Meet the Other Phone. A phone that grows with your child.

Meet the Other Phone.
A phone that grows with your child.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To want to split with DH after 25 years together?

303 replies

stoviesfortea · 16/03/2025 10:03

I have had thoughts of leaving DH on and off throughout our marriage but it’s always been too difficult. Kids too young, finances etc. We are very different and I actually don’t know why we even got together. It feels like it just happened and now 25 years later and 18 years of marriage, here I am.

We generally get on and have had many good times but the same old arguments and clashes come up time and time again. It’s hard to get compromises and when we argue we both just seethe and hold resentment, push it away, ignore it and then things go back to normal. But then a few months later the arguments appear again.

A big issue is I think DH has ASD (which he doesn’t believe) as one of the things we’ve always clashed over is his avoidance of people and socialising, I can count on one hand the amount of times he’s gone out with me and my friends in the 25 years together. We do separate activities and I actually avoid going out with him as he’s so awkward if we bump into anyone. I have learned to live an essentially separate life apart from the things we do at home with the kids. I’m actually fine having this sort of life so a life without him might not feel much different. He also lacks empathy and insight and this really gets to me.

The latest argument was that he blew up when I said I wanted our kitchen done up (it’s literally falling apart) and he said no as has a total issue with workmen being in the house. We’ve had house stuff done over the years but he’s always said it’s ‘hell’ and has major issues with workmen being in our house.

We are also clashing over money. We’ve always been independent finance wise (own accounts but have a joint account too and split all bills), fairly comfortable (not rich but not poor) and mortgage now paid off. I recently got a decent amount of money so we can totally afford to do the house up and go on some nice holidays. Although I’ve said this is essentially family money he has this weird male pride thing where he says HE can’t afford these things so we can’t do them. Even though the money is sitting there! It’s bloody bizarre and feels a bit controlling. We had a huge argument over this with me saying I’ll pay for holidays and the kitchen and he’s saying they don’t need done and he can’t afford them anyway. AIBU to think that’s weird?!

We also clash over sex- he would happily do it every night whereas I cannot be arsed. We do have sex about once a week but if there’s a gap of even a few weeks he goes in a weird mood and we’ve had major arguments about this in the past.

He also says I constantly nag but he is so untidy and messy and I’m sick of running about after him and our kids. We have 2 daughters who are nearing the end of school and the thought of them going off to uni and me being with DH for another 18 years does not fill me with joy, the opposite in fact 😢

He has some pluses too but the minuses always seem to trump these.

I’ve said before we should split but I’ve never followed through with it. This time though feels different as the kids are older, I think they’d be OK and maybe not majorly surprised, I could potentially buy him out of the house, and I am getting no younger (we are in our 50’s)

AIBU to finally split?!!

OP posts:
AcrossthePond55 · 23/03/2025 19:27

@stoviesfortea

"I’ve noticed he is trying harder now though…"

Oh, I'm sure he is! He is sensing 'a disturbance in the Force' but can't really put his finger on just what it is. He feels you pulling away and doesn't know why (ignorant git) so he's panicking and throwing crumbs at you. If you were to take him up on his offers of walks, dinners, weekends, he'd soon feel you were back in your box and those offers would fade away.

Sunat45degrees · 24/03/2025 09:38

@stoviesfortea I’ve noticed he is trying harder now though… today he asked if I wanted to go for a walk with him. I said ‘no thanks I’m going on my own’. He then said do I want to arrange a dinner with my friends as he’s just ‘got out of the way of it since we’ve had kids’. He was never in the way of it in the first place (!) so again I simply said ‘no thanks I’d rather not!’. He then asked if I want to get away for a few days over Easter and I said no the kids have exams after Easter… he said what about even for a night with the younger DC, ‘no thanks but feel free to go away yourselves!

I found myself thinking about this a LOT since you posted it.

The thing is, he isn't really trying, is he? He's simply pretending to try. These are suggestions of things to do... that you would most likely have to arrange and organise and he would just go along with. He then gets to feel like the hero for "trying" and worst case scenario(for him), he gets a trip away, organised by someone else, and best case, you decline and he gets to continue to feel like the hard done by husband who can't do anything right.

The problem is that this has gone on for so long, and he's been so unwilling and unable to meet you half way over the last 25 years that he has no idea how to do it now that you really mean it. And you have been making no progress for so long that you find yourself defaulting to thinking, "I feel a bit bad for him beause he is trying". That is the pattern you have in your relationship. It's not your fault at all, but you should be aware of it.

You say you hope this means that he'll move on from you quickly, but I'm really sorry, you need to be prepared for a huge fight. He is 100% going to play the victim and he is going to turn this on you. It will be all your fault. He will shout and cry about how he "tried" but nothing "was ever good enough" for you. He will claim this is coming out of nowhere. that if you'd just spoken to him....

LouiseMadetheBestBroccoliPasta · 24/03/2025 19:49

Sunat45degrees · 24/03/2025 09:38

@stoviesfortea I’ve noticed he is trying harder now though… today he asked if I wanted to go for a walk with him. I said ‘no thanks I’m going on my own’. He then said do I want to arrange a dinner with my friends as he’s just ‘got out of the way of it since we’ve had kids’. He was never in the way of it in the first place (!) so again I simply said ‘no thanks I’d rather not!’. He then asked if I want to get away for a few days over Easter and I said no the kids have exams after Easter… he said what about even for a night with the younger DC, ‘no thanks but feel free to go away yourselves!

I found myself thinking about this a LOT since you posted it.

The thing is, he isn't really trying, is he? He's simply pretending to try. These are suggestions of things to do... that you would most likely have to arrange and organise and he would just go along with. He then gets to feel like the hero for "trying" and worst case scenario(for him), he gets a trip away, organised by someone else, and best case, you decline and he gets to continue to feel like the hard done by husband who can't do anything right.

The problem is that this has gone on for so long, and he's been so unwilling and unable to meet you half way over the last 25 years that he has no idea how to do it now that you really mean it. And you have been making no progress for so long that you find yourself defaulting to thinking, "I feel a bit bad for him beause he is trying". That is the pattern you have in your relationship. It's not your fault at all, but you should be aware of it.

You say you hope this means that he'll move on from you quickly, but I'm really sorry, you need to be prepared for a huge fight. He is 100% going to play the victim and he is going to turn this on you. It will be all your fault. He will shout and cry about how he "tried" but nothing "was ever good enough" for you. He will claim this is coming out of nowhere. that if you'd just spoken to him....

Yes, he'll be "blindsided".

This is the word that men overwhelmingly use in Walkaway Wife Syndrome, where the woman has tried for years to communicate with their H, has lived years in distress and frustration, has given up, has become emotionally detached, has decided to leave, and has quietly bided her time and got her ducks in a row until she could leave.

And the H is always "blindsided" and screeches about not being told and how horrible the woman is for "doing this to him". By then, most walkaway wives couldn't care less what the H thinks and his reaction is simply the final nail in the coffin of his disinterest and disregard for her.

Divorce lawyers see WWS a lot.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page
Swipe left for the next trending thread