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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To not go on the holiday?

62 replies

Onetimesconesmine · 20/04/2025 10:35

In a nutshell, I'm with an avoidant partner. I'm an anxious person and I do recognise that my traits aren't great, but honestly the avoidance is probably the main cause of my anxious behaviour.

Any time I try to bring anything up it's 'not the right time' to talk. There has never been a right time. It's been ongoing for 2 years now.

We are meant to be going away on Tuesday for a week. We have been niggling at each other a bit recently so I wanted to just clear the air before we go. To say new leaf, let's enjoy ourselves etc etc.

Even when I walk on egg shells in order to approach the conversation with tact and caution, he sees it as an attack. I said nothing about HIM or pointing any fingers, I was clear that we both probably need to do better with each other.

It turns in to him shouting at me, storming out the room to sleep on the sofa.
I said please can you come back to bed, let's just have a cuddle and be okay.
He tells me to leave him alone, he needs space. Out the duvet over his face and just shuts off, doesn't respond to me.
I know I should have left it but because of my anxiousness this is really upsetting to me so I asked how long he'd need space for as I wouldn't be able to sleep now.
He tells me to just fucking listen, go away and leave him alone.

I know avoidants process things differently and need time and space. But I cannot fathom seeing your partner crying asking you to come to bed, and you tell them to basically fuck off.

He's still not up yet, and obviously I've barely slept. We were meant to spend today getting everything sorted for the holiday.
I'm tempted to not go. I don't feel safe emotionally and I know I'm going to be hyper sensitive over the next week or so, as I often am after an argument.

Just for transparency, we don't live together or have children together (although there are children involved from previous relationship - they were not in the house at the time so not subject to the shouting).

OP posts:
DisplayPurposesOnly · 20/04/2025 10:37

Go on holiday. Tell him the relationship is over and he's not coming.

RealityContinuesToRuinMyLife · 20/04/2025 10:37

Your anxiety would improve massively if you were single.
No one should be walking on eggshells in a relationship.

FionnulaTheCooler · 20/04/2025 10:39

It doesn't sound like you are particularly compatible, you both seem to trigger each other's issues. I'd be thinking seriously about the future of this relationship, is this really the way you want to live long term?

PonyPatter44 · 20/04/2025 10:39

Oh god just bin him off, love. He's not the right person for you. Go on holiday on your own, have a few drinks and celebrate getting the rest of your life back.

DuckEgg24 · 20/04/2025 10:39

Go by yourself and there is no chance of shouting or storming off.

Left · 20/04/2025 10:39

This sounds no fun, wouldn’t being single be massively better? You can book your own holidays without angry men.

crumblingschools · 20/04/2025 10:40

Are children involved with the holiday?

What do you both get from this relationship?

Onetimesconesmine · 20/04/2025 10:41

There's no way he wouldn't go on the holiday, otherwise I would absolutely go alone.
It was a destination he particularly wanted to visit, and he paid the majority.
The choices are to go with him, or not go at all.
I suppose as I've got the AL booked off work I could try and find something last minute for myself.

OP posts:
AnneLovesGilbert · 20/04/2025 10:43

You know relationships are supposed to make you happier and life better? Otherwise what’s the point?

There’s an awful lot of therapy speak in your post, can’t you just accept you’re incompatible and better off apart? It sounds exhausting all this angst and drama, crying, duvet hiding, clearing the air and avoiding.

If you can go by yourself then do that. But for goodness sake stop wallowing in labelling everything and making everything a thing. It’s not helping.

Since your update which I cross posted with then don’t go and do something else fun instead - dump him first.

Foodylicious · 20/04/2025 10:43

Doesn't sound like a relationship worth investing anymore of yourself in.
Sounds like it's taken enough!
Either go back to yours, or kick him out.
Either go on this holiday without him, or cancel yourself going and do something else.

Onetimesconesmine · 20/04/2025 10:44

crumblingschools · 20/04/2025 10:40

Are children involved with the holiday?

What do you both get from this relationship?

No children coming - I don't want to out myself by giving too many details, but no the children aren't going to be there.
We get on very well... Until there's something I want to discuss.
I know it probably seems obvious it isn't working as an outsider, but I do tend to be impulsive with decisions and can act rashly, which can lead to me later regretting things.
Which is why I wanted to put it to the hive mind. I do respect a lot of the advice I see on here.

OP posts:
Justkeepingplatesspinning · 20/04/2025 10:44

He's emotionally abusive and it's having one heck of an impact on your wellbeing. Noone should be walking on eggshells to keep their partner happy etc.
Don't go on holiday with him. Use the time to regroup and rebalance, and if you haven't already, work through why you are with him and what he brings to your life. If this snapshot is typical, he doesn't bring much and you'll be better off without him.

Eenameenadeeka · 20/04/2025 10:45

This sounds very sad and not at all healthy. Definitely think you should take your own holiday without him (even if that's booking something else) and end the relationship.

