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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:
GreenShirtLace · 16/03/2025 11:23

You have money, divorce and split up. Sadly your money will become important to him then.
So can you survive if you lose half of that ?

Mauro711 · 16/03/2025 11:24

stoviesfortea · 16/03/2025 11:04

@BarneyRonson oh I couldn’t be arsed with dating or finding anyone else. A life on my own seems bliss. I actually feel envy when I hear others in this position

I left 3 years go after 20+ years together. Can't be arsed with dating either but tried it briefly last year. It was dire. Living alone is what makes me the happiest. I have grown up kids and lots of friends plus a dog so I am really not missing out by not having a man around. My life has never been more stressfree and I have never been more content. Just do it, you will thank yourself.

BarneyRonson · 16/03/2025 11:24

stoviesfortea · 16/03/2025 11:04

@BarneyRonson oh I couldn’t be arsed with dating or finding anyone else. A life on my own seems bliss. I actually feel envy when I hear others in this position

I totally understand. Your ambivalence has always been there and now there’s no kids to tie you to him. The door is open!

what’s holding you back?

ChewbaccaAteMyHamster · 16/03/2025 11:27

YANBU.

You only get one go at life. We don't get another go round so this is YOUR time to put yourself and your happiness first. If you don't see the future with him, and the thought of life with him when your DC have gone fills you with dread, then you have your answer. Especially if you think your DC will handle it okay too.

You mentioned that a life on your own sounds bliss and you are in a fortunate financial position that you can go it alone so I think you need to be brave and follow your heart. Start making some plans to end the relationship and then sit your DH down and tell him how you feel and that it is over. It will be difficult so prepare yourself for that and hopefully you can split amicably for the sake of your kids.

Life is for living, go live it. ❤

Calamitousness · 16/03/2025 11:28

We’ll go for it. The good thing is he wants no part of your windfall so I’d say it’s a fairly straightforward split. Family assets are divided. Each keep their own savings/pensions if that’s how you’ve been living anyway. Good luck.

BunnyLake · 16/03/2025 11:31

stoviesfortea · 16/03/2025 11:04

@BarneyRonson oh I couldn’t be arsed with dating or finding anyone else. A life on my own seems bliss. I actually feel envy when I hear others in this position

That is me. I have been single for many years now, both kids young adults and I love being a free agent. I don’t date (experience has told me all you get from someone else is a different set of issues, especially at my age, everyone has too much baggage).

ThreeMagicNumber · 16/03/2025 11:36

I'd go for it without a doubt. I'm happily married but have always thought if we were to split up I'd not bother dating again either and would be happily single, so can understand that. Sounds like your life will be much easier not being married.

WellsAndThistles · 16/03/2025 11:57

Definitely time to go it alone, I'll bet you've missed out on so many things socially bringing up your kids. Time to get settled into a new happier life before Granny duty beckons.

Or, stay, picture yourself at 70/80 stuck with a miserable old anti social sod, too scared to invite your kids, their partners and kids round for Xmas etcas he'll just complain but you'll never be able to go to theirs as he will refuse.

LindorDoubleChoc · 16/03/2025 12:14

Do you really think AIBU is the right place for your question? What is wrong with using the Relationships board?

ginasevern · 16/03/2025 12:16

I was going to waffle on a bit about how hard and lonely life can be on your own, especially being 50 plus. But taking everything into account it sounds as though the opportunity is ripe for taking. You'd be financially secure, kids left home (or about to) and you aren't interested in finding a "replacement" bloke. Good for you. Go for it whilst you're still young and healthy enough to enjoy it.

destiel00 · 16/03/2025 12:19

This is no way to live, op.
You have the means to leave...so leave.

CheesePlantBoxes · 16/03/2025 12:20

It's nit going to get better so the real question is how much confidence you have in yourself to make yourself happy.

I'd say go for it. Better to try.

Genevieva · 16/03/2025 12:23

Marriage counselling first? It might help to gave another person there to get him to listen and realise that marriage involves him having to make sacrifices he doesn’t want to ( like workmen in the house occasionally) or accepting your generosity graciously.

CheesePlantBoxes · 16/03/2025 12:23

LindorDoubleChoc · 16/03/2025 12:14

Do you really think AIBU is the right place for your question? What is wrong with using the Relationships board?

Bloody hell, who appointed you the post police? 🚔

Rhe description of AIBU is

"Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions." That's what OP has done. No case to answer, Guvnor.

stoviesfortea · 16/03/2025 12:26

@Wingingitnancyomg yes decorating how I want! I’ve already put my touches in a lot of the house but we had a major argument when he refused to replace the flooring in a room despite there being a massive hole in the laminate where a piece of permanent furniture had been removed. As it in was a built in cupboard so the bit with no floor was about 2m wide. He saw no reason at all to ‘spend money unnecessarily’ on new flooring. Ie he didn’t want any workmen in the house or spend any of his own cash

OP posts:
stoviesfortea · 16/03/2025 12:28

@GreenShirtLaceI don’t think he will be entitled to have my money as it’s inheritance and I’m in Scotland (I’ve looked it up). It’s not seen as part of the matrimonial assets

OP posts:
stoviesfortea · 16/03/2025 12:31

BarneyRonson · 16/03/2025 11:24

I totally understand. Your ambivalence has always been there and now there’s no kids to tie you to him. The door is open!

what’s holding you back?

