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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:
MyHouseInThePrairie · 29/05/2025 11:56

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 what you’re saying is that he is controlling and abusive.

Punishing someone to that extend is NOT normal .

JemimaPiddlepot · 29/05/2025 11:58

Riaanna · 29/05/2025 10:52

did you consider the private study is a hoarders paradise?

And what if it is? He doesn’t have to set foot in it.

Hoppinggreen · 29/05/2025 11:59

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.

That sounds like a much bigger issue than him throwing your things away.
Can you leave him?

Starlight7080 · 29/05/2025 12:00

This sounds like a very stressful way to live. Your study should be out of bounds for him.
How will he cope when your children are teens? Will he be super strict with them?
This does not sound like a nice environment at all

JemimaPiddlepot · 29/05/2025 12:00

Riaanna · 29/05/2025 10:58

If you have taken from this post that there isn’t an ongoing issue of out of control hoarding I can’t help you.

You neither can nor want to help anyone. You just want to make trouble.

JemimaPiddlepot · 29/05/2025 12:01

Riaanna · 29/05/2025 11:13

It didn’t stop the other poster causing the OH a bully.

Because he is.

crumblingschools · 29/05/2025 12:01

@Summersun9 what bit of OP’s posts show she is an extreme hoarder, a bottle of Baileys more than 2 days old, a few extra socks, a receipt lying around (in her study)

Is there any bit of DH’s behaviour or reactions that you think might not be acceptable?

Riaanna · 29/05/2025 12:08

JemimaPiddlepot · 29/05/2025 12:01

Because he is.

I don’t agree.

PointsSouth · 29/05/2025 12:12

I don't think that how your husband is dealing with this is fair at all. It's coercive and rather threatening.

It's also pointless, because you are unlikely to change, and neither is he.

I'm pretty untidy, but not a hoarder - though I've lived with one. And what the hoarder considered 'objectively quite tidy' was just one ancient half-bottle of Tipp-Ex away from a life-threatening avalanche.

So one problem is the relationship, which I doubt will improve.

And another problem is the hoarding, which won't improve without professional help. I'd try to get some, if I were you - especially if you have kids, because their view of normal is going to be influenced by growing up with a hoarder.

beAsensible1 · 29/05/2025 12:14

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?

She has an entire room and in the house to keep her ripped clothes and old condiments

it is absolutely awful for other people to
live around your hoard and insane attachments and meltdowns that come with throwing away a 2 year old tin of beans

other than baileys she’s talking about condiments an receipts.
hoarders are always just about to Erwin something or fix something or take it to a charity shop or sell it at car boot it never happens.

her DH is a shit but living around the insanity is just as shit. They should separate obviously

Chucklecheeks01 · 29/05/2025 12:15

My ex DH was like this, its soul destroying. The final nail in the coffin (apart from his affair) was when he threw my collection of hats and fascinators away as I didn't wear them enough. They were stored out of the way, couldn't be seen and as we had young children we didn't socialise a lot at the time.

DelectableMe · 29/05/2025 12:16

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.

Your last sentence is very worrying.
Any reaction from me to anything gets a tenfold reaction back, the only option really is to back down.
You're not a hoarder. You're probably not even messy. You are in a relationship with a controlling bully and you need to do something about this. People on here may have links, but you need some practical advice and support.

museumum · 29/05/2025 12:20

The thing is, hoarding is a mental health issue. It’s a way to try to feel safe. So if the op is a hoarder (not saying she is) then her DH making her feel less safe is actually making it worse.
my DH tends towards hoarding at times to try to control his world. I (almost) always put his stuff in piles for him to sort out rather than doing it myself. If I did it he’d really feel out of control.

I say almost because I did secretly bin an old duvet in the garage the other day. It used to be our guest one but was 20 years old and stained when I tried to bin it a couple of years ago. It’s taken up a shelf in the garage since because he wouldnt. We don’t have pets. There’s no conceivable use for it. I couldn’t stand any longer wrestling stuff we use weekly on and off overfull shelves while that whole shelf was wasted with the old duvet in an Ikea bag.

beAsensible1 · 29/05/2025 12:24

The thing with hoarding is their MH and feeling safe comes at the detriment of everyone else’s safety and anxiousness who lives with/around them. It’s profoundly upsetting and a constant feeling of stress and overwhelm for everyone else. Objectively shit and traumatising as it gets bigger and bigger.