HeatedBlanketAllYear · 20/04/2025 10:46

I feel your pain. My ex behaved like this, and worse. In the end there was nothing I could do as the problem was with him and would never see his behaviour as a problem. The way he processed conversations and always assumed the worst, never listening to what was actually said. Everything was a trigger to either ghost or gaslight me and it was exhausting. I tried bringing things up sensitively, not bringing them up, people pleasing (which never works) and treading on eggshells all the time to the extent that there was always an atmosphere.
In the end the only thing to do was to leave. I think this is where you are now. It won’t get better. You do have to go, there’s no coming back from this behaviour.

Hoydenish · 20/04/2025 10:48

He's just a horrible bully, all this bobbins about 'avoidant' is a cover for awful behaviour towards you.

I would advise you to not go on holiday with him. I know it is money down the gurgler but in another it is a decent price to pay to get yourself sorted and settled back into your own place, without him sulking and dissing you as you pack your toothbrush and hairdryer.

Onetimesconesmine · 20/04/2025 10:49

HeatedBlanketAllYear · 20/04/2025 10:46

I feel your pain. My ex behaved like this, and worse. In the end there was nothing I could do as the problem was with him and would never see his behaviour as a problem. The way he processed conversations and always assumed the worst, never listening to what was actually said. Everything was a trigger to either ghost or gaslight me and it was exhausting. I tried bringing things up sensitively, not bringing them up, people pleasing (which never works) and treading on eggshells all the time to the extent that there was always an atmosphere.
In the end the only thing to do was to leave. I think this is where you are now. It won’t get better. You do have to go, there’s no coming back from this behaviour.

This is exactly it. Everything is an attack in his mind. Even if I was to apologise and take the blame for something I'd done wrong, he would somehow think I was attacking him. The defensiveness is on another level, and he always responds with anger.
I do sometimes wonder if he could be void of empathy all together.
How did you finally pluck up the strength to walk away? Did you ever regret your decision?

OP posts:
DuckEgg24 · 20/04/2025 10:49

Book yourself somewhere and enjoy yourself.

DuckEgg24 · 20/04/2025 10:50

Hoydenish · 20/04/2025 10:48

He's just a horrible bully, all this bobbins about 'avoidant' is a cover for awful behaviour towards you.

I would advise you to not go on holiday with him. I know it is money down the gurgler but in another it is a decent price to pay to get yourself sorted and settled back into your own place, without him sulking and dissing you as you pack your toothbrush and hairdryer.

I agree with all the above.

shellyleppard · 20/04/2025 10:51

@Onetimesconesmine I'd let him go on the holiday by himself. While he's gone find somewhere else to live and call it off. Walking on eggshells around your partner is no life for anyone. You deserve so much better 🥰

ThinWomansBrain · 20/04/2025 10:54

Don't go on holiday with twatface
stay home, enjoy the time and clear all vestiges of the idiot out of your home.

Onetimesconesmine · 20/04/2025 10:54

You're all so lovely, thank you.
I honestly thought I'd get some stick for following him when he stormed off, and not just giving him the space he said he needed.
I start thinking I'm the problem for wanting to communicate.

When he finally gets up (what he's doing I have no idea), I will tell him I'm not going away. His reaction will tell me everything I need to know in regards to whether there is anything worth working on when he's back or not.

I don't think he'd ever expect me to not go. I am always the one who's there wanting to make things work, so I suspect it'll come as quite a shock.

OP posts:
ilovesooty · 20/04/2025 10:54

shellyleppard · 20/04/2025 10:51

@Onetimesconesmine I'd let him go on the holiday by himself. While he's gone find somewhere else to live and call it off. Walking on eggshells around your partner is no life for anyone. You deserve so much better 🥰

She says they don't live together. However I agree she'd be happier without him.

Find somewhere to go on holiday by yourself and get rid of him.

Iamaverysillyperson · 20/04/2025 10:56

Sounds like an unhappy relationship: he feels attacked; you feel as though you are walking on eggshells.
It's not healthy.

S0j0urn4r · 20/04/2025 10:56

Taxi!

Lurkingandlearning · 20/04/2025 11:05

How did you finally pluck up the strength to walk away?
There isn’t a single quick fix for that, but it begins with the belief that the relationship is not right for you and that you deserve to be happy. That your life, the only life you have, matters. Once you take that on board, the courage you need to end it is closer to hand.
Did you ever regret your decision? I think you know it’s unlikely anyone will regret leaving a relationship that made them unhappy. Initially, the strangeness of being single might be uncomfortable but the relief from the stress will soon override that.

Tell him to go on the holiday without you. Use that time to have a holiday of your own, either booked or just days out exploring things you enjoy.

Then end it. No one deserves to be with someone who hides under a duvet rather than have an adult conversation

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