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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:
davo91 · 29/05/2025 17:46

No advice, you are not being unreasonable but I could have written this myself about my partner. 2 years and 2 kids later and he's mellowed a bit but sometimes has random outbursts and tries to chuck everything he deems as 'clutter' i.e. pots and pans in the kitchen, stuff on shelves for decoration to make the place homely.

Like I say, no advice but I feel your pain!

ZoggyStirdust · 29/05/2025 17:52

This is mumsnet

messy man tidy woman - man is disrespectful ,at fault and probably abusive

messy woman tidy man - man is up tight, at fault and probably abusive

whitewineandsun · 29/05/2025 17:53

butterfly55 · 29/05/2025 08:55

Oh and I asked him to stop buying packet rice, because we already had loads. He buys more. This morning I've counted 7 packets that are out of date - I mean why???? The birds will be having a good morning anyway.

That's crazy wasteful and would piss me off.

Quebeccles · 29/05/2025 17:55

I've heard it all now - OP, you stand accused of forming 'an emotional attachment' to condiments! Repent! Never mind that your actual words were merely I might buy an expensive condiment. Which your H then uses up as quickly as possible because he can’t bear to let you have it in the house.

I have news for many people on this thread: keeping a bottle of vinegar in your cupboard for 3 months isn’t a crime and it doesn’t mean any man gets to exercise his controlling tendencies over it.

FrodoBiggins · 29/05/2025 17:57

whitewineandsun · 29/05/2025 17:53

That's crazy wasteful and would piss me off.

Today I learned that rice goes out of date 😬

Wavescrashingonthebeach · 29/05/2025 17:59

FrodoBiggins · 29/05/2025 17:57

Today I learned that rice goes out of date 😬

They probably mean the ones mixed with various flavours maybe or the pre cooked stuff. I think plain dried rice by itself is indefinite as long as its stored correctly :)

godmum56 · 29/05/2025 18:03

Wavescrashingonthebeach · 29/05/2025 17:59

They probably mean the ones mixed with various flavours maybe or the pre cooked stuff. I think plain dried rice by itself is indefinite as long as its stored correctly :)

I have found that it does get harder and take longer to cook. This is not wot I read on t'internet but by actually cooking it. It won't kill you but its worth knowing.

Dancingintherain09 · 29/05/2025 18:04

This relationship seems very unhealthy. There also seems to emotional abuse and cohersive control going on. He seems to control how you think and respond also second guessing yourself (gaslighting).
The fact you say he's unpredictable and could escalate. The fact you are scared of his reaction or retaliation is extremely worrying.
If you want to save the relationship I'd strongly suggest couples therapy. If he refuses let him know it a condition of the relationship lasting. If not start looking at how you can leave the relationship safely.

TinyFlamingo · 29/05/2025 18:12

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.

I'm so sorry.

My ex through almost all my book collection away and half my DVDs when we moved house and I was Pregnant and was so vulnerable.

The loss of money for the DVDs hurts, but a lot of those books of been building since school. Heartbroken 💗 💔 and irreplaceable collection.

ThatCyanCat · 29/05/2025 18:27

ZoggyStirdust · 29/05/2025 17:52

This is mumsnet

messy man tidy woman - man is disrespectful ,at fault and probably abusive

messy woman tidy man - man is up tight, at fault and probably abusive

Well, it's Mumsnet, a lifestyle discussion forum populated mostly by women but with a fair few incels and MRAs who don't think women should gather without supervision and correction. It's not the Old Bailey so if it turns out to be a place that, unusually, centres women rather than acting as a paragon of perfect justice, then so be it. It's only female spaces that get castigated for not being completely morally perfect. Besides, we are always being told how irrelevant we are, too, so why does it matter?

Chucklecheeks01 · 29/05/2025 18:32

TinyFlamingo · 29/05/2025 18:12

I'm so sorry.

My ex through almost all my book collection away and half my DVDs when we moved house and I was Pregnant and was so vulnerable.

The loss of money for the DVDs hurts, but a lot of those books of been building since school. Heartbroken 💗 💔 and irreplaceable collection.

Thank-you
Took me a long time to get past the gas lighting etc but I'm happy now. The kids are happy away from him (one doesnt see him) and I have a loving partner that would buy me all the hats in the world.

crumblingschools · 29/05/2025 18:34

@NikNak321 why is there no middle ground? That’s not how relationships should work. If that was a man (a bit like OP’s DH) telling his partner how the house should be, that would be deemed controlling. Why is your way the best and only way? Why no compromise?

Teddybear23 · 29/05/2025 18:36

saraclara · 28/05/2025 23:46

You need to leave him. This isn't just about minimalism vs attachment to items. He's controlling and vindictive.

