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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:
Euro24 · 23/06/2024 08:34

Don't get pregnant by him.

A close friend fell in love with a guy who was still living at home with mum in his 30s (not bad in and if itself but coupled with his long-term unemployment, and zero goals and ambitions, a real loser).

Naturally he couldn't be in that situation forever so he moved in with my friend -with whom he'd been in a 'label' less situationship - when mummy had enough of this overgrown man child.
Really fucking convenient how his sudden desire to be in a relationship with my friend coincided with mummy chucking out.
There's much more to this but it really would be outing to go into finer details.

She got pregnant by him. She won in the short term but soon realised that he wasn't into her but needed him as he wasn't totally useless with the child.
When the child became old enough, she got rid of him.
He had one job he managed to hold for two months in the fifteen or so years they were together before becoming too stressed about having to travel 20 miles for a meeting!
(The shame she felt when paying for groceries with ten people behind her in the queue and the card bounced and having to crawl to his mother for cash will not leave her.)

She admitted to me the pregnancy was no accident.

Bottom line trying to 'catch' a man like him doesn't work out.
You just become bitter, angry and resentful. Just like my friend.

You're best off cutting contact. If you can't do this suddenly do so gradually and slow fade him out.
Speak every two days, then 4 etc eventually down to nothing or very infrequent contact and this is key, all the while getting out and meeting new people.
Slow fading gets a bad rap but in situations like this I feel it's justifiable.

pasturesgreen · 23/06/2024 08:45

It does sound as though you're massively overthinking this, and maybe a slight case of rose-tinted glasses.

You can't flog a dead horse and the relationship had more than run its course by the sound of it. For the love of God, please stop subsidising him still. Stop all contact, block him if needs be: it's very unhealthy to still be in constant contact and ultimately it's only doing you harm.

Time to draw a line and move on.

pandasorous · 23/06/2024 09:00

youreeyeswithoutaface · 22/06/2024 19:42

Just feel like he'd never want to give me a second chance because I left him and hurt him.

how about the fact that he hurt you? I think you are so used to making excuses for him, you can't see how shit this relationship is

trust me a a few months down the line, you will ask yourself how you managed to stay in such an awful situation for so long.

Itsprobablynotcominhome · 23/06/2024 09:03

Sounds like you threw away a shit relationship actually. Lucky escape.

Euro24 · 23/06/2024 09:05

Yes cut contact - it's never a good idea to be in constant contact with an ex (unless you have to be) anyway.

I understand drastic cutting him off is scary so do it gradually.
People who say this is unfair don't take into account that it's OK to do this if the person who is being faded out is toxic.

Hairyesterdaygonetoday · 23/06/2024 09:57

OP, please wake up! Everyone’s telling you. Don’t let him keep you dangling for years more, till it really is too late for you to have a baby.

BusyMum47 · 23/06/2024 10:03

I'm pretty sure I remember your original post - you were very unhappy about all of the issues & were definitely more like his carer than his equal life partner. You agonised before you ended it - now just cut the ties & move on!

AgentJohnson · 23/06/2024 10:14

What miracle would happen in a few years time that would have made him ready? Look, the only mistake you are making is not moving on properly and that means cutting contact.

You miss the person you want him to be and the future you wanted to have him, sadly that didn’t match with the person he is. Ultimately, that made him the wrong person for you. You are doing your future self a disservice by faffing about and not moving forward.

mountaingoatsarehairy · 23/06/2024 10:20

An PP has mentioned you have multiple threads on this crap relationship. Why are you wasting your time and ours on this crappy pointless user ? He didn’t love you. You were useful.

no one can help you if you don’t want to change. You can sit about and mope forever. It is your choice.

if you post again and can you link to your previous threads tho? Save us all trying to help you when you won’t / can’t help yourself

KTheGrey · 23/06/2024 10:22

He's told you continually he is not capable of committing to a relationship. It seems strange you won't believe him.

youreeyeswithoutaface · 23/06/2024 10:22

AgentJohnson · 23/06/2024 10:14

What miracle would happen in a few years time that would have made him ready? Look, the only mistake you are making is not moving on properly and that means cutting contact.

You miss the person you want him to be and the future you wanted to have him, sadly that didn’t match with the person he is. Ultimately, that made him the wrong person for you. You are doing your future self a disservice by faffing about and not moving forward.

I guess I thought that he might feel ready in a couple of years from now.

OP posts:
pandasorous · 23/06/2024 10:27

youreeyeswithoutaface · 23/06/2024 10:22

I guess I thought that he might feel ready in a couple of years from now.

why exactly? you do realise that thought is entirely without any logic? just blind hope/a bit delusional. sorry I am being harsh. I have been in a similar position, just don't want you to waste your precious time like I did

Chimminychimminy · 23/06/2024 10:28

Cocklodger Wastrel OP. RUN . Been there . You haven't made a mistake . There is better for you . Block him and avoid contact with him . The only way. He is not for you. There is someone better out there pal.

nutbrownhare15 · 23/06/2024 10:29

Doesn't sound 'perfectly good' to me. You broke up for the right reasons. You still miss him. That's normal. Doesn't mean you would have the kind of future you want if you got back together, in fact you would waste more years of your life on someone who's not that bothered about settling down with you. I'd suggest trying to move on with your life.

