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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To think my boyfriend is being a prick?

184 replies

MissSqueak · 30/04/2024 18:12

Today I got upset because I told him I was coming home, rather than staying at work late like I usually do on a Tuesday. He said “okay that’s fine”. He used to get super excited when I wasn’t working late, and I sometimes get really sensitive about wording. As in, my boyfriend thinks saying “that’s fine” is interchangeable with and the same as “that’s great, can’t wait”.

I know it’s something I’m very sensitive about and I’m trying to change.

He flipped and shouted at me, saying “oh don’t start this word thing again”. I thought the way he said this was really rude and nasty. I tried to explain to him that yes, I didn’t realise what I was doing and I didn’t mean to, but I was sorry.

He then wouldn’t apologise for saying something mean without ending it with a “but”. He denied this and said I was doing the same thing.

I tried to explain that I acknowledge what I did wrong, but it’s the way he said it that upsets me. That he comes to me so overly critical rather than telling me kindly what I did wrong.

He just doesn’t get this at all??? He said he did nothing wrong and that I’m trying to flip everything into him, that I can’t just take accountability without letting him know what he did wrong. He doesn’t seem to understand that actually he does stuff wrong too. He said he does, but he genuinely thinks I’m just “flipping it on him as a defence mechanism”. That I can’t accept that I did something wrong without us both doing something wrong.

He then hung up on me and said he “can’t talk to me when I’m like this” and “maybe I should’ve stayed at work”

im so hurt but I can get very sensitive and clouded sometimes so maybe I am in the wrong. Help???

OP posts:
Spudthespanner · 01/05/2024 07:00

WhoGivesaSpit · 01/05/2024 03:01

He then wouldn’t apologise for saying something mean without ending it with a “but”. He denied this and said I was doing the same thing.

I tried to explain that I acknowledge what I did wrong, BUT it’s the way he said it that upsets me.

Jesus wept 😂

😂

I'm wondering if this poster is even genuine

Shiningout · 01/05/2024 07:21

I love the total hypocrisy of you getting all upset about his 'wording' of everything and yet it's perfectly fine for you to come online and call him a prick (for doing absolutely fuck all).

And the passive aggressive 'jokes' are ridiculous, are you 14?

Im shocked he's stayed for 1.5 years tbh, I'd be fucking outtttt of there

ElaineMBenes · 01/05/2024 07:25

You're paraphrasing me... About what he specifically said, I said ... "he basically replied that he couldn't care less" which is exactly what 'okay, that's fine' implies. It's neither good or bad, just acceptable. I personally wouldn't want to be with someone whose response to me seeing them earlier than planned was, okay, that's acceptable.

I use the phrase 'that's fine' all the time and when I use it I'm not saying or meaning 'that's acceptable'. It's my way of saying good, great or no worries.

My DH knows that's what I mean when I say that phrase because we've discussed it. Thankfully he doesn't fall out with me for using it because it's not a big deal.

inappropriateraspberry · 01/05/2024 07:40

MissSqueak · 30/04/2024 18:52

I thought it was really insensitive and rude to say “don’t start with the word thing again” rather than just something like “would you mind not picking apart my wording please”

But are you not also picking apart HIS wording? It's on you I'm afraid. I imagine he is getting fed up of your neediness and how you approach things like this.

Jehsyagvs · 01/05/2024 09:26

He didn't say anything wrong. Even the "don't start with the word thing again" isn't rude it's accurate and sounds like he was (rightly) very frustrated

you are doing the same thing my emotionally abusive ex did. You are wrong in the situation and instead of just holding your hands up and taking the blame, you are trying to make him the bad guy because he didn't respond in the most perfect was he should have, therefore he's to blame? no that's crazy, no one reacts perfectly when being confronted - especially when they didn't do anything wrong in the first place!

The entire argument was your fault. You are 100% to blame, not him. By trying to twist it to make him partially accountable you are gaslighting, it's abuse behaviour. Stop it.

holrosea · 01/05/2024 10:00

I think "being a prick" is a bit strong for this particular incident.

All I can offer is that if someone is not meeting/understanding your needs after 1.5 years, maybe you are not compatible.

I am both very communicative and very impacted by other people's moods. I spent 3y with a person who is was emotionally, for all intents and purposes, brain dead. I don't think I ask for much, I need to hear things like "I'm having a great time, I love you" with a squeeze of the shoulder, whereas he grew up in a family that barely hugged.

He understood that I need to see things like smiles and have better feedback than "If I didn't want to be here, I'd leave" 🤔but he never really mastered it and it was a sensitive topic for the length of the relationship, which inevitably ended. He's not a bad guy, just absolutely not my guy, needs & preferences-wise.

Spirallingdownwards · 01/05/2024 10:11

MissSqueak · 30/04/2024 18:49

Yeah that’s not my complaint!!
ifs the fact he thinks if I mention anything he did wrong, he thinks I’m deflecting and being defensive. He can’t accept he does anything wrong and I feel a bit like a doormat

The problem will be that this is the example you are using of him doing something wrong.

He hasn't done anything wrong in the example you gave us.

Thus if this is indicative of "things you deem to be wrong" it is easy to see why he thinks he hasn't done anything wrong.

BMW6 · 01/05/2024 10:24

OP not come back? Quelle surprise!

KreedKafer · 01/05/2024 21:06

a222 · 30/04/2024 23:37

all you lot commenting acting stone cold just because you hate your husbands are being mean to op, for no reason.

i completely understand this and get this with my fella. he often replies short and it makes me confused and worried i’ve done something wrong.

it’s normal to feel like this, i just remind myself that i am sensitive, but also asking ur partner to change something small shouldn’t be an issue. ‘fine’ can seem a little short, especially if you were excited to see him.

LOL. I absolutely adore my partner and he adores me right back. We pretty much never argue, even after 21 years together.

I suspect one of the reasons we don’t argue is because neither of us is a giant baby who can’t even receive a perfectly normal text about a routine thing like what time we’re finishing work without getting upset and telling each precisely what to say next time. And then calling each other ‘a prick’ and demanding apologies.

It isn’t remotely normal to react like this. It’s paranoid, hyper-anxious and controlling.

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