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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

DH throwing out my things

605 replies

fa556 · 28/05/2025 23:20

DH is a minimalist to the extreme, he has very little in terms of 'things'. Naturally I'm the opposite, a hoarder. Over the years I've conceded ground and downsized a LOT to pacify him, although it's probably fair to say that I still have too much stuff and it's also a bit messy and cluttered. Having kids has obviously brought more stuff to the house generally, but my own "stuff" is contained, with most of the house being tidy and (from my perspective at least) quite minimalist as he likes it. The "stuff" is in our bedroom (my side) to some extent, but mostly in my study which only I use.
In response to my compromises, instead of compromising too he seems to be going the other way. I'm increasingly finding my stuff in the bin, or things have just disappeared. I'm not talking about my most prized possessions, but they are things that I have bought, with my own money, for myself, that are on my side of the bedroom or in my study. I've always known not to leave things lying around in the kitchen or lounge or whatever for this reason, but it's like he's encroaching more and more on what I'd consider limited private spaces. To be fair, a lot of them are not big stuff. But even if it's just a receipt, it might be for some things I had meant to return or where I was going to claim something back as an expense. But to him, he's right and I'm wrong.
Even if it's actually something that is completely unimportant and doesn't matter to me, I still feel in principle that he shouldn't be throwing out my things from my study without checking or at the very least telling me. Am I being unreasonable?
When I pick him up on something specific, the response is always about the actual thing in question "what were you going to do with it anyway / it had a rip in it / you said yourself you have too many socks". Where for me, it's about the principle of it being up to me what to do with my own things. He says my clutter affects him as he lives here too, but he increasingly seems to be looking for it beyond surface level (while he is extremely private about his own things).
His 'need' to get rid of things also extends to perishable goods. So I might buy an expensive condiment (where he won't spend a penny more than he has to on anything), or I'll get a bottle of Baileys as a present from someone, he'll use them up as fast as he can, I'm talking days, not really 'enjoying' them as far as I can see, but just to get them out of the house. And inside I feel "hey they are my nice things", but am I just being selfish?
The other side is that I probably do have too much stuff and too much emotional attachment to 'things'. And gifts I receive like the Baileys could be in the cupboard for weeks/months otherwise. He says they're there to be used. Should I just give in?
At the moment I'm not giving in, at least not in my head, it's a huge source of frustration for me. But any effort to put a boundary in place on this, as with anything else really, is met with a bullheaded wall of stubborness ("I'm not agreeing to that"). I basically have to let it go time and again. But it's making me very anxious, what will be gone next?

OP posts:
AnonymousBleep · 29/05/2025 10:13

Riaanna · 29/05/2025 10:08

If it’s left lying around yes.

You also don’t need a receipt as proof of purchase for faulty items, bank statement is fine. Or let me guess there’s wads of cash lying around with the ripped up socks and old receipts.

You do need a receipt, especially if the item was part of a larger purchase and therefore won't show up on a bank statement.

Purplebunnie · 29/05/2025 10:13

Riaanna · 29/05/2025 10:08

If it’s left lying around yes.

You also don’t need a receipt as proof of purchase for faulty items, bank statement is fine. Or let me guess there’s wads of cash lying around with the ripped up socks and old receipts.

Sorry you are wrong, I bought a gold necklace for my DD's birthday, it broke the first time she wore it. I couldn't find the receipt but I had proof on my credit card statement. The shop refused to replace it as it was no longer a stock item (yes two months after we'd purchased it) so the item was no longer on their stock record. Credit card statement was not accepted.

You need a receipt

Edit to add it was a manufacturing fault I had to pay to get it repaired

Blondeshavemorefun · 29/05/2025 10:14

fa556 · 28/05/2025 23:44

Thanks for the support. But if I did that, the response would be colossal. Either something related but much more extreme like throwing out ALL of my somethings, or it would be something seeminly unrelated but very negative and destructive, maybe telling his family I'm not able to go with them on the extended family holiday this year or something like that. Any reaction from me to anything gets a tenfold reaction back, the only option really is to back down.

Or leave and get a divorce

Hardly sounds a marriage you are happy in

MissScarletInTheBallroom · 29/05/2025 10:15

Riaanna · 29/05/2025 10:09

It is my place and her husbands to expect to not live in rubbish.

Sounds like you and her husband should get together and live in a sterile, soulless cell.

wildfellhall · 29/05/2025 10:15

I think his binning of your stuff is bad but it seems like a symptom not a cause.