OnionPond · 23/06/2024 10:31

youreeyeswithoutaface · 23/06/2024 10:22

I guess I thought that he might feel ready in a couple of years from now.

Why is this all you think you’re worth — to hang about, waiting for the MH of a waster to improve, hoping to persuade him into committing to a future with you? And, as you very much want children, can you honestly see him being a good parent? Providing for his children, doing nappies and night feeds at 3 am when you are both exhausted and both have important meetings first thing, helping with homework every day, playing with them, prioritising them when he’d rather do other stuff, dealing with all child-related admin (school stuff, dentist, vaccinations, buying shoes, hobbies, clubs, childcare picks ups and drop offs), being emotionally available and talking to them and doing all the basic stuff it takes to be a good hood enough parent?

CbeeGeeBee · 23/06/2024 10:40

He doesn’t sound like a catch TBH. Don’t tie yourself up with someone with those issues. It’ll be a nightmare for you if you have kids in the future.

MimiGC · 23/06/2024 10:57

His mum and sister are (maybe subconsciously) angry with you because they know he needs a lot of support in life and now they'll either to step up or he'll flounder.
This man may be lovely, but is not a good partner and would likely not have been a good father. Also, any child you'd have had with him may well have been ND themselves, as there is a strong genetic component. What would your life have been like then, supporting a child with extra needs and supporting him?
Walk away, looking back with fond memories, but it's time to move on now. I would stop the constant contact now.

Euro24 · 23/06/2024 11:45

All good advice so far.
I know it's hard when we are hung up on a guy to not like him but there is no 'one' for us. You are still young - ish.
Please if you can't withdraw abruptly from this guy then do it gradually while simultaneously getting out more.

I will never forget talking to my friend's waster of an ex telling me how he felt his mother had 'victimised' him by wanting his thirtysomething ass out of her home.

Absolute loser.

Don't be like my friend. She's now in her 50s and not finding getting a new guy easy.

CreamStick · 23/06/2024 12:11

MimiGC · 23/06/2024 10:57

His mum and sister are (maybe subconsciously) angry with you because they know he needs a lot of support in life and now they'll either to step up or he'll flounder.
This man may be lovely, but is not a good partner and would likely not have been a good father. Also, any child you'd have had with him may well have been ND themselves, as there is a strong genetic component. What would your life have been like then, supporting a child with extra needs and supporting him?
Walk away, looking back with fond memories, but it's time to move on now. I would stop the constant contact now.

About the support bit . I wrote about that upthread. I think the OP took a lot of stress away from the mother and sister and now as you said they have to step up . I've seen this scenario played out in my family. My cousin was with a drug addict for ten years . She tried and tried to get him clean . Lots of drama tears and bailing him out because she loved him and wanted the person back that he was before he became an addict. She got to her late twenties and realised she was wasting her life. He was never going to change and she could see her friends settling down and starting families. So she ended it . His mother and sister were absolutely furious that she had "abandoned " him . It was because she had taken the worst of his addiction and now they had to deal with it . My cousin went on to meet someone and is settled with a family . She regrets all those years she wasted and can't get back . She realised he would never change . Sadly he passed away due to his addiction. Some times you have to put yourself first and do what's right for you .

GeoffLinton · 23/06/2024 12:17

He'll be ready to settle down at some point, no doubt.

Just not with you. Sorry if that sounds harsh, but I've seen this situation play out before.

youreeyeswithoutaface · 01/07/2024 16:20

Update - i saw him as he still had some of my stuff, and he said he feels like he wasted 4 years of my life. Not sure what to think of that.

OP posts:
TheMixedGirl · 01/07/2024 16:22

Nope. You're living in the delusion that if you had just given it a bit more time it would have changed. It wouldn't have. You'll meet someone else.

ResultsMayVary · 01/07/2024 16:26

I think he's telling you he can't give you what you want and never will be able to. That the time you spend together was time you could have spent finding someone compatible. It may be hard to hear but he's being honest with you - believe him.

Hatty65 · 01/07/2024 16:28

youreeyeswithoutaface · 01/07/2024 16:20

Update - i saw him as he still had some of my stuff, and he said he feels like he wasted 4 years of my life. Not sure what to think of that.

He did. Don't let him waste any more, for God's sake.

Move on.

Aquamarine1029 · 01/07/2024 16:28

youreeyeswithoutaface · 01/07/2024 16:20

Update - i saw him as he still had some of my stuff, and he said he feels like he wasted 4 years of my life. Not sure what to think of that.

He's trying to make it clear to you that there will be no happy future together. He will never be the man you need him to be. Honestly, just stop talking to him already. It's just keeping you trapped in the past.