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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Husband sometimes breaks things when angry - should I leave?

105 replies

Stircrazy1984 · 23/01/2025 21:11

My husband and I have been together 15 years, he grew up in a house where his dad was abusive to his mum and his mum would break things from frustration and emotionally lean on him.

As a result, sometimes, when he gets really mad he will smash things up, in our old house he smashed shelves off walls, pounded wicker baskets and one time dropped a plate full of food into our wooden floor, so it shattered in a million pieces, and I told him it couldn't happen again as, our eldest daughter who was a baby in her highchair, could have gotten bits of china in her eye.

We've been here 5 years and I can only recall 3 incidents, he threw his Xbox on the floor when I told him he loved it more than me maybe a year ago, as he spends his life on it, he punched a hole in a door a few months ago and this weekend he threw a large cooking pan, which then bounced and smashed our front window, he then tried to break his phone in half, but I took it from him, then he walked past the pan on the floor and aggressively stamped on it until it was all bent and unusable (it was a brand new one we treated ourselves to). We have a 9 and 6 year old now and I can't bare to think what would have happened if one of them walked through the hall when that pan was flying, and our 9 year old ran and hid and locked herself in the crate with our dog and was clearly affected by it. He did speak to a mental health professional and he has had an assessment with talking space but they don't deal in anger management. He has said I just have to stop whinging at him so much (but I just asked him to be present with the kids and to help me with some housework - I work p/t so do most of it)

My husband says it happened because I was getting at him too much..but I had only suggested that 9am was too early to play on his Xbox and for him to pick up half the dog poos in the garden as I'd done the other half, as we were having guests over for a party a few days later, and he snapped BIG TIME. Burst into tears and said that he works really hard and never gets to do what he wants and that he wants to kill himself...he had been playing his games since midday the day before all day and night until he came to bed late. He has a motorbike, a new mountain bike, a Nintendo switch, his Xbox and a tennis club membership, but apparently he never gets to do what he wants and he says it was how I talk to him...I said I talk to him like that as feel 2nd to the Xbox...proportionally he spends 90% of his free time between Xbox, switch and scrolling through his phone, he has a stressful job and uses it to escape, but by escaping reality he's also missing out on family life.

Anyway, I'm not being myself for fear of setting him off again but he's frustrated at me for not being myself?! And obviously now I have my children to think about and my daughter has told me she's worried when Daddy gets angry again he'll break something again, and he does get angry quite a lot, just not to the 'breaking items' degree.

He thinks I am 'blowing things out of proportion' this time as I haven't just snapped back to normal like nothing has happened this time...is he right? Am I overthinking it? I'm thinking I need to put my kids first and also me as I don't feel I can be myself around him at the moment for fear of him snapping again.

OP posts:
Endofyear · 23/01/2025 23:42

You need to leave and get your children out of this environment. These are adverse childhood experiences and will have a lifelong effect on them. It cannot continue. Get advice from Women's Aid and make a plan. You and your children should not have to tiptoe around your partner in fear.

MeAndBoqDrivesmemad · 23/01/2025 23:46

It’s a matter of time before social services become involved. If my neighbour threw a pan through the window I’d call the police.

ThisWormHasTurned · 23/01/2025 23:47

LurkyMcLurkinson · 23/01/2025 22:42

So far we’ve got the following areas covered.
Saying he wants to kill himself when you challenge him - using coercion and threats ✔️
Smashing things - using intimidation ✔️
Suggesting his behaviour is your fault - denying, minimising and blaming ✔️
How else is he abusing you? I’d also urge you to consider that his behaviour seems to be escalating as the physical incidents are happening more regularly.

This is exactly what I was thinking.
I left an abusive relationship. It was as obvious as smashing things in front of me, it was just strange how much got broken and how much of it was mine 🤔
DD was miserable and frustrated. Everything was a battle. 3 years on she is so much happier, does as she’s asked and even does without being asked. I cannot express the difference living away from her father has made.
Please leave for your DCs’ sake.

WeeWigglet · 23/01/2025 23:47

our 9 year old ran and hid and locked herself in the crate with our dog

You know what you need to do

You've centred your life around this violent man & made excuses for terrible behaviour for 15 years. It hasn't changed him, or made him happy or made you happy and your kids hiding in a dog crate.

He's learned that being violent & blaming you shuts you up.

He's not losing control in the slightest - he knows exactly when to stop, so you feel total shit but dont leave. It's calculated and very deliberate.

Shift your priority to your child & yourself. Tell people what he does, watch their horror. Don't carry his shame for him.

Lottie6712 · 24/01/2025 00:26

"My husband says it happened because I was getting at him too much"

He's blaming you for his abusive behaviour. He is the only person responsible for his behaviour. My husband doesn't act like this. My father didn't. It's not normal. Can you live with yourself if it continues to get worse and one of your children gets hurt? They're also growing up thinking that the dynamic you and your husband have in a marriage is normal. That is paving the way for a lifetime of dysfunctional relationships for them - and increases the risk of them being an abuser/victim themselves.

