two children with? Is he my boyfriend?

Singleandproud · 12/04/2024 18:51

For me partner means partnership and having an emeshed life where you rely on each other. For me it's when you share a house, bills, children and you are actually a partnership. Whilst living separately and responsible for your own house and bills you are independent so I wouldn't class that as a partner even if you've been together years.

But that's just my thoughts and really that doesn't matter much do what you are comfortable with. I'm sure there are probably couples that live separately that are in far better partnerships than someone liking with a cock lodger or man child where everything really falls on them

Shepadoodle · 12/04/2024 18:54

It's when you feel too old to refer to someone as your boyfriend.

Laikalaika · 12/04/2024 18:54

In our case it went boyfriend, fiance, then husband. I always found the term "partner" cringey and weird - it's kind of something and nothing. I wouldn't be happy being called someone's "partner".

Laikalaika · 12/04/2024 18:55

CurlewKate · 12/04/2024 09:48

Oh, and my partner's mother is my mother in law and has been for 30 years, whatever Mumsnetters say! And if he had children from a previous relationship they would be my step children-whatever Mumsnetters say!

mother-in-law
/ˈmʌð(ə)rɪnlɔː/
noun

  1. the mother of one's husband or wife.
AcheyBalzac · 12/04/2024 19:03

I thought it was just personal preference which name to use

AcheyBalzac · 12/04/2024 19:03

Laikalaika · 12/04/2024 18:54

In our case it went boyfriend, fiance, then husband. I always found the term "partner" cringey and weird - it's kind of something and nothing. I wouldn't be happy being called someone's "partner".

I find the term partner ick as well!

Dacadactyl · 12/04/2024 19:08

CurlewKate · 12/04/2024 18:45

@Dacadactyl I'm puzzled! What do you think I should call the man I have shared my life with for nearly 40 years, and have two children with? Is he my boyfriend?

Tbh, if I hear of a couple together 40 years with 2 kids, all I think is why aren't they married.

I feel that being married is the committment he had to make to elevate himself from a boyfriend.

weareallcats · 12/04/2024 19:09

Partner makes me cringe. I said boyfriend right up to the day we got married.

sciencemama · 12/04/2024 19:42

lol when I met my oh he has always been my partner it felt a bit silly calling him my bf when I was 23 and he was 34