DelectableMe · 29/05/2025 12:26

I'm going to question whether she's a hoarder. This is what her husband is saying, but bearing the update at 23.44, it sounds as if his behaviour is very concerning.

crumblingschools · 29/05/2025 12:27

@DelectableMe I think many posters are ignoring that post

Thelnebriati · 29/05/2025 12:27

OP you might not have considered this but just because your OH is throwing things away doesn't mean he's not a hoarder. He's throwing useful things away, he may be distressed about having them around because they will eventually become an issue he has to deal with.

I think you need outside help from someone who understands hoarding, and controlling relationships.

DelectableMe · 29/05/2025 12:28

crumblingschools · 29/05/2025 12:27

@DelectableMe I think many posters are ignoring that post

Yes. It's really very concerning regarding his behaviour.

ChippingSoda · 29/05/2025 12:39

He doesn’t sound very nice tbh. And you’re saying there are broader issues in your relationship and I don’t want to minimise that. He sounds controlling.

That said it might be helpful for you to understand this perspective…. My DH has hoarding tendencies and it drives me nuts. I grew up in a cluttered, not very clean house and for me that environment makes me feel quite unwell. My partner, for example, will just empty his pockets on the bed - coins, receipts, leaflets, random bits of rubbish and tat - and just leave it there. In his office he has leaflets for local activities held in 2015. He never gets rid of post or packaging. He has belongings dating back from decades ago that he doesn’t use or wear (or like?) that we have to give house to. He has loads of books and doesn’t read. Mostly his clutter is contained to ‘his’ areas - office etc - but the general attitude of never disposing of things (eg a large pile of Gu pudding glasses by the kitchen door that he won’t let me get rid of because he “might use them in the garage”) or taking anything to charity shop still really affects me and winds me up.

If your partner is as stressed out by this as I am I can see why he acts as he does in a way (to be clear, I do chuck old receipts and rubbish that are left on my bed, but I would never throw away his belongings as they aren’t mine).

TheRareOlivePoster · 29/05/2025 12:41

Whether you're a hoarder or not, I don't think he should be throwing away your things without asking or checking in with you. You compromise for him and he should do the same for you. But throwing away things of his to show him how it feels is petty and vengeful — best to sit down and explain to him how important this is to you, try to get to the route of why it's a struggle for him to adapt to, and find a solution that works best for you both.

Verv · 29/05/2025 12:42

I think you need to split.

Husband is out of order for binning your things, but, I can also see that becoming a last resort for somebody who's sick to the back teeth of living in another persons filth and chaos.

sandyhappypeople · 29/05/2025 12:44

fa556 · 29/05/2025 00:04

I don't know if he would stick to it, but being optimistic he might, so it is worth a try, thanks for this practical tip.

I was going to suggest this box idea to be honest, it does work.

We both have a lot of things, but he has a huge hobby space in our house for all his where as I have pockets of space throughout the house, because of that my things tend to be the things left out until I get around to putting them away properly, he doesn't like clutter in the rest of the house so if he is tidying he puts anything he finds of mine on my desk, it annoys me a little as he puts anything and everything there, even stuff that is nothing to do with me, but when I mention it he goes back to just putting my stuff there.

I think he is exasperated by you leaving things around and this is the most effective way to get you to deal with it, it's not right or fair on you, but if you know things will be binned are you more likely to deal with them? In which case what he is doing is working and that is why he sees it as the correct way.

It sounds like a communication issue as much as anything, but definitely consider implementing a middle ground instead of 'your' way or 'his' way.

1SillySossij · 29/05/2025 12:46

People are not considering there are children on the house, young children whose health and safety might be at risk by her hoard. It us impossible really for us to say without seeing the hoard and she has not posted any photos to help us decide who is BU

Purplebunnie · 29/05/2025 12:52

I've come to the conclusion Riaanna is the OPs DH

JemimaPiddlepot · 29/05/2025 12:52

Riaanna · 29/05/2025 12:08

I don’t agree.

You wouldn’t.

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