GreenLeaf25 · 24/01/2025 01:12

If you don't leave, your children will end up hating you for it. Trust me, I know.

Machya · 24/01/2025 01:13

Your poor children.
God love them.
They will carry this forever.
He's a house terrorist and he has damaged your children irrevocably.
Hopefully one of them will mention it to a teacher who will report it.

Get ahead of this and get out.
He's an abusive angry pig and your poor children are bearing the terrible price every day you stay.

Could your daughter be any clearer.
Poor terrified mite.

modernshmodern · 24/01/2025 01:19

Whilst you stay in this marriage you are normalising violence to your kids. Show them they should not accept this treatment.

At any point he could have sought help for his issues

mummytrex · 24/01/2025 01:54

So according to him he is blameless and wants to kill himself as it's all your fault..?

Please Hmm. He is manipulating you and trying to train you to put up and shut up.

Read your post back to yourself. In particular:

"our 9 year old ran and hid and locked herself in the crate with our dog and was clearly affected by it."

"my daughter has told me she's worried when Daddy gets angry again he'll break something again,"

If you can't leave for yourself. Do it for your kids. They need to be protected and deserve better than being exposed to this sort of environment. Do you really want them growing up to think this is normal and/or repeating this behaviour??

UnicornWorld · 24/01/2025 01:55

I stopped reading at the comment around the China could have hit your baby. You matter too, you know

Run.

mummytrex · 24/01/2025 01:55

And if he genuinely tries to kill himself (doubtful), then that's on him.

Sparklfairy · 24/01/2025 02:43

He thinks I am 'blowing things out of proportion' this time

Oh the irony is laughable. Really. Ask him if HE ever blows anything out of proportion? I'd dearly love to hear his answer.

SwanSong1 · 24/01/2025 02:57

Absolutely leave, he is an adult and fully capable of controlling his temper.

PleaseAndThankYou12 · 24/01/2025 04:13

I'm so sorry you're going through this.

But please protect yourself and your children and leave.

Sending you love x

Calamitousness · 24/01/2025 05:05

I genuinely am not an ltb person on here unless it’s so very bad and believe me. This is so very bad. Get your children and leave. Phone the police when he’s smashing things. Get a record of his behaviour. It will be useful for court and child custody. But get out.

Michiru · 24/01/2025 05:07

I've been in that kind of relationship.

I kept walking on eggshells in order to not provoke his anger.

I kept trying to keep peace so we didn't - again - have to replace something because he lost his temper.

I left when I saw one of my children imitating this.

What will your child learn? Either, they will end up in a similar cycle (do you want that kind of life for them) or they will end up with similar behaviour.

Oh, and his violence did escalate and he almost killed me at one point. His regret didn't last too long.

I am on my own now, with my children, and finally healing after many years.

LoudSnoringDog · 24/01/2025 05:42

Protect your children.

He's manipulating you.

Mamma38383 · 24/01/2025 05:52

Imagine if your daughter had written this - would you want her to put up with it? Or would you tell her to get out?

Apart from the violence he's blaming you. He's a grown man and he's not in control of himself, and you don't know if and when he will turn from breaking objects to hurting you and your children because he blames you or them too.

Mamma38383 · 24/01/2025 05:53

And agree, he is being a terrible model for your kids. He may have learned this behaviour from his mother but he is teaching it to your children.

ThighsYouCantControl · 24/01/2025 06:40

The thing is, you get a choice whether you finally leave this ticking time bomb or not. Your children don’t. Your children running and hiding in their own home because they are so frightened is genuinely heart breaking. Your parents are meant to be the ones you run to when you’re frightened.

I won’t have a go at you, that would be hypocritical of me as I’ve been in a very similar situation. But I will say the transformation of my own kids when we lived in our own home away from their father was amazing. They were no longer on edge or frightened. Living like that is exhausting.

Stircrazy1984 · 24/01/2025 09:52

He's been signed off work for 2 weeks with stress.

OP posts:
Marmaladelover · 24/01/2025 10:16

Stircrazy1984 · 24/01/2025 09:52

He's been signed off work for 2 weeks with stress.

Not much good if he just spends the whole 2 weeks playing on the Xbox . The 2 weeks should be a Reset .

Machya · 24/01/2025 11:11

Stircrazy1984 · 24/01/2025 09:52

He's been signed off work for 2 weeks with stress.

So your childrens abuser will be home full-time.

God help those poor children.

Dror · 24/01/2025 11:22

Your children are being terrorised. Don't give another thought to their abuser, prioritise his victims and get them safe.

ItGhoul · 24/01/2025 11:25

I've been in a similar position to you and I'm sorry, but absolutely MUST leave him. First of all, it's awful for you to live with. Secondly, it's emotionally damaging and potentially physically dangerous for your child. Thirdly, there's a good chance it will escalate into physical violence towards you.