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.

To think I threw away a perfectly good relationship

208 replies

youreeyeswithoutaface · 22/06/2024 17:13

of just under 4 years, and I have to live with my mistake now. It's a lesson learned anyway, I'll try to be a little more patient next time.
I'm 33, and my ex partner is 29, a few months off 30. I left before Christmas as he was reluctant about any sort of commitment and he didn't seem to be 100% sure about me, which hurt.
I just wish I'd waited longer and not given into societal pressures, or panicked about my age as I do still have time.

I believe he did love me, he had autism and ADHD and hadn't been in steady employment for a while as well as suffering with his mental health, so I did whatever I could to support him.

I had previously brought up the subject a year ago, and he wasn't ready. I brought it up again 6 months later, admittedly I was starting to get frustrated. lived with him for 3 years.

I've no interest whatsoever in an expensive ring or wedding, I was more than happy with a registry office. my parents offered to pay for a reception which was very nice of him but the point was that even with these things mentioned, he wasn't interested.
I wasn't saying we had to get married immediately, but I wanted to know if it could come in the next couple of years.
I explained that ideally I'd like to have a child in the next couple of years because of my age, but looking back, I have longer than expected.
I couldn't get a firm answer on any of the above, he kept changing his mind about wanting to get engaged, about 3 or 4 times. it was clear he wasn't ready.
He said it was so final, none of his friends were married and it was like the end of his youth.

He felt he wasn't in a stable financial situation which I do understand, particularly re the children, but it doesn't have to cost anything to be engaged and we could've sorted a small wedding.

ok I thought, maybe I can wait a bit longer. I asked him if I was the one for him and he said he thought so? didn't say yeah of course.
I asked him if he could see himself with me in a few years and he couldn't answer it.

I left. I just went to my parents for a bit to get some space, thinking we might work things out. it wasn't a this is over forever, I just told him there's no point coming back right away as nothing could change.

He didn't seem surprised and told me he wants the above but is scared of responsibility. I did express a lot of remorse to him back in January and say that I still wanted to sort things out. I asked him if he wanted me to come back and he said he couldn't answer it.

so I did try to sort things out fairly soon after. he said he thinks he's put me in a difficult position, I told him I wasn't blaming him at all and he was entitled to not want these things.

we've actually been in touch constantly and are on great terms, just feel like I threw something great away. I should've been more patient and just given it at least another year or two, but it's too late. With hindsight, I'd rather just be with him, the rest doesn't matter.

Does it sound like I was an idiot? also, because of his job situation I paid more of the rent, which put a strain on because I couldn't afford it. However I have a better paid job now and I hoped it would change things.
I'm still supporting him with stuff. breaks seem to work for some but not for me, apparently his Mum and sister hate me, which hurts because I thought we got on really well.
I was an idiot who panicked and compared myself to others.

OP posts:
Venturini · 22/06/2024 17:40

He is a total dead weight and you are well rid of him. I would cut contact and give yourself time to move on. Honestly sounds like you have dodged a bullet here.

skibiditoilet · 22/06/2024 17:40

He does want these things just not with you. Stop lowering your standards and being a door mat. Decide what you want and stick to it. Don’t look for breadcrumbs from someone who clearly can’t give you what you want.

dontcryformeargentina · 22/06/2024 17:41

LionBarPlease · 22/06/2024 17:17

I knew from the title that you hadn’t made a mistake. The only mistake you’re making is wasting more time on this. You were on a hiding to nothing. Listen to the part of you that knows this and made the initial step away.

He can be the nicest man in the world but the only way you’ll be a mother with him is by being a mother to him. You deserve more than that. Honestly, you really do.

Absolutely agree with this

youreeyeswithoutaface · 22/06/2024 17:42

He seemed to love me and we had so many great times.

I don't know why we still talk every day.

About a week after I left he said 'Can we make a plan?' i said yeah, what sort of plan? And he never replied.

