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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Daughter isolated in new city with new boyfriend who won’t go home

286 replies

Feelingabitconfused · 13/03/2025 13:11

Hi fellow Mumsnetters.

I’m not sure whether to voice my concerns, and if so, what I can say without alienating her.

My daughter started at University last October, 5 hours drive from where we live. She has been working in a bar to part fund herself and has met someone who also works there, now her boyfriend. This all started in January, all fine. He is her first serious boyfriend. My main concern is that he’s not been home AT ALL since they got together around 10 weeks ago. He is a local lad, lives with his parents and is nearly 24. They sleep in her very small single bed, they sit and eat their meals on her floor (I know!). Whenever we face time she’s absolutely knackered, yawning throughout the call, he speaks, but refuses to be seen by me on face time, and she’s recently saying she’s completely out of money. We give her £50 per week to buy food etc, we pay all her accommodation, and she works to have more £ for spends. She has at least £100 per week to live on including work money.

Recently she’s been skipping lectures and hasn’t been attending her seminars either. She spends whole days in her room, presumably with this chap. They appear to do nothing together, other than stay in her room.

I know they’re not having sex yet as we’ve discussed this, and she’s very open with me, seeking advice about contraception etc. She has a gp appointment on 20 March for this (she’s not had sex yet) but says she feels like he doesn’t want to have sex as he’s in pain all the time; apparently he’s been run over twice, which might account for his pain levels. Also of concern is that he’s telling her he was beaten up by his parents, held down by his mum so he could take the beating. I don’t know when the last time this happened/ what age he was when this happened to him, but could well account for his reluctance to go home.

I know she’s classed as an adult, being 18, but my feeling is that her boyfriend is almost 24, she’s isolated, somehow broke despite having £100 bare minimum per week, and sharing her very small space with someone who it appears to me, doesn’t want to go home.

I’ve booked a place to stay to go to see her at the start of April - she sent me a screenshot list of her lectures for March so we could plan the trip and there was absolutely no time for me to visit and see her as all lectures were 9-5. I can see on life 360 app she hasn’t moved out of her room for 2 days! She wants the life 360 btw, she said it keeps her safe and she likes to see what we’re doing too.

AIBU? She’s an adult, she has to make her choices and feel the consequences?
AINBU? Have a real discussion with her and voice my concerns?

OP posts:
savagedaughter · 07/07/2025 06:04

Feelingabitconfused · 13/03/2025 13:11

Hi fellow Mumsnetters.

I’m not sure whether to voice my concerns, and if so, what I can say without alienating her.

My daughter started at University last October, 5 hours drive from where we live. She has been working in a bar to part fund herself and has met someone who also works there, now her boyfriend. This all started in January, all fine. He is her first serious boyfriend. My main concern is that he’s not been home AT ALL since they got together around 10 weeks ago. He is a local lad, lives with his parents and is nearly 24. They sleep in her very small single bed, they sit and eat their meals on her floor (I know!). Whenever we face time she’s absolutely knackered, yawning throughout the call, he speaks, but refuses to be seen by me on face time, and she’s recently saying she’s completely out of money. We give her £50 per week to buy food etc, we pay all her accommodation, and she works to have more £ for spends. She has at least £100 per week to live on including work money.

Recently she’s been skipping lectures and hasn’t been attending her seminars either. She spends whole days in her room, presumably with this chap. They appear to do nothing together, other than stay in her room.

I know they’re not having sex yet as we’ve discussed this, and she’s very open with me, seeking advice about contraception etc. She has a gp appointment on 20 March for this (she’s not had sex yet) but says she feels like he doesn’t want to have sex as he’s in pain all the time; apparently he’s been run over twice, which might account for his pain levels. Also of concern is that he’s telling her he was beaten up by his parents, held down by his mum so he could take the beating. I don’t know when the last time this happened/ what age he was when this happened to him, but could well account for his reluctance to go home.

I know she’s classed as an adult, being 18, but my feeling is that her boyfriend is almost 24, she’s isolated, somehow broke despite having £100 bare minimum per week, and sharing her very small space with someone who it appears to me, doesn’t want to go home.

