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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU for calling for help

120 replies

redsky223 · 26/05/2025 16:51

Sorry it’s a long one but I’d really appreciate some honest advice and outside perspective.

My partner and I had an argument last night – it started after he came home from the pub (he’d had about 5 or 6 drinks) and wanted to order a takeaway. We couldn’t agree on what to get – I didn’t fancy what he suggested, and I didn’t want to leave the house to collect anything as I was about to shower. It felt like a small disagreement, but it escalated quickly. He said I always get my own way and he never gets what he wants.

He ended up grabbing his keys and driving off. I tried to stop him as I knew he’d been drinking, but I couldn’t follow him as our toddler was asleep upstairs. I panicked and called his mum for advice, hoping she might be able to help or calm things down. He came back about 10 minutes later – turns out he’d only driven to the local shop around 30 seconds down the road. I contacted his mum to let her know he was home safe, and thought it best to avoid any further discussions when he arrived home.

I will add he has always been against drink driving and won’t even drive after 1 drink normally, so this behaviour really shocked me.

This morning, he brought me flowers and apologised for how he reacted, but when I told him I’d called his mum, he completely lost it. He said I’d crossed a line and that I’d now damaged his relationship with his parents. For context, he is close to them, but has said before he finds it frustrating when they get too involved. He was especially angry that his dad has now cancelled plans with him and won’t speak to him because of what happened.

He has always had issues with alcohol (not an alcoholic, it just doesn’t agree with him as it can make him aggressive and emotional) It’s been a long time since anything like this has happened. He hardly drinks anymore since we had our child, and he really has tried hard to improve his relationship with alcohol. His parents are particularly upset because there have been issues in the past when he’s been drinking – it’s led to arguments with them and damage to their home. He also once punched a door in our house during an argument, so I think they’re just really upset and worried that things are slipping backwards.

He’s now ended our relationship and told me he doesn’t want to be around me right now. He’s asked me to leave the house for a night or two to give him space – but he wants our child to stay with him. I’ve never spent a night away from our toddler and I don’t feel comfortable with this as I want to keep things as normal as possible for them. I said I would go if it were just me, but I don’t think it’s right to separate like that without explanation or preparation.

I’ve already spoken to his mum and apologised for calling her – I even told her I’d overreacted – but she was lovely and said I should never feel bad for reaching out and that I could always call them. Still, I feel awful that it’s caused such tension between them, and I do feel partly responsible for getting his parents involved.

I just feel totally stuck and unsure what the right thing is. I never expected something so small to turn into this.

Was I unreasonable for calling his mum? Is he unreasonable for ending our relationship and blaming me for the issues caused?

OP posts:
C152 · 26/05/2025 17:22

I thought you were going to say your reported him to the police for drunk driving (which also would not have been a mistake, had you chosen to do so). No, you were scared and didn't know what to do, so it's not unreasonable to want to call someone else for help and advice.

DON'T leave the house or your child alone with him. THIS IS NOT YOUR FAULT. This is HIS fault. He chose to get drunk when he knows he can't handle alcohol. He chose to pick a fight with you. He chose to get in his car and drive while drunk. You did not create this situation. You did not create tension between he and his parents - his violent, drunken behaviour caused that.

He is, of course, free to manage the situation he caused as he sees fit. If he wants to end the relationship, I would say you've had a lucky escape (as hard as that may be to hear...but next time it may not be the door that he punches in a drunken rage, it may be your face, or your child). I think you need to, at the very least, write down what's happened while it's still fresh in your memory, and keep a (secret) written record of everything moving forward. Please try to get help and a plan to escape. Your PIL can see the writing on the wall, which is why his mum said you could always call them and why his dad hopes to shock/punish sense into your DH by cancelling their plans.

MounjaroMounjaro · 26/05/2025 17:26

He wants you to leave the house and your toddler because he drove when drunk? Is he insane?

IveGotAnUnusuallyLargePelvisISwear · 26/05/2025 17:26

He’s lucky you didn’t call the police. I don’t blame his parents being disgusted with him and I’m happy for you that your MIL sounds like such a kind and reasonable person.