OP posts:
WhatNoRaisins · 22/06/2024 17:46

He doesn't sound like a bad person and he may well have loved you but it sounds like you'd have had to do so much carrying here I don't get how you'd be able to do it without resentment. You're only human and he isn't going to change at nearly 30.

Mamma36474 · 22/06/2024 17:46

You're saying you could have waiting for him another year, but you could have waiting five years and he may still be in the same position and you would still be wanting children.

I agree, it doesn't sound like you want the same things and you're lucky that you got out while you're still young enough to find someone who will commit to you fully.

I say that as a mum to an autistic boy. I hope he finds someone who loves him and wants the same things in life. I suspect anyone who does will have to give up a lot of herself or himself.

Autumntimeagain · 22/06/2024 17:47

youreeyeswithoutaface · 22/06/2024 17:42

He seemed to love me and we had so many great times.

I don't know why we still talk every day.

About a week after I left he said 'Can we make a plan?' i said yeah, what sort of plan? And he never replied.

You still talk every day because it suit him to keep dangling the carrot to keep you around.

Who else will financially support him and listen to his self obsessed twaddle ?

He's deliberately 'breadcrumbing' you to keep you from actually moving on, because that wouldn't suit HIM.

You absolutely need a clean break from him, because that's what you need.
You don't have many fertile years left. Please don't waste them on a man that you already know neither respects nor agrees with your life plans/ desires/needs.

youreeyeswithoutaface · 22/06/2024 17:47

I didn't mind supporting him. None of his friends are married which probably doesn't help, I don't know, I just feel he may have wanted it with me in a couple of years. I just wish there could've been some sort of compromise.

OP posts:
LionBarPlease · 22/06/2024 17:47

youreeyeswithoutaface · 22/06/2024 17:42

He seemed to love me and we had so many great times.

I don't know why we still talk every day.

About a week after I left he said 'Can we make a plan?' i said yeah, what sort of plan? And he never replied.

Honestly - this is the very definition of flogging a dead horse. Even if he had a miraculous turnaround you wouldn’t be able to trust him. Your problem isn’t how he feels about you, it’s how you feel about yourself. You’re still in a bad relationship now - with yourself! Don’t waste anymore time, block him and delete his number.

LionBarPlease · 22/06/2024 17:49

I don’t know why we still talk every day.

Because your self-esteem is low and because he’s a passive deadweight that will continue with the status quo until you’ve entirely run out of time. For the record, though as a man, he probably won’t run out of time. There’s no impetus for him to do anything. And if he loved you, he would either have committed to you or let you go. The way you know he doesn’t is what he’s doing right now.

skilpadde · 22/06/2024 17:51

You trusted your gut and did the right thing for you. You may not have enough distance from it yet to see it, but you didn't make a mistake. You're on the right path for you.

Your only error now is in maintaining contact with him. Free yourself and move on entirely.

NoChanceNoWay · 22/06/2024 17:51

If after 4 years he wasn't ready to commit then he will never commit, at least not to you.
You did the right thing.
Be kind to yourself and start looking after you.

Stop contacting him and focus on you. You can't move on if he is still in your life. Start a new hobby, join meet up groups, exercise, read books, arts and crafts, new tv series, new hairstyle and clothes, keep busy and it will eventually get easier.

Bordersgarage · 22/06/2024 17:55

I’m unclear from your post where the mistake is?

PossumintheHouse · 22/06/2024 17:55

Christ no, OP. The red flags are flying at full mast. You've been with him for four years, living together for three. It's enough time for him to not be shying away from commitment. Chances are you'll be lumbered with his indecision a couple of years down the line if you go back. Not to mention the mum and sister issue. You have plenty of time to find somebody new to settle down and start a family with.

youreeyeswithoutaface · 22/06/2024 17:56

The thing is I've seen it quite a few times on here where men do take longer sometimes, 6/7 years if not more, and the women wait but it all works out in the end.
I just keep wondering what if.