I’m not sure. I worry how it will affect my kids and their schooling mainly. Worry I’ll get drawn into more difficult convos with him

OP posts:
TimeForSomething · 16/03/2025 12:35

you can’t hang about for years, have the convo tell the kids and get on with living

goody2shooz · 16/03/2025 12:36

@stoviesfortea you've spent long enough having ‘difficult convos’ with him, and this doesn’t need to be too much harder or more difficult. A visit to the solicitor to clarify what to do/will happen, and then it’s simply a case of this is what’s happening. You don’t need his approval or permission. Enough is enough!

blobby10 · 16/03/2025 12:37

@stoviesfortea this was the scenario for my now exH and I ten years ago. Kids going off to uni/college and neither of us could face being on our own with each other - I had felt it for a couple of years but H was the one brave enough to voice it and say lets split up before anyone else is involved. Ten years on, he is happily remarried and living the dream - me single and living more of a nightmare but tbh I'm happy for him. My nightmare is nothing to do with falling out of love with him, or being single, just a series things no one could have predicted Grin
I was worried about the kids but they were older teens and now well adjusted 20 somethings. The only thing I have done which ex hasn't is keep a room in my house for them to call 'theirs' so they can come home if they need to. Which they have when inbetween houses/flats/careers as well as at Christmas and stuff and i'm so lucky to get to see them early mornings and in the evenings for sofa snuggles watching TV - ex doesn't get that anymore! Does mean I have no money for me as it all goes on keeping a too big house but it's not for much longer.

stoviesfortea · 16/03/2025 12:40

WellsAndThistles · 16/03/2025 11:57

Definitely time to go it alone, I'll bet you've missed out on so many things socially bringing up your kids. Time to get settled into a new happier life before Granny duty beckons.

Or, stay, picture yourself at 70/80 stuck with a miserable old anti social sod, too scared to invite your kids, their partners and kids round for Xmas etcas he'll just complain but you'll never be able to go to theirs as he will refuse.

I hadn’t even thought of that. But yes that’s what would happen. Already the kids rarely bring pals over compared to when they were younger, I loved having various kids pals wander in after school when they were younger but he would always have a grump about it. I asked them if they’d ever invite a future BF for dinner and they said ‘no way’ 😢 He always makes me feel having people over is a total inconvenience so I only ever invite pals over if he’s out

OP posts:
Fluffycloudsfloatinginthesky · 16/03/2025 12:40

i split after 11 years. The main point for me was realising that I was dreaming about him disappearing and how much happier my life would be. He was also undiagnosed ND

YoungSoak · 16/03/2025 12:45

CreationNat1on · 16/03/2025 10:56

Broke, messy, sex pest, who refuses holidays. Release this horny, useless beast.

I laughed so hard at this I spat out my apple tart 😁

treesocks23 · 16/03/2025 12:51

I am in quite a similar situation to you in some ways but sadly don’t have additional funds to make it easy. We had children young so I’m only early 40s and we have one at uni and one doing GCSEs. We don’t have any mutual friends. DH has a few people he sees separately from work but he’s very much ‘likes who he likes’. He sees my family about 2/3 times a year and I know he doesn’t enjoy it (big noisy family, very loving). I don’t have them to our house as he hates it. Ours is v much his sanctuary and doesn’t want that disturbed. Kids don’t have people round that much. Yet I love it. I’d love to be making bacon sandwiches for them all in the morning, I love the teenage gossip and super close to the kids. Love the idea of entertaining but he would never want to and just wants our little family. But then he doesn’t really connect or talk to the kids that much. It nearly always ends up in an argument because he can’t seem to relax or have fun and his ‘conversations’ are always one way or very lecturing and on certain topics. He doesn’t see why the kids get frustrated and he just gets annoyed that it’s because he’s ’never listened to or shown any respect’ and so instead he just doesn’t really talk. Whereas me and the kids jibber jabber about everything and they share pretty much everything with me. We’ve almost split so many times and I am thinking more of how DH would cope if they start to bring bf/gfs home which amazingly we haven’t faced yet but will soon. It’s just really jarring and like two different households. He doesn’t see it though. And we have very different attitudes to money etc as well and I do feel resentful of a lot. It’s really sad and I just don’t know how to fix it. I feel responsible for him and I can’t explain that. So I don’t feel I can leave him to be independent.

stoviesfortea · 16/03/2025 12:56

Update- so during the kitchen argument he said ‘maybe we should split if we can’t get on’. I don’t think he was expecting my reply of ‘maybe we should’. It’s obvious he’s thought things over as he’s now apologised and said he was being unreasonable and if I want I can get a new kitchen and book a summer holiday.

I didn’t feel relief though, I mainly felt ‘oh god does this mean I have to stay’. I said to him thanks for apologising but it’s the same stuff that keeps coming up time and time again that’s so frustrating. He said he will go out with me and my pals any time I ask but also I don’t even think I’d want that as it would obviously be forced and through gritted teeth cos I know he hates all that. He also said let’s go out today for a walk together… I think he’s panicking. I think I’ll keep today fine as the kids are around but said we need to talk more tomo when they’re at school

😰😞

OP posts: