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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Boyfriend doesn’t like my DD

458 replies

Loveisntallyouneed · 04/06/2024 10:49

My boyfriend of 3 years is having issues with my DD (14). She is most likely on the autism spectrum and I am going through the route of assesment for her.

She likes schedules, predictability and time alone. She struggles socially to make friends and feels very alone at school. She gets easily overwhelmed with too much noise or stimulation and is very emotional and cries everyday. She doesn’t like to do much and her preferred choice of activity would be sitting around painting or watching tv. She also has some mild learning difficulties, so struggles with her schoolwork. She often doesn’t know the ‘right’ thing to say and her conversations can be strange and odd at times. She people pleased in my opinion which means we often all get different individual versions of events and she often lies in small ways. Overall she is a good kid with a kind heart.

Her dad (who left when she was a baby) is a very wealthy man, but a terrible parent who has little to nothing to do with her other than to criticise her family and especially me and my DBF. He will sees her a few times a year for a meal and calls her now and again to ask what I am up to and put me and her siblings, or even her, down.

My BF get very agitated and can be in a mood for the rest of the day or can start an argument that lasts for days any time DD mentions her father, or anything her father has said to her. To be fair her dad is always telling her what we are providing isn’t enough, the holidays aren’t good enough and we aren’t traveling first class, like he does. She doesn’t have a filter and just shares this with us. Not as her view but as her dads.
I’ve spoke with her many times and it’s now at the point where I have asked her not to mention her dad around DBF.

DBF has started saying DD is spoiling everyone’s fun as she struggles with sensory overload on car journeys or trips away. She gets teary and upset over the noise (we have two other younger children) and doesn’t want to be touched by her siblings or to be in the car too long. I find ways to manage it with her. We plan out timings so she knows how long we are in the car for, we plan our days on holiday so she knows what activities to expect. She tries her best but can’t help sometimes feeling overwhelmed and then cries.

She doesn’t like to exercise and struggles with her confidence with many things.

He thinks she is spoiling the activities for everyone else as she looks miserable. She’s simply trying to join in and not make a fuss as best she can. She can’t help it if she isn’t enjoying it!

He says she is entitled as she prefers luxury and she’s making a scene because she wants to be on a luxury holiday and not a budget one. I know her and that’s not the case. She just struggles with the sheer amount of activities and lack of relaxation that is on holidays with DBF and the other children. If I were given an option of a relaxing beach trip to the Maldives or a camping site I would choose the Maldives hands down, no questions asked too! I’m not ungrateful!

She acts like a much younger child and he will always focus on the fact that she is 14 and should be behaving in a certain way.

Sometimes he makes a real effort with her and is great. Then others, he has no patience and moody as ever and ignores her.

He says he doesn’t have anything in common with her. Sometimes he doesn’t engage in conversation with her and answers her questions in one word answers. Doesn’t ask how her day was, nothing. And when I confront him about it he say he isn’t being horrible to her or saying anything mean. In my opinion he is basically pretending she doesn’t exist.

So the thing that gets to me the most is we can be having a discussion, say about how nice the weekend was, and he will then interject with something negative like, ‘we’ll your DD wasn’t happy. She looked like she hated it. It wasn’t good enough for her. She is ungrateful/ entitled.’ Or he will roll his eyes when she says something odd or she doesn’t seem genuinely excited for something we have planned that isn’t actually to her taste.

On holiday last week they were alone for a few minutes at a lovely restaurant I had booked as a treat for DD and they had a conversation when I was in the ladies room. Everything was perfectly fine before this. The rest of the meal was silence and he didn’t talk to me or DD at all other than responding to my questions with grunts or single words, without actually looking at me. He complained about the food and just said he hated it and wanted to leave. He wouldn’t tell me why until later.

Turns out it was because DD had mentioned she really likes eating out at nice restaurants like the one we were in and that’s the best part of her holidays. (She a massive foodie and it’s her passion) he said it felt like she only wanted luxury things and she was, his words, ‘shitting on the rest of the holiday.’