I’ve booked a place to stay to go to see her at the start of April - she sent me a screenshot list of her lectures for March so we could plan the trip and there was absolutely no time for me to visit and see her as all lectures were 9-5. I can see on life 360 app she hasn’t moved out of her room for 2 days! She wants the life 360 btw, she said it keeps her safe and she likes to see what we’re doing too.

AIBU? She’s an adult, she has to make her choices and feel the consequences?
AINBU? Have a real discussion with her and voice my concerns?

Go and visit her, drop in without notice, take her father with you, be pleasant if circumstances allow. Definitely not being unreasonable, I'd be very concerned.

Feelingabitconfused · 07/07/2025 09:21

Thanks for all your posts.

Interesting turn of events. I turned up yesterday just before 4pm. DD said she’d been to the shops with BF and he’s not well. The day pans out with him in bed, I didn’t see him at all, and me and DD spoke in the kitchen. Stank of pee, oven not cleaned, first thing I did was take DD to shops and buy a load of cleaning stuff and start to clean kitchen we were sitting in while having our chat.

For context I didn’t book anywhere to stay as my plan was to turn up, spend the night at hers and take her away to a nice coastal village for a couple of days, look after her, nourish her, get her outside in fresh air.

She refused that plan of going away for a couple of days. Said she didnt want to leave her house as she’d just come back 5 days ago from visiting her friend, moved house last Tuesday and was getting her house in order. Eventually I relented. Privately I thought she was guessing that if she agreed to go away with me, I’d insist that he leaves the house, which was indeed my plan! He would be staying in a large student house without the agreement of the landlord or anyone else, so it would make sense he’d have to go. DD was completely clear that she wasn’t going with me for a couple of days to spend quality time together. We kept circling this until it got to around 8pm at which point I started looking for somewhere to stay in the city she lives for the next couple of days.

She has answered the things I raised concerns about. I believed her, mostly, with some reservations and things to check out at a later date. She gave an immediate answer to the retaking the year and I felt covered it off without any issue. She told me the family friend she discussed this with on the phone while DH listened to her side only. Family friend was asking direct questions … how would you feel if you had to retake the year, how would you feel about your friends on the course continuing without you, etc. When I asked her my questions about her course, she said retaking the year is not an option, she’s made some basic mistakes, non academic referencing, structure etc which Russell Group are hot on, and that she’s learned from this going forward. I have made it explicitly clear there is no money in the pot for any repeat years so she’s going to have to nail it every year. She said she wants a first class degree, but she’s unclear about how she’s going to get that, no plan, but I will cover that with her today, and I’ll check in with her regularly about what assessments are coming up. She said she generally loves her course, hates a couple of elements of it, repetition of certain things, gets anxious about assessments, but she hasn’t missed any deadlines, and has said that in the last week prior to a deadline she is finishing the detail off. Tbh I was happy to hear that cos I was never great at finishing off, always up to the last 10 minutes of submitting by deadline, fine tuning, so I hear that.

Some red flags. Obviously BF taking to his bed for the day, which she said he’d been ill from night before and she forced him to go out for pillows with her. Apparently he is very fussy about his pillows, so fussy they didn’t buy any. Weird. Not necessary a red flag, just odd given everything about him. Red flag is he is ill again. That was his excuse the first time I met him to delay / avoid meeting me. She defended him of course.

I did press her a little bit on her relationship with BF, acknowledged he appears to be her comfort blanket when she was lonely and the Halls she was in was a dead end for building friendships, challenged her when she got defensive which she admitted she was being. She was concerned that DH didn’t like BF as she thought DH was quiet. Deliberate ploy by DH who wanted to see what BF brought which he thought was nada, said no character, no chat, dull. I said I didn’t know what DF thought and to ask him.

But another red flag for me was that she did kind of warn me off being concerned about her BF … said she doesn’t want this to drive a wedge between us. I did back off a bit, didn’t get into his character or what DH thought about BF, but reiterated my concern about the fact that 6 other girls will be living in the house, paying rent and bills etc and he is not to be there alone while they are there, or to be staying over more than 2 nights per week, which I think is reasonable for a normal BF to do. Also the fact that her tenancy would be breached if he continued to stay there as he did whilst she is in halls.

Red flag about that during this part of our discussion … she questioned me what would happen if one of the “other girls” decided that they didn’t want to live there what would happen. I said is she “asking for a friend”, which she denied, but my spidey senses are telling me otherwise. I can see that she could be thinking about jacking the house in and living with BF. Why would she ask this otherwise?