Do not move out without your child- he could have a case that you’ve left your child and it might affect residency if he continues to be like this. I don’t see why you should move out at all- you’ve not done anything wrong, he was the one drink driving. He’s done you a favour ending your relationship though as he’s an idiot with an alcohol problem and you and your child deserve better.

YourSignalFadedIntoAnotherWorld · 26/05/2025 17:26

redsky223 · 26/05/2025 17:11

For those asking, we are not married but we jointly own the house. He does contribute quite a lot more financially as I returned to work part time after having our child, which I think he feels should give him more of a claim on it. Prior to having our child we did split mortgage/bills etc fairly evenly.

Move out as per request but take the nipper. Seek legal advice and force the sale of the house and be free of this total asshole.

GardenGaff · 26/05/2025 17:29

He has always had issues with alcohol (not an alcoholic, it just doesn’t agree with him as it can make him aggressive

Then he should never drink a drop of the stuff ever again.

Jamesjunk · 26/05/2025 17:29

Do you have any support from your family op, ?he's an alcoholic 💯 per cent, he's now trying to bully you, out of your home,this won't get any better trust me.
Get out ( of the relationship). The only reason he's mad at you contacting his mother is because he now can't rewrite the narrative to suit him. The truth is ugly and he knows it , utter twat.

Mareleine · 26/05/2025 17:31

I'd actually be tempted to tell his mum that he's trying to throw you out over this. He needs an intervention and you need support.

nomas · 26/05/2025 17:33

Tell HIM to leave. Why should you leave?!

CoughCoughLaugh · 26/05/2025 17:34

If he wants space, fair enough, but he leaves the family home, not you or your child.

MoreChocPls · 26/05/2025 17:35

DO NOT leave the house. This is HIS fault. He should not have drunk driven. What a loser. I’d be telling HIM to go.

Cantgetausername87 · 26/05/2025 17:37

He needs to be accountable for his behaviour. Not gaslight you into apologising - you did nothing wrong, if he doesn't want his parents to know - don't behave like that in the first place!
He sounds awful with his damage to the house etc so I'm sure there's more to this but do not leave the house without your child because he was drink driving.

diddl · 26/05/2025 17:38

Presumably he's pissed off that you told his mum that he was driving drunk?

I don't really know what you thought she could do!

Anyway he sounds like a waste of space so it sounds as if you'd be better off without him.

Thegreatescape12345 · 26/05/2025 17:43

He's trying to twist this into being about you. He storms out drunk and gets in a car and drives off, committing a crime and putting himself and others in danger, while you have a child together to think about and other responsibilities.

You wouldn't have had to call anyone if he hadn't gone out drunk driving! The fault is entirely his.

Do not leave, and do not let him blame you.

"I called for help because you were drunk driving. You were the one that went out drunk driving. You are the reason I had to call for help. Your actions caused this. I have done nothing wrong".

Presumably you called because you were worried about him and thought you'd need to stop him - to prevent something dangerous happening or worse - a criminal conviction.

You've done him a FAVOUR. You could have easily called the police instead.

Do not leave and absolutely do not let him shift the blame from himself on to you!

PeapodMcgee · 26/05/2025 17:44

Please tell us you are not leaving your own home. Social services would take a dim view of your child being abandoned with a violent drink driver.

It doesn't matter who earns or owns more, if you're on the deeds he cannot compel you to leave. If he kicks off do however report him to the police and he will be removed for your own safety.

An alcoholic doesn't have to drink every day, it's just someone who is a problem drinker.

It doesn't sound as if he recognises this, or cares, so I'd be wanting to end the relationship anyway.

House can be sold via court order if he doesn't comply.

whycantibeselfishforonce · 26/05/2025 17:46

He feels really guilty and embarrassed about what happened - him blaming you is because of how he feels. I don't think you did anything wrong at all. He caused the problem 100% by drinking and then storming off in his car. You just reacted in the moment and called her. You definitely should not be leaving the house. If he wants some space from you then he is the one who needs to leave.