He had no understanding of the fact that she is most likely autistic and that her brain doesn’t work quite like his. He says that it’s no excuse to behave as she does.

He has recently been let go from his job so is struggling with that and other stressful situations, so he is more moody than usual at the moment.

So is my kid a brat or is he? I just need some outside views on the situation. Thank you.

YABU - DD is a brat
YANBU- DBF is a brat

OP posts:
kitteninabasket · 04/06/2024 11:54

She doesn’t know what’s going on.

Of course she does

LMMuffet · 04/06/2024 11:54

I don’t know why you are waiting for him to change. Anyone who treated my child the way he does yours would be out of the door without a second chance, let alone 6 months of chances.

Your poor DD: a useless father, a “father figure” who obviously doesn’t like her, and a mother who is prioritising her own relationship with the man who doesn’t like her, over her.

That may sound harsh, OP, but if your DD is autistic, there’s every chance she sees it as starkly as that. And frankly, even NT children would too because that is what is happening here.

You don’t have children with this man. So cut out of this ASAP. There is nothing to discuss.

susiedaisy1912 · 04/06/2024 11:54

Please put your DD and end this relationship op. She relays on you for everything and can't fend for herself in the outside world, he should be making your life easier and more enjoyable if he doesn't bring that to the table then it's a waste of your time and energy and it's damaging your daughters life.

GodDamnItJanet · 04/06/2024 11:55

I'm sorry I didn't even read your post as the title was enough to form my opinion.

Get rid!!

kirinm · 04/06/2024 11:55

@Loveisntallyouneed you are either naive or purposely trying to pretend that your daughter will not see how your boyfriend feels about her.

Why are you sitting back and watching this happen? What does he have to do or how unhappy does she have to be before you will make any changes?

Italianita · 04/06/2024 11:56

This reply has been deleted

This has been deleted by MNHQ for breaking our Talk Guidelines.

arethereanyleftatall · 04/06/2024 11:56

You are not behaving in any way like your dds greatest supporter.

If you were you would not be in a relationship with this man.

You have put yourself and your relationship first. That is incredibly selfish.

This should not even be a question op. The FIRST time he treated your daughter, like shit, you should have ended your relationship with him.

CurlewKate · 04/06/2024 11:56

End the relationship. Now.

BurbageBrook · 04/06/2024 11:56

The title of the thread tells me everything I need to know. Your DD must come first. Get rid of him.

MightyGoldBear · 04/06/2024 11:56

This man would be like this if you had no children at all. He is showing you who he is and how he behaves when everything isn't on his terms. He would never work as a team. He is immature,selfish and abusive.

He is entirely the issue.

ElephantsDontReadFantasy · 04/06/2024 11:59

Put your child first. Please.

ashitghost · 04/06/2024 11:59

You don’t share any kids together. Kick him out. It boils down to his envy of your ex husband’s wealth and he’s taking it out on a 14 year old child. Petulance in a man is a dark trait. Just get rid of him.

Octavia64 · 04/06/2024 12:03

A lot of teens can be very difficult to live with. They get worried about peers and want what everyone else has and this can cause conflicts.

A lot of autistic children can also be hard to live with.

However it really doesn't sound like your DD is particularly difficult given she is autistic and a teen.

It more sounds like your partner is choosing to take offence. Lots of children/teens will repeat views their parents have said - it's normal if somewhat annoying. In the restaurant it sounds like she was actually saying how much she enjoyed the activity she was currently doing - it's quite a stretch for him to take offence at that.

She will grow up and become an adult and develop better social skills. In the meantime, she needs supportive parenting, the more so because of the autism,

If he's not able to give it then maybe he needs to spend less time around her for both their sakes.

MonsteraMama · 04/06/2024 12:09

Do you know how hard it is to live with someone who has open contempt for you? Very fucking hard.