It sounds like he’s acting in anger as he’s had enough. Not acceptable but this is a marriage in crisis and you have to make a livable system together.

Marriage is literally a team sport, you have to work together and make compromises and work out a livable way to be.

Otherwise you end up apart. What is this marriage worth to you both and what are you both prepared to do to keep it together? Those would be my starting points and he should of course not chuck your stuff out.

Riaanna · 29/05/2025 10:17

AnonymousBleep · 29/05/2025 10:13

You do need a receipt, especially if the item was part of a larger purchase and therefore won't show up on a bank statement.

No you don’t. But again, if it’s important it should be stored away somewhere safe not left lying around.

AnonymousBleep · 29/05/2025 10:17

Purplebunnie · 29/05/2025 10:13

Sorry you are wrong, I bought a gold necklace for my DD's birthday, it broke the first time she wore it. I couldn't find the receipt but I had proof on my credit card statement. The shop refused to replace it as it was no longer a stock item (yes two months after we'd purchased it) so the item was no longer on their stock record. Credit card statement was not accepted.

You need a receipt

Edit to add it was a manufacturing fault I had to pay to get it repaired

Edited

Yep I just had to return a broken air fryer to the manufacturer and they insisted on the receipt as proof of purchase (luckily I'd kept it). They obviously want to make it as difficult as possible to return anything and so insisting on a piece of paper that's probably been chucked out months ago makes sense.

Riaanna · 29/05/2025 10:18

Purplebunnie · 29/05/2025 10:13

Sorry you are wrong, I bought a gold necklace for my DD's birthday, it broke the first time she wore it. I couldn't find the receipt but I had proof on my credit card statement. The shop refused to replace it as it was no longer a stock item (yes two months after we'd purchased it) so the item was no longer on their stock record. Credit card statement was not accepted.

You need a receipt

Edit to add it was a manufacturing fault I had to pay to get it repaired

Edited

You should have made a claim because what they did was unlawful. Because you don’t know your rights doesn’t make it permissible.

HighLadyofTheNightCourt · 29/05/2025 10:21

wildfellhall · 29/05/2025 10:15

I think his binning of your stuff is bad but it seems like a symptom not a cause.

It sounds like he’s acting in anger as he’s had enough. Not acceptable but this is a marriage in crisis and you have to make a livable system together.

Marriage is literally a team sport, you have to work together and make compromises and work out a livable way to be.

Otherwise you end up apart. What is this marriage worth to you both and what are you both prepared to do to keep it together? Those would be my starting points and he should of course not chuck your stuff out.

Did you miss the bit where the OP states she has been the only one in the marriage to make concessions?
Where he purposefully eats/drinks her treats and presents even though he doesn’t like them, just to get the out of the house?
Or where she says his reactions are vindictive and disproportionate?

godmum56 · 29/05/2025 10:23

Riaanna · 29/05/2025 10:11

In which case it shouldn’t be left lying around.

why are you defending a bully?

Riaanna · 29/05/2025 10:24

godmum56 · 29/05/2025 10:23

why are you defending a bully?

Why are you defending a slob?

PaterPower · 29/05/2025 10:28

Sad to say it, but yours doesn’t sound like much of a marriage.

Compromise is supposed to be a mutual meeting in the middle, not a bullying enforcement of what one party wants, with no consideration for the other.

You have young kids, so I understand why you might not want to split up / divorce him, but I don’t think you’d be wrong to consider it.

crumblingschools · 29/05/2025 10:34

@Riaanna what compromises is DH making? OP says her DH response would be colassal if she threw something of his away? Do you finish all condiments within a couple of days? Do you dictate how many clothes a partner should have (obviously if you end up with one drawer and your partner had every other bit of storage in the house then a conversation would need to be had but you shouldn’t automatically bin it without a conversation). Ripped clothes can be mended. DS would be impressed if I chucked his jeans with a hole in the knee. He wouldn’t complain if I mended a hole in the crotch in them. But I would check with him before I binned them if I thought they were too far gone to be worn or mended, especially as he buys most of his clothes now. They are not my clothes to decide what to do with them

Are you controlling in your relationship/household?

Comtesse · 29/05/2025 10:38

Riaanna · 29/05/2025 10:24

Why are you defending a slob?

Well that is charming. Maybe you would get on well with OP’s bullying husband.