It does sound very odd though OP, to have an argument about food escalate so badly. I hope you are able to find a way through this and move on but I'd be worried about my relationship if this were me tbh.

JohnofWessex · 26/05/2025 17:46

You own the house jointly

Neither of you can exclude the other without a Court Order

You need Legal Advice I suggest Womens Aid & you may be eligible for Legal Aid

Mix56 · 26/05/2025 17:51

You jointly own the house.
Do not leave, or if you do, you take your child
If you do, you go straight to his parents house !
He is doing a number on you. He is not your boss

BountifulPantry · 26/05/2025 17:59

Do not leave the house and your child whatever you do.

Repeat. Do NOT leave the house.

TheMimsy · 26/05/2025 18:04

If he wants space then off he fucks to somewhere else. It’s yours and your sons home @redsky223 regardless of whom pays more.

certainly wouldn’t leave my some with him if that’s how he’s acting.

do not be afraid to escalate this to the police if you are scared or worried about how angry he gets.

stand your ground and don’t leave your child.

have you told his mum what he’s saying now? His attitude stinks of deeper issues with alcohol than he wants to admit.

and who drives whilst drunk to a shop down the road - regardless of how far he went he was reckless and endangered himself and others. He’s lucky you didn’t ring the police.

stop accepting blame and stop blaming yourself or minimising his actions.

Good luck x

PeapodMcgee · 26/05/2025 18:05

By the way, if he thinks your contribution is worth less than his, he's only able to work full time because you have fallen on your sword to look after HIS child. Doubt he's making up your wage or pension contributions for you, is he? He's an abusive dick.

thankheavensforcalpol · 26/05/2025 18:08

redsky223 · 26/05/2025 17:11

For those asking, we are not married but we jointly own the house. He does contribute quite a lot more financially as I returned to work part time after having our child, which I think he feels should give him more of a claim on it. Prior to having our child we did split mortgage/bills etc fairly evenly.

He might contribute more but how much do you save on childcare by working part time? I’m assuming that was a decision you made together so he can’t hold that over you.

And the dick head drink driver leaves the house, not you.

IOSTT · 26/05/2025 18:12

redsky223 · 26/05/2025 17:11

For those asking, we are not married but we jointly own the house. He does contribute quite a lot more financially as I returned to work part time after having our child, which I think he feels should give him more of a claim on it. Prior to having our child we did split mortgage/bills etc fairly evenly.

Do you do most of the housework and childcare, as well as working? He thinks he has more right to the house?? He is a CF

Calmdownpeople · 26/05/2025 18:17

pinkdelight · 26/05/2025 16:58

Shocked that you've got a child together and he's behaving this way. Right down to ending it over you calling his mum. He's pathetic and reacting this way to make you feel like shit when it's him who's in the wrong. Don't be sucked in to his messed up way of thinking. Look after yourself and your child.

Totally agree but honestly OP who calls someone’s mun? He is a grown up with a child.

He is a dirtbag and shouldn’t have driven drunk but what exactly was his mun going to do.

Call the police or no one. He was right to be annoyed at you doing this but his reaction wasn’t annoyed it was way over the top.

Grammarnut · 26/05/2025 18:18

redsky223 · 26/05/2025 17:11

For those asking, we are not married but we jointly own the house. He does contribute quite a lot more financially as I returned to work part time after having our child, which I think he feels should give him more of a claim on it. Prior to having our child we did split mortgage/bills etc fairly evenly.

That he 'contributes' more counts for nothing here - you also contribute because you are raising the child. And a jointly owned property is joint - doesn't matter who pays the electricity bills.

Vroomfondleswaistcoat · 26/05/2025 18:19

He wants to end the relationship, he wants you to leave him alone with your toddler - and all because HE WAS COMPLETELY IN THE WRONG??

Fuck. That. Shit. Talk about spitting the dummy out. Although he needs to give up drinking. He doesn't need to be an alcoholic to have a problem with alcohol, and it seems like his problem with it is that it makes him behave like a thwarted child.