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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to not want my DH to know where I am and what I'm doing at all times?

229 replies

Izzosaura · 05/08/2024 22:19

This is inspired by the recent thread about people who are on tracking apps with their partners. My DH has no interest in us being on a tracking app and nor do I so this isn't a practical question so much as a theoretical one.

During the tracking discussion, I found myself having really strong negative feelings about being tracked but found it difficult to justify these rationally. As a few people put it, why worry if you have nothing hide? So I went away and analysed why I was so hostile, and I realised that apart from my wider worries about tracking (the danger of it not being truly voluntary due to pressure to agree to it; the potential for coercive control; a dislike of a world where people don't have to make the conscious choice to commuicate but just expect others to know their movements and fulfil their needs)... there actually ARE things that I want to hide from DH.

These are the exapmples I can think of from the last few months:

  • I'm working to lose weight at the moment and have had considerable success, but a few weeks ago I had an appointment cancellation that unexpectedly gave me a spare half hour for lunch at work and gave in to a craving to go to a local chippy. I was embarrassed about breaking my diet and wouldn't have wanted my DH to know I'd been there. He would have been fine with it and wouldn't have seen it as his business to judge but he'd likely have made a joke about it and I wanted to avoid that.
  • Last week I was meant to be out on a work visit about an hour away but it got rescheduled so I ended up spending the morning working from home unexpectedly. I didn't tell DH as knew that he'd then have expected me to do some tidying round the house - something he always does when working from home. But I had deadlines to meet and didn't want to do anything other than sit on my laptop. I therefore didn't mention the change in my schedule to him.
  • About 3 months ago I was meant to be meeting up with a friend for a country walk and my DH agreed to look after our daughter whilst I did this. My friend met me but needed to leave earlier than we'd planned so we did a shortened version of the walk. Rather than rushing home, I enjoyed an hour to myself going round some nearby shops. I didn't tell my DH because although he'd have been cool with it, I felt guilty.

If my DH and I tracked one another, these omissions / white lies on my part would have been busted. I suppose I like to continue to be free to do this sort of thing once in a while. I'm also fine with the idea of him doing things he doesn't tell me about that are of a similar nature.

Some would perhaps say that this is the sort of dishonesty that breaks relationships and is a sign that our marriage is doomed... so am I being unreasonable to think that this sort of thing is fine or not?

YABU - These things shouldn't be hidden from your DH and you should be totally honest with him about where you are at all times.

YANBU - It's fine not to share these sorts of things with your DH; it's ok for married people to keep some things from one another.

OP posts:
MoreCardassianThanKardashian · 06/08/2024 16:06

longestlurkerever · 06/08/2024 15:33

This is exactly what I really don't like. What if your dd was somewhere you consider dangerous? What if she wanted to lie about it? I really think it should be within an adult's ability to be able to do that. It's sort of important, from an autonomy/free will point of view. She might think oh well I'm only ever in lidl or whatever, what does it matter. But if she suddenly turned it off you'd worry.

So far she’s a good’un. If there’s somewhere she’s uncertain, she will call to check she can go. I see this getting less as she gets older but it’s always based on previous things or places she’s been allowed to go to.

I do get worried at sleepovers as she has started asking if she is allowed to go out at night time, between 9-10.30 and although I’m not comfortable she is with a group so I say yes but to let me know when she is back. I worry that she will one day go out but leave the phone at her friends so I think she is safely there. Hopefully we will build trust so this doesn’t happen but kids will be kids.

longestlurkerever · 06/08/2024 16:08

MoreCardassianThanKardashian · 06/08/2024 16:06

So far she’s a good’un. If there’s somewhere she’s uncertain, she will call to check she can go. I see this getting less as she gets older but it’s always based on previous things or places she’s been allowed to go to.

I do get worried at sleepovers as she has started asking if she is allowed to go out at night time, between 9-10.30 and although I’m not comfortable she is with a group so I say yes but to let me know when she is back. I worry that she will one day go out but leave the phone at her friends so I think she is safely there. Hopefully we will build trust so this doesn’t happen but kids will be kids.

If she's a kid that's different. Kids don't have the same right to autonomy as adults and if your condition of allowing something is that they share their location that's ok because it would be OK not to allow them to go at all. Sorry, I thought were talking about an adult dd and I do think it's important to wean yourself off this comfort blanket before they are an autonomous adult

MoreCardassianThanKardashian · 06/08/2024 16:51

@longestlurkerever ha, imagine she's 30 and I'm still tracking her! I probably will be

Izzosaura · 06/08/2024 23:02

Theothername · 06/08/2024 09:30

You’re entitled to privacy and autonomy @Izzosaura

What concerns me in your post is the guilt you feel about slipping from your impossibly high standards. I think it’s important to resist the urge to lie, not for any moral reason, but because you being you is not something to be ashamed of or cover up.

I relate strongly to your op, but I know some of my feelings are rooted in a childhood with a very controlling parent. Secrecy was a survival trait. I still have to work quite hard to feel confident and relaxed in my own skin. so I’m probably projecting!

That’s not a pro tracking argument btw.

Thanks so much for this post. Like some other people on here you've picked up on something separate from the tracking question here: my sense of shame and desire for secrecy that comes from that.

OP posts:
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