Another pinkish coloured flag was she said to me directly how would I know if she did have BF staying with her all the time. Although she did absolutely promise he wouldn’t be staying there come September when the others got there. Helpfully for me, the letting agent, when sending the contract through, included all the names, addresses, telephone numbers and email address of all the parents and all the girls! I know! Total breach of confidentiality which I thought didn’t happen in this day and age, but I told DD I have this info. She said “I would be really fucked off if you contacted the girls in my house”, to which I responded, “And I would be really fucked off if you make me liable for £7k because you’ve been evicted and you have nowhere to live because how will you complete your course?” Said pleasantly and smiling. She has promised he will be out in September but she is living in this place without any other students there, in a pretty student grotty part of the city, so I can see some sense to this. I feel if I pressed the point and insisted he moves out, that would up the ante, and he’d probably stay there anyway because how can I police this? so nothing to gain.

I spoke positively about the pub we went to that evening, so close to her home and that she and the girls should com down for quiz night and a night out to bond. She seemed positive about building relationships and doing little things like this which clearly make or break relationships in the house.

i spoke to her about priorities … she could be completely giving be a load of BS, but she said that completing her course is her total priority, even above her BF and she said BF said she must put her course first also. 🤔
he really does seem saintly!

Question for you all … when pushed to answer what he contributes, she told me he gave her £150 2 months ago and £200 last month and that he has transferred it directly into her account. How can I ask her to show me her bank account without driving the wedge between us. I think if I can get an answer to this to confirm these payments, I can tell to what degree she is prepared to defend him / how much of what she is telling me is complete BS. I have some ideas but grateful for your input as always.

Also your thoughts about Clare’s Law? Just in case.

OP posts:
Serpentstooth · 07/07/2025 09:53

He's A User in every sense of the word, including the draggy one. I wouldn't give her a penny more but let her continue practising Adulting with the leech she's allowed to attach itself to her. It won't be comfortable for anyone but hopefully the parasite will find another host when there's no longer any way of obtaining really nice pillows from your family free money pot.

YowieeF · 07/07/2025 09:55

You are right to be concerned, seems too many loose ends. I have an 18 yo DD at Uni and living with 2 others.

TiredCatLady · 07/07/2025 10:09

I’d be suspicious your DD is telling you what she thinks you want to hear.

Given what you’ve said, it’s definitely time to do a Clare’s Law check. I’d be highly surprised if drugs aren't a feature in this leech’s life.

RaspberryCombat · 07/07/2025 10:15

Is there any downside to your using Clare’s Law? Are you just concerned it’s a breach of her trust in some way, (or that it’s a slippery slope and you’ll be tempted to do it for every future boyfriend regardless of red flags!)? I’d do it.

Feelingabitconfused · 07/07/2025 10:26

Ive looked into Clare’s Law. It appears that the report goes directly to the person who it affects ie my DD would be informed. I am going to ask the question to be absolutely sure, but if this is the case, I’d have to think really carefully about whether to go through this as she’d never trust me again. No I wouldn’t do it for every boyfriend, there’s just this worry on my part that he has inserted himself into her life due to her loneliness at the time, and she appears to want him there.

There’s no drugs, unless he’s taking them without her knowing. It’s something to think about when I see him next, but I’m not concerned about DD - she’s definitely not on drugs and is really anti drugs apart from alcohol.

OP posts:
RaspberryCombat · 07/07/2025 10:29

Ah I was wondering if that was what was behind your hesitation OP. Yes that makes absolute sense.

Serpentstooth · 07/07/2025 10:35

OP you sound like a lovely mum but you are extremely trusting and naive. The daughter you sent off to university is not the same person now. Obviously we want to trust what our children say to us but your daughter is glossing over lots of things she doesn't want you to hear. It's obvious to many of us on MN. Cut the money. There's no other way.

Cardinalita90 · 07/07/2025 10:35

I sense trouble ahead when the other girls move in. To go from being together all the time to only 2 nights a week won't happen realistically.

It sounds like you handled it really well and now have to give her space to prove she's listening and make her own choices. She's fully aware of the financial consequences so this is her first proper test of making big girl decisions. Good luck OP.