TicklishMintDuck · 29/05/2025 10:41

fa556 · 28/05/2025 23:44

Thanks for the support. But if I did that, the response would be colossal. Either something related but much more extreme like throwing out ALL of my somethings, or it would be something seeminly unrelated but very negative and destructive, maybe telling his family I'm not able to go with them on the extended family holiday this year or something like that. Any reaction from me to anything gets a tenfold reaction back, the only option really is to back down.

So why are you staying with him? He sounds controlling and manipulative.

Riaanna · 29/05/2025 10:43

crumblingschools · 29/05/2025 10:34

@Riaanna what compromises is DH making? OP says her DH response would be colassal if she threw something of his away? Do you finish all condiments within a couple of days? Do you dictate how many clothes a partner should have (obviously if you end up with one drawer and your partner had every other bit of storage in the house then a conversation would need to be had but you shouldn’t automatically bin it without a conversation). Ripped clothes can be mended. DS would be impressed if I chucked his jeans with a hole in the knee. He wouldn’t complain if I mended a hole in the crotch in them. But I would check with him before I binned them if I thought they were too far gone to be worn or mended, especially as he buys most of his clothes now. They are not my clothes to decide what to do with them

Are you controlling in your relationship/household?

Not remotely but I also don’t live with someone who leaves literal rubbish lying around whilst openly admitting to having too much stuff / being a hoarder.

HighLadyofTheNightCourt · 29/05/2025 10:46

@RiaannaI think you need to look up the definition of a slob. Nothing the OP has said puts her in that category.

You seem very quick to defend get bully of a husband. Do you think his behaviour is acceptable?

Mightyhike · 29/05/2025 10:47

@Riaanna did you read the bit that said the receipt was in her private study? Not just lying around the house?

insomniacalways · 29/05/2025 10:49

He sounds mean - I think you say no to throwing my stuff away. You can do what I do with my kids which is they have a basket. I put stuff in it that I think may be broken, not needed or too small and they go through and put stuff in the bin or put it away. I would def say no to eating /drinking anything given to me.

Tagyoureit · 29/05/2025 10:50

Have you posted this before?

This sounds so familiar and it turned the poster was a hoarder and had kept everything her children had ever owed because it may come in useful one day for someone else but had never made an effort to clear anything out and her husband felt like they were drowning in their own home.

If you have hoarding tendencies, it really needs to be address but your dh needs to help you with that rather than throwing stuff away. However, if he is throwing out broken, ripped items, you do need to let those go.

Quebeccles · 29/05/2025 10:51

'Literal rubbish'? Come off it.

I’m imagining OP as completely normal and her H as an aspiring John Pawson who wants a completely white and featureless interior with nothing visible, just four walls, a ceiling and floor with no possessions, no handles on any kitchen units and of course no appliances or sockets to be seen. I once read an interview with the Pawsons - his wife worked for Colefax and Fowler so they were at absolute extremes in their approach to design. She was asked how they bridged the gap between them and she said words to the effect of 'we didn’t, he won and I had to give up'.

With OP, sadly it sounds like his way or the high way.

Riaanna · 29/05/2025 10:51

HighLadyofTheNightCourt · 29/05/2025 10:46

@RiaannaI think you need to look up the definition of a slob. Nothing the OP has said puts her in that category.

You seem very quick to defend get bully of a husband. Do you think his behaviour is acceptable?

I don’t think there is sufficient in the original
post to determine one way or the other. But I do think it’s unreasonable to have receipts lying around, ripped clothing, excess socks, and to hoard / have too much stuff and think that doesn’t impact the rest of the household. My interpretation of this post is that the OP has too much stuff and that a lot of it is literal rubbish and he has had enough.

Riaanna · 29/05/2025 10:52

Mightyhike · 29/05/2025 10:47

@Riaanna did you read the bit that said the receipt was in her private study? Not just lying around the house?

did you consider the private study is a hoarders paradise?

Anonycat · 29/05/2025 10:54

He sounds as if he has real mental health problems. The only alternative is that he is a "control freak" (nasty term but I don’t know how else to put it). Ask him which is true for him. It sounds to me as if he needs therapy.

I can sort of understand the bedroom stuff, because what you keep on your side affects the look of the whole room, but the rest is ridiculous and insulting. I would find it very, very difficult to carry on living with a man who treated me so disrespectfully - don't be gaslit into thinking it’s you that is the problem.

Mightyhike · 29/05/2025 10:57

Riaanna · 29/05/2025 10:52

did you consider the private study is a hoarders paradise?

But so what if it is? He has all the other rooms in the house to be a minimalist!