OP posts:
Autumntimeagain · 22/06/2024 17:58

It's very generous of you to say that you didn't mind supporting him.

But how would that have worked when you had a child ?

Would he miraculously have gotten a good, full time job so that both you and your child could depend on HIS financial support when you were on maternity leave ?

Would you be happy to have to cover nursery fees on top of all other bills when you went back to work?

It's 100% certain that's what he would expect, because he isn't willing to 'adult' now, so he wouldn't be willing to suddenly start just because you needed him to.

So you'd be back on MN asking 'how can I make him see that he needs to step up now we have a baby?'

MumblesParty · 22/06/2024 17:58

OP if you’d stayed with him, this would have been your post in 5 years.

”I’ve been with my partner for 9 years. He has ASD and ADHD , rarely holds down a job for long, so I’ve paid the bulk of the rent, bills etc over the years. I had a bit of a wobble 5 years ago when I wanted to get married and talk about having kids. He wasn’t sure, couldn’t answer me, so I nearly left him. But I decided that we got on so well, and I was sure he’d change his mind. The thing is, every time I ask him about marriage and kids, he says he’s not ready. He’s only 34, but I’m 38 now, so time is running out.”

You did the right thing ending it.

quantumbutterfly · 22/06/2024 17:58

You did the right thing, the longer you stay the harder it is to leave.

Raising a child together, married or not, is better if you are on the same page, or at least reading the same book.

youreeyeswithoutaface · 22/06/2024 17:58

Mum and sister seemed to really like me whilst we were together, they said a few times I was lovely and such. Apparently they're just very angry at what I've done.

OP posts:
LionBarPlease · 22/06/2024 17:59

youreeyeswithoutaface · 22/06/2024 17:56

The thing is I've seen it quite a few times on here where men do take longer sometimes, 6/7 years if not more, and the women wait but it all works out in the end.
I just keep wondering what if.

I’ve seen absolutely hundreds that don’t end that way. And I wonder how many of the few you’ve seen are truly happy at this point. By then you’d be pretty close to 40 and you want kids. Also, his family are toxic from the sounds of it. But why would you want to take that long shot gamble anyway? Why would that be a good thing to do with a man that’s done nothing for your well-being so far and shows so many red flags?

Say you do get to have children, a daughter, what would you advise her now?

PossumintheHouse · 22/06/2024 18:00

youreeyeswithoutaface · 22/06/2024 17:56

The thing is I've seen it quite a few times on here where men do take longer sometimes, 6/7 years if not more, and the women wait but it all works out in the end.
I just keep wondering what if.

You'd be rolling the dice if you decide to give it another go, and with all of the other issues I seriously wouldn't bother.

Dotto · 22/06/2024 18:01

Sounds more like co-dependency than love. My ex sounds like yours, always getting fired, autistic, non-committal. I feel sick now that I wasted my best years just because my own self-esteem was shot. I'm with someone much better now. You deserve the same. He won't change.

WhatNoRaisins · 22/06/2024 18:01

If he's struggling to hold down work maybe his family were hoping you'd help look after him. I get why they're disappointed but that doesn't mean you did anything wrong.

youreeyeswithoutaface · 22/06/2024 18:02

It sounds naive but I never cared about his job situation, I cared how he felt about me. I am earning well and have a good maternity package.

When I told him I'd gone to stay at my parents he didn't seem wholly surprised, he was upset but said we didn't see each other enough because of our working hours, I wasn't transparent enough about finances and also I didn't cook from scratch enough.

OP posts:
Jungkooky · 22/06/2024 18:02

You did the right thing!

Sounds like he didn't love you,or at least not enough to commit.

STOP helping him out now, you are nothing more than a convenience to him. Your first instinct to leave was 100% right and YOU deserve better.

He'll never marry you, or want a family with you. Now, provided you can cut the strings completely, you actually ahve a chance to find that.