VickyEadieofThigh · 07/07/2025 10:49

Cardinalita90 · 07/07/2025 10:35

I sense trouble ahead when the other girls move in. To go from being together all the time to only 2 nights a week won't happen realistically.

It sounds like you handled it really well and now have to give her space to prove she's listening and make her own choices. She's fully aware of the financial consequences so this is her first proper test of making big girl decisions. Good luck OP.

I sense that same trouble when all the other housemates rock up, too. There is nothing more irritating than sharing with a girl who moves her boyfriend in - it never works for the others, always ends up 'costing' (in all senses) them and completely changes the dynamic of the house.

Stormroses · 07/07/2025 11:01

It's so hard. DS had a partner I loathed when he was at uni. He was so prickly and defensive. I couldn't outright say what I thought but I did ask frequent questions that made him aware of the issues. I'd make declarations like: Are you getting enough time to study? A loving partner wants the best for you, so I'm guessing he is encouraging you to spend time in the library and get your essays in on time. Or: did you share the cost for that? Is he going to pay you back?

I also taught my DC the importance of placing equal value on all the core areas of life: work, family, friends, health, hobbies as well as romance. Don't let one area of life - whether it is work or fitness or romance - dominate and exclude the others. Keep everything in balance. I did go on about this quite a lot and it helped when both DC broke up with the first entirely unsuitable loves of their lives. They had other aspects of life in a healthy state that they could focus on while getting over the heartbreak.

You could call often and simply ask loads of questions about other aspects of her life. Ask what her tutors have said about her work or about potential placements. Ask how her developing friendships are going. Ask if she has joined any societies. Gently easing her focus away from the lacklustre limpet will help her find her own balance.

Planesmistakenforstars · 07/07/2025 11:14

I think sooner or later you might have to broach the fact that you are worried about her because of him. He almost certainly knows you are anyway, it might be better to get ahead of that. I'd probably got at it from the angle of how great it will be to build relationships with her housemates, and he might limit that. The other most obvious way would be around the age difference - as a mum you can'thelp but worry about that anyway. Could you suggest her doing a Clare's Law request herself to put your mind at ease?

As for policing that he moves out, I think her housemates will do that for you. Out of 6 women, there's no way someone won't get pissed off with a boyfriend being there all the time. You probably need to be prepared for that to come to a head and what you do if she chooses living with him over the house share.

RampantIvy · 07/07/2025 12:36

@Feelingabitconfused As a guarantor you will have a copy of the tenancy agreement. There should be something on it about having a permanent visitor. It might be a good idea if you can show this part to your DD.

I also agree that the other students won't be happy at this cock lodger's permanent presence.

I think you are handling it all brilliantly BTW and agree that your DD should get less financial support from you. Also keeping the channels of communication open by telling her that you are worried about her and she can come to you for anything is the best way forward.

If you do a search in the higher education topic you might find other threads about retaking exams and the implications of having to retake a year. If you can get some facts together and present the options to your DD she might have a clearer mind about what choices she has.

Good luck. We never stop worrying bout our offspring, do we.

Delilaaaah · 07/07/2025 13:07

I think you have done a great job so far. She is opening up to you (not fully) but you still need to be on it. Its good that she wants to focus on her degree and she obviously cares what her DF thinks of her BF. However be aware that his type will be dripping poison into her ear that you both hate him in order to alienate her from him - so dont hand him any bullets to shoot you with - kill him with kindness - invite them both down to your home or a weekend away......

Maybe enough questioning for now - as that will have challeneged her enough to keep any doubts she has being processed - you have set the seeds - let them grow. Keep up the nourishing. She needs to focus on the resit - encourage her to get down to the uni library (where he cant go) daily to study. Also maybe a routine - like join a cheap gym for the month. Are you having a family holiday with her?

Is she still working at the bar with him? Maybe suggest she drops that as clearly she needs more study focus and it has cost her dearly this year with the resit.

I would be getting him evicted out of the house - I would somehow let the other parents / girls know that she is an coercive controlling exploitative relationship - because you dont what them to end up in conflict with her and chuck her out - but they could be a subtle weapon to build up the rest of her life.

He must have stacks of cash if he has been working all year - even if she claims he doesnt get enough shifts - he has zero out-goings (you have housed, fed and paid his bills for coming up to 12 months). If you are adamant that there is no drugs - is there a potentially an alcohol problem? Gambling?