Wtf is he expecting to have in common with a 14 year old girl anyway? He sounds like an emotionally unintelligent, insecure idiot if nothing else, what kind of grown man gets in a sulk over something a teenager has said? Even NT teenagers will say things that make you want to turn yourself inside out sometimes, you just have to deal with it as the adult in the relationship.That'd be a huge ick for me completely notwithstanding him treating your child poorly.

HorseAreBetterThanHumans · 04/06/2024 12:18

As the parent of an autistic teen this makes me really sad.

Please do better and get rid of the 'D' BF. If you are your DD's biggest supporter as you claim to be, you would have done this by now.

MeinKraft · 04/06/2024 12:21

Hell would freeze over before i would let some man talk to my child like a piece of shit.

Bumblebeeinatree · 04/06/2024 12:46

Everything seems to revolve around your older DD, what about the two younger children, are they never allowed a fun day out without meltdowns and tears? I do see your BF's point of view a bit, could her father have her some days, take her out for a nice meal if he's loaded and take a bit of the strain off. From the sound of it the BF is trying but the constant problems are wearing him down.

Springchickenonion · 04/06/2024 12:47

What is it with women who pander to men and put them above their children? Especially when it's not even the kids father. Just blows my mind. Talking as a kid who was always behind mums 3 husbands over 16 years.

Loveisntallyouneed · 04/06/2024 12:54

Bumblebeeinatree · 04/06/2024 12:46

Everything seems to revolve around your older DD, what about the two younger children, are they never allowed a fun day out without meltdowns and tears? I do see your BF's point of view a bit, could her father have her some days, take her out for a nice meal if he's loaded and take a bit of the strain off. From the sound of it the BF is trying but the constant problems are wearing him down.

This post is about DD. She doesn’t have meltdowns often and if she does it’s not a toddler tantrum at all. It’s more tears and she needs a hug and a little chat and alone time for a few minutes.

We still do all the things we normally would do and find ways to manage It for DD. Like giving her timings and plans for trips and she handles it all so well. Making those small changes has really helped and it’s easy for me to do that. I only did this once I realised she was likely ND and took advice from friends with ND kids.

The other two children have plenty of fun (and their own tantrums and bickering and need as per normal) and DD does not spoil anyone’s fun other than DBF by mistakenly mentioning she likes the restaurant we were at. Yes sometimes she’s had enough and exhausted and she needs to sit out the end of the activity and that’s fine. Sometimes the other kids get hungry or need a wee in the middle of an activity and it doesn’t spoil it for anyone.

OP posts:
mammaCh · 04/06/2024 12:54

He doesn't like your daughter?
Why are you still with him?!

Bananalanacake · 04/06/2024 12:56

Well if you don't live together (and don't let him move in now he's out of work) your dd never has to see him again. Go on dates with him once or twice a fortnight, don't let him sleep over at yours and don't go on holiday with him.

BangTidys · 04/06/2024 12:58

This reply has been deleted

This has been deleted by MNHQ for breaking our Talk Guidelines - previously banned poster.

MissUltraViolet · 04/06/2024 12:59

He might not say these things to her but there is no chance your poor DD doesn't know he has an issue with her, kids are not stupid. She probably feels really uncomfortable all the time.

Sounds a lot like the man child has some personal issues with your ex having more money than he does. That's a shame for him but it isn't your daughters fault, she has zero control over him or her dad yet you have allowed it to become her problem.

Please also tell her you were wrong and being silly when you asked her to no longer talk about her dad in front of this man - she should know that she can talk about whatever she wants.

SpringleDingle · 04/06/2024 13:00

I have an ASD DD13 and a love in OH. Luckily he’s the soul of patience and understanding. I too have ASD and the other day it took 30 mins to leave the house as both DD and I were having clothes sensory issues!!! Your DP may be a nice enough guy when not stressed but he doesn’t sound the right fit for a neurospicy household. He needs to sort himself out to provide better support to you and to understand and empathise with your poor DD. Or LTB because he’s behaving like a little bitch!

Moonshine5 · 04/06/2024 13:01

LEAVE YOUR BF

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