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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to think his behaviour was disrespectful?

63 replies

endangeredmum · 30/07/2024 21:16

Hello,
I left an emotionally abusive relationship in January but we have children and so we need to stay friendly. He works abroad for around 9 months of the year so it's been fairly easy for me to detach, however, this last weekend I reached out to him to join me and the children at a local festival that I go to with my Mum and Dad and brother every year. He said he would come for the Friday and the Saturday and so we got him a discounted ticket.

My Mum lives opposite the festival and so offered to put him up and made sure he had everything he needed for a comfrotable stay. He had all the beer he could want, all the food he could want, a lovely clean and laundered room to stay in with the children and of course we made him feel welcome.

On the Saturday night, My Mum and Dad offered to take the kids home so we could roam around the festival - as friends of course. We watched a bit of music and then I started to get really tired as I look after the children on my own - he doesn't read to them, doesn't do bath time, doesn't take them anywhere...he will stay in bed whilst I get up with them so I didn't want to be too tired when they got up the next morning.

The festival is a bout a mile walk from the house in the dark and as he had other friends at the festival, I said to him 'why don't you stay, I will be fine' to which he kept replying 'nah, I will walk you home as it's not safe and you never know what's going to happen etc. etc.' He kept up this narrative until suddenly, he spotted a young girl he knew (maybe 15 years our junior) and lunged over to greet her. He told her my name but didn't tell me how they knew each other. She said she was there alone. He then continued to stand with her and talk and when there was a lull in the conversation, he didn't say 'well it's nice to see you, I had better get the mother of my children home safely' he waited...and waited until I got the hint and finally said 'oh, don't worry, I will walk myself home' to which he replied 'OK! If you're sure'

It isn't the worst thing he has ever done to me (he pushed me once when I was holding my newborn and also came home at 7am high on pills and cocaine just after I had had our first child) but it hurt DEEPLY.

Am I being a narcissist here by needing to control his reactions to seeing other women? I am so, SO confused. I don't know which way is up and wonder if I am crazy to feel disrespected. I sobbed all the way home.

OP posts:
Thelnebriati · 31/07/2024 09:46

He set up a situation to hurt your feelings and he used a child to do it. Find your inner anger and disgust at his behaviour. He's done such a number on you that you are jealous of him chatting up an underage girl, rather than calling him out for being a sleazy pig.

KreedKafer · 31/07/2024 09:53

Ultimately, you’ve been separated for eight months from this man, who was abusive, and then you invited him to a festival and then expected him to behave like you’re still together.

I am sure he absolutely is a complete arsehole, but you aren’t a couple and he can talk to whoever he likes at a festival; he wasn’t there as your date.

It was a weird idea to invite him in the first place. You split up because he was abusive. He isn’t going to suddenly become a nice guy to be around now that you’re not together. Unless you’re some sort of masochist, don’t hang out with a man who isn’t actually nice. You don’t need to. Stop it.

KreedKafer · 31/07/2024 09:56

Thelnebriati · 31/07/2024 09:46

He set up a situation to hurt your feelings and he used a child to do it. Find your inner anger and disgust at his behaviour. He's done such a number on you that you are jealous of him chatting up an underage girl, rather than calling him out for being a sleazy pig.

Nobody said the girl was ‘underage’. She was 15 years younger than the OP, not 15 years old.

KreedKafer · 31/07/2024 09:57

sixtyandsomething · 31/07/2024 08:46

If he walks you home, then he has to walk back to the festival on his own, after, and he is more likely to be attacked than you are

Ah, the MRAs have arrived

Edingril · 31/07/2024 09:58

Thelnebriati · 31/07/2024 09:46

He set up a situation to hurt your feelings and he used a child to do it. Find your inner anger and disgust at his behaviour. He's done such a number on you that you are jealous of him chatting up an underage girl, rather than calling him out for being a sleazy pig.

How was she under-age?

divinededacende · 31/07/2024 10:29

Respectfully OP, this is a soft YABU. At a certain point, you can't blame a duck for quacking. He is what he is and you left him for that. I admire you maintaining a good relationship because you have children together but this whole weekend seems far too cosy and goes way beyond that. The whole post is giving me bad date vibes, not boundaried social activity with abusive ex for the sake of the kids.

I don' think you're being a narcissist but I don't think you've fully let go of the relationship and weekends like this aren't going to help you do that. As for offering to walk you home and then ditching you as soon as another woman came along, that's a dick move but, as you say, nothing out of character and all it did was leave you in the same situation you were in beforehand. He is a single man, no matter how icky his behavior is.

I hope you can get some closure on him OP. No matter what happens, finding a way to move past this guy is your best option. I know it's hard when there's so much emotion and history. Maybe some counselling might help you to process your feelings?

sixtyandsomething · 31/07/2024 15:12

KreedKafer · 31/07/2024 09:57

Ah, the MRAs have arrived

I have no idea what an MRA is, but I am just talking about a statistical truth.

RedHelenB · 31/07/2024 16:22

Before he'd even met this girl you said you'd be fine. After he met the girl he still asked if you were sure you wanted to walk home alone. Yabu.

5128gap · 31/07/2024 16:29

This man is not your friend. He is your abuser who unfortunately is still part of your life because of your children. However that part should be as small as you can make it where your own life is concerned. He deserves none of your time, attention or emotional investment, yet you and your family are pandering round seeking his approval and rewarding him for being the appalling person he was and is. I can understand from your perspective as it takes time to break free and no longer feel you need to please your abuser. But I can't imagine what your parents were thinking to facilitate this. Please keep him at arms length in future as he will hurt you again and again.

Aligirlbear · 31/07/2024 16:32

I feel sorry for your mum - you actually have put her in an awful position as I’m sure she would never have agreed to him staying if she had known about the reasons for your split and hopefully your DC didn’t misconstrue this as a possible reunion of you and your ex.

You need to chalk this down to experience and set appropriate boundaries between you going forward. - being “friends” like this doesn’t work. It will confuse your DC and be traumatic for you as his behaviour won’t change.

5128gap · 31/07/2024 16:34

sixtyandsomething · 31/07/2024 08:46

If he walks you home, then he has to walk back to the festival on his own, after, and he is more likely to be attacked than you are

Well he sounds like quite a physical guy himself. If that happened perhaps he could give them a push.

FemurRobinson · 31/07/2024 16:36

divinededacende · 31/07/2024 10:29

Respectfully OP, this is a soft YABU. At a certain point, you can't blame a duck for quacking. He is what he is and you left him for that. I admire you maintaining a good relationship because you have children together but this whole weekend seems far too cosy and goes way beyond that. The whole post is giving me bad date vibes, not boundaried social activity with abusive ex for the sake of the kids.

I don' think you're being a narcissist but I don't think you've fully let go of the relationship and weekends like this aren't going to help you do that. As for offering to walk you home and then ditching you as soon as another woman came along, that's a dick move but, as you say, nothing out of character and all it did was leave you in the same situation you were in beforehand. He is a single man, no matter how icky his behavior is.

I hope you can get some closure on him OP. No matter what happens, finding a way to move past this guy is your best option. I know it's hard when there's so much emotion and history. Maybe some counselling might help you to process your feelings?

Good post.

Bowies · 13/01/2025 23:30

Maintain separate and strong boundaries and stop pandering to him and putting yourself in situations that are inevitably going to upset you.

You aren’t friends and don’t need to be.

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