Does he have any friends locally from childhood, from work etc - has she met them? If not why not?

Why has she not come home for the holidays? Does she have old school friends /local friends? Thats very odd IMHO.

Hilarious that the skunk is hiding from you - can't look you in the eye.

You are doing a great job - but is a very slow and very delicate one to navigate.

Darkwaters · 07/07/2025 13:20

Does your DD realise her bf is liable to pay council tax as he’s staying there over the summer?

Serpentstooth · 07/07/2025 13:26

His mum and dad must be thanking their lucky stars someone's taken him off their hands. Have you met them OP? No? He wouldn't feel comfortable with that? Thought not.

TheLivelyViper · 07/07/2025 13:39

@Feelingabitconfused Can I ask what year of university she's in and how long her course is? If she's planning to do a placement year, I'd remind her that they're very competitive but also can be such a good way to getting a grad job. Then you can remind her of her goals. I wouldn't tell to to take a year out just yet, she might just need to remember why she's likes her course or her future career plans because it will be very important for her future. If she fails a resit and doesn't come out with at least a 2:1, getting a top placement will be likely pretty difficult. Even when motivation goes, if she has a clear plan it can help her stick it out and keep on studying. I'd make sure she has a meeting with her personal tutor; most unis make sure every student has one. Try and get her to be honest about her lack of motivation and investment and make a plan with them. Her uni will also have support services, likely pastoral support. They often have 1 to 1 mentors especially if she's struggling with motivation, she could ask her tutor to get in touch with them and also sometimes they have study support as well.

I think focus on this first because honestly sometimes taking a year out can be worse, she might move in with boyfriend, enjoy not doing much and then never go back; so she won't have a degree (could cut off certain careers) and a waste of her time, money and the money you've been given her as well.

Delilaaaah · 07/07/2025 14:06

Some thoughts for you.

Drugs:

In your OP you said "I still have reservations, not least that he has a history of drug taking, which he’s “given up for her,” and which I think will continue to be to the forefront of my thoughts about him."

"He agreed to this and hasn’t done drugs since mid January ie when they got together."

You are now saying there are no drugs. I would assume there are. He has no money and neither does she despite him working full time with zero outgoings. What drugs was he doing before? Its totally naive to believe he was able to stop overnight for your DD with zero support. Assume he is still using - either secretly or your DD knows and is trying to get him off them or in she's in denial or on them herself. I think he is balls deep in dealing and hiding out from dealers who he has a debt to and who beat him up (hit by a car !! - twice!!)

Friends:

"So there is only 1 other girl who she has made friends with in her flat and they’re going to house share next year." Is this who she is living with? I would plan to make contact with this girlf from the tenants list and ask for a confidential conversation as you are concerned that she is in a controlling relationship and that their might be subs abuse issues - just listen to her - she would have seen them in halls.

What about her BFF - has she met the BF? Do they have plans to socialise over the summer - are they still in touch daily? 'She went and stayed with a friend a couple of hours away.' seemingly without the BF (but then couldn't leave him again to go away with you - he's totally controlling) - This friend would also be good to have an off-line convo with (or if you knw her DPs well - you could ask them if they know anything)

Lying?

She has form for this - before she met him as you said "she did minimum amount of work, despite telling me she was." Know that her baseline with you is not 100% honest. Judge her only on actions and evidence. She is hiding a lot here.

"Said never missed a lecture" - But at them 9-5 when you wanted to visit - but you can see that she hasnt left her room? Which one is it?

Money:

"She hasnt spent any time with BF as he’s working all the time" - which one is it no shifts / too many shifts ? Either way he is minted with zero outgoings as he is poncing off your family money.

"The money is just disappearing she’s always broke". but if they never leave her room what are they spending it on? Or is she leaving her phone behind in the room - does she have another phone?

"She’s developed an active social life, been drinking more than she would normally, paying pub prices and eating out. She’s got a good discount, being staff, but it all mounts up and she has been staying behind after her shifts for a couple of hours then going out to bars with the other staff there." Has this all stopped?

Her character:

"Her character has changed also. She’s gone from being quite clear about her future and kind of knowing how to get there, wanting a placement year, to now making excuses about going on placement (because she prob realises BF won’t be there). Plus she’s arranged a meeting with tutor next week during convo she said she “felt sick about seeing him and so nervous.” And needed me to draft an email to him requesting the meeting. Honestly there’s other stuff too, she just seems to be regressing.

"about her change in behaviour, suddenly anxious about everything. I mean I dont recognise the way she’s speaking or what she’s saying to me."

"She has answered the things I raised concerns about. I believed her, mostly, with some reservations and things to check out at a later date" - dont believe her words - the actions and evidence dont stack up.

Is he alcohol dependent - is she? That would make her anxious if she is drinking heavily.

Iwanttoliveonamountain · 07/07/2025 15:19

If i was as worried as you i would call the letting agency and say there is a man living in a girls student house share. and yes your lovely daughter is telling you what you want to hear. I would ask to see the print out of her results - maybe you can reduce the amount you pay for her rent to allow him to pay 50% if you are not doing anything about getting him out.

Tallisker · 07/07/2025 15:27

They are so having sex too.

Delilaaaah · 07/07/2025 15:36

Tallisker · 07/07/2025 15:27

They are so having sex too.

Unless there is ED - caused by coke, heroin, alcohol, weed.

What 24 year old 'man' targets an 18 year old from out of town?

One with a history or reputation? One looking for a roof over his head and someone to fund his habit.

He's pocketing over £1,700 a month after tax and NI if he is on min wage.

He has zero outgoings and is poncing off your DD.

What's he doing with it all - investing in ISAs?

Nope he's sticking it up his nose.

Bloodybrambles · 07/07/2025 15:39

Feelingabitconfused · 07/07/2025 09:21

Thanks for all your posts.

Interesting turn of events. I turned up yesterday just before 4pm. DD said she’d been to the shops with BF and he’s not well. The day pans out with him in bed, I didn’t see him at all, and me and DD spoke in the kitchen. Stank of pee, oven not cleaned, first thing I did was take DD to shops and buy a load of cleaning stuff and start to clean kitchen we were sitting in while having our chat.

For context I didn’t book anywhere to stay as my plan was to turn up, spend the night at hers and take her away to a nice coastal village for a couple of days, look after her, nourish her, get her outside in fresh air.

She refused that plan of going away for a couple of days. Said she didnt want to leave her house as she’d just come back 5 days ago from visiting her friend, moved house last Tuesday and was getting her house in order. Eventually I relented. Privately I thought she was guessing that if she agreed to go away with me, I’d insist that he leaves the house, which was indeed my plan! He would be staying in a large student house without the agreement of the landlord or anyone else, so it would make sense he’d have to go. DD was completely clear that she wasn’t going with me for a couple of days to spend quality time together. We kept circling this until it got to around 8pm at which point I started looking for somewhere to stay in the city she lives for the next couple of days.

She has answered the things I raised concerns about. I believed her, mostly, with some reservations and things to check out at a later date. She gave an immediate answer to the retaking the year and I felt covered it off without any issue. She told me the family friend she discussed this with on the phone while DH listened to her side only. Family friend was asking direct questions … how would you feel if you had to retake the year, how would you feel about your friends on the course continuing without you, etc. When I asked her my questions about her course, she said retaking the year is not an option, she’s made some basic mistakes, non academic referencing, structure etc which Russell Group are hot on, and that she’s learned from this going forward. I have made it explicitly clear there is no money in the pot for any repeat years so she’s going to have to nail it every year. She said she wants a first class degree, but she’s unclear about how she’s going to get that, no plan, but I will cover that with her today, and I’ll check in with her regularly about what assessments are coming up. She said she generally loves her course, hates a couple of elements of it, repetition of certain things, gets anxious about assessments, but she hasn’t missed any deadlines, and has said that in the last week prior to a deadline she is finishing the detail off. Tbh I was happy to hear that cos I was never great at finishing off, always up to the last 10 minutes of submitting by deadline, fine tuning, so I hear that.

Some red flags. Obviously BF taking to his bed for the day, which she said he’d been ill from night before and she forced him to go out for pillows with her. Apparently he is very fussy about his pillows, so fussy they didn’t buy any. Weird. Not necessary a red flag, just odd given everything about him. Red flag is he is ill again. That was his excuse the first time I met him to delay / avoid meeting me. She defended him of course.

I did press her a little bit on her relationship with BF, acknowledged he appears to be her comfort blanket when she was lonely and the Halls she was in was a dead end for building friendships, challenged her when she got defensive which she admitted she was being. She was concerned that DH didn’t like BF as she thought DH was quiet. Deliberate ploy by DH who wanted to see what BF brought which he thought was nada, said no character, no chat, dull. I said I didn’t know what DF thought and to ask him.

But another red flag for me was that she did kind of warn me off being concerned about her BF … said she doesn’t want this to drive a wedge between us. I did back off a bit, didn’t get into his character or what DH thought about BF, but reiterated my concern about the fact that 6 other girls will be living in the house, paying rent and bills etc and he is not to be there alone while they are there, or to be staying over more than 2 nights per week, which I think is reasonable for a normal BF to do. Also the fact that her tenancy would be breached if he continued to stay there as he did whilst she is in halls.

Red flag about that during this part of our discussion … she questioned me what would happen if one of the “other girls” decided that they didn’t want to live there what would happen. I said is she “asking for a friend”, which she denied, but my spidey senses are telling me otherwise. I can see that she could be thinking about jacking the house in and living with BF. Why would she ask this otherwise?

Another pinkish coloured flag was she said to me directly how would I know if she did have BF staying with her all the time. Although she did absolutely promise he wouldn’t be staying there come September when the others got there. Helpfully for me, the letting agent, when sending the contract through, included all the names, addresses, telephone numbers and email address of all the parents and all the girls! I know! Total breach of confidentiality which I thought didn’t happen in this day and age, but I told DD I have this info. She said “I would be really fucked off if you contacted the girls in my house”, to which I responded, “And I would be really fucked off if you make me liable for £7k because you’ve been evicted and you have nowhere to live because how will you complete your course?” Said pleasantly and smiling. She has promised he will be out in September but she is living in this place without any other students there, in a pretty student grotty part of the city, so I can see some sense to this. I feel if I pressed the point and insisted he moves out, that would up the ante, and he’d probably stay there anyway because how can I police this? so nothing to gain.

I spoke positively about the pub we went to that evening, so close to her home and that she and the girls should com down for quiz night and a night out to bond. She seemed positive about building relationships and doing little things like this which clearly make or break relationships in the house.

i spoke to her about priorities … she could be completely giving be a load of BS, but she said that completing her course is her total priority, even above her BF and she said BF said she must put her course first also. 🤔
he really does seem saintly!

Question for you all … when pushed to answer what he contributes, she told me he gave her £150 2 months ago and £200 last month and that he has transferred it directly into her account. How can I ask her to show me her bank account without driving the wedge between us. I think if I can get an answer to this to confirm these payments, I can tell to what degree she is prepared to defend him / how much of what she is telling me is complete BS. I have some ideas but grateful for your input as always.

Also your thoughts about Clare’s Law? Just in case.

Op I understand you’re concerned, but you need to back off a bit. Seeing her bank statements is a complete invasion into her privacy.

You need to learn to trust her.

My BF at uni ended up being turfed out as my housemates (rightly so, but at the time I didn’t see that) snitched on him living with me to the landlord. I got a letter saying he was only allowed to stay a maximum of two nights a week. My mum had been telling me how he was a freeloader/bad news and of course I thought she was just being her usual pessimistic self. Again, she was right. He moved out, bummed off his housemates and I saw that really he was bit of a loser/quite enjoyed having a normal student life. Had a huge row and I called it quits.

Let them spend the summer playing house. I’m sure they’re having a wonderful time. I swear I held onto that boy for too long as I thought everyone was again him/us and wanted to prove them all wrong. Ha!

Molstraat · 07/07/2025 15:41

He's a leech OP and I suspect you are being played by her.
She is going to be the CF in the house that moves her boyfriend in and pisses everyone off.
Re the course she is just telling you what you want to hear.
At university they either want it or not.
No parent is checking up on assignments.
They have to want it.

She is saying enough to keep you sweet and paying for stuff.
He's undoubtedly using her and didn't want to meet you.

I wouldn't trust either of them I'm afraid.
God knows what he is into and using her for.

WickWood · 07/07/2025 15:54

You sound like a lovely mum, he sounds like a leech.

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