My son grew up and started to behave like your husband, and started moving my things when I was at work. I’d find half my ornaments in a drawer etc and I explained to him how would he like it if when he gets his own home I started moving or hiding his things. He seemed to understand but carried on complaining about my things that had been out for years. He started complaining to his dad about his stuff too (we’re divorced) and his dad explained that as a child he himself had nothing so now he has some nice things we wants to be able to look at them.

Rhaenys · 29/05/2025 18:38

Oh God my DF does this, and we don’t even live in the same house! The other day he let himself into my back garden and threw away the boxes my garden items go in, so now when I put them back in the shed, they’ll just have to go in loose. 🤦🏼‍♀️

Funnyduck60 · 29/05/2025 18:40

Sorry but you sound like it's you who has issues. I would ask him to pay for some counselling. It isn't normal to be so attached to every day stuff. You are obviously mismatched. What is more important, junk or a happy marriage?

NikNak321 · 29/05/2025 18:50

crumblingschools · 29/05/2025 18:34

@NikNak321 why is there no middle ground? That’s not how relationships should work. If that was a man (a bit like OP’s DH) telling his partner how the house should be, that would be deemed controlling. Why is your way the best and only way? Why no compromise?

I get why you feel it's controlling...but I do not force my partner.... he's made a choice to live similarly. Had my husband not been on board with living in a tidy and clean way; we simply would not of continued from early dating and if it materialised a later date say living together...we wouldn't have lived together for very long. It's a question of compatibility....I would never of forced my way on someone...but like wise I wouldn't stay with someone who was in opposition of my way of living. In everybody there are things that are negotiable and things that aren't. It's important to me to live in a clean, tidy, organised space. I couldn't live with someone who wasn't that way 👌

JemimaPiddlepot · 29/05/2025 18:54

Funnyduck60 · 29/05/2025 18:40

Sorry but you sound like it's you who has issues. I would ask him to pay for some counselling. It isn't normal to be so attached to every day stuff. You are obviously mismatched. What is more important, junk or a happy marriage?

She hasn’t got a happy marriage though. She’s saddled with a twat who necks her Baileys in the name of keeping the cupboards tidy.

MissScarletInTheBallroom · 29/05/2025 18:54

Funnyduck60 · 29/05/2025 18:40

Sorry but you sound like it's you who has issues. I would ask him to pay for some counselling. It isn't normal to be so attached to every day stuff. You are obviously mismatched. What is more important, junk or a happy marriage?

It is actually very normal to be attached to stuff.

She doesn't need him to pay for counselling. She needs him to respect that she is a person in her own right who wants to own some stuff, and that he isn't the boss of her.

OntheGolfCourse · 29/05/2025 18:55

This is abusive controlling behaviour, get out quick please. It sounds like you’re not safe unless you totally comply with everything he does. Ask any professional who has worked with victims of domestic abuse and they will tell you that controlling is usually starting point for domestic abusive.

JJMama · 29/05/2025 19:07

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.

Well this sounds terrifying. He’s a bully and is abusing you. Using emotional responses to things like that is abuse OP. Please try to get away from him before things escalate more than they have. He is controlling you and leading you to believe you are in the wrong. What makes him right? Why are you beholden to him and his ways and whims?

BambinaCucina · 29/05/2025 19:14

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.

I already came here to say that he might choose to be minimalist but you're not, and he has no right to chuck out your possessions.

However this bit above? What a bastard. I couldn't cope with that and would rather separate than live with such a vindictive bully.

Nanny0gg · 29/05/2025 19:16

fa556 · 29/05/2025 00:01

Thanks. It's hard to know, am I exaggerating the issue? Especially the hypotheticals about 'what he would do'. Maybe I'm wrong and he'd do nothing. He's not very predictable. And maybe I'm more at fault than I can see or say.
Either way, I do feel that what you (and others, thanks) are saying is probably right. What I can do about it now is another question, any drastic change feels impossible at the moment.

He's really done a number on you

You are being abused every which way

Talk to Women's Aid

Talk more on here

Wise women will help you

Bluedenimdoglover · 29/05/2025 19:17

Are you afraid of him? It sounds as if you are giving in to him too much. If you have your own study I'd put a lock on that for a start.

If he threw out my things he'd be the first thing I'd dispose of.

Nanny0gg · 29/05/2025 19:18

Rhaenys · 29/05/2025 18:38

Oh God my DF does this, and we don’t even live in the same house! The other day he let himself into my back garden and threw away the boxes my garden items go in, so now when I put them back in the shed, they’ll just have to go in loose. 🤦🏼‍♀️

What did you say to him and what was his excuse?

Please tell me he hasn't a key to your house?

Nikki75 · 29/05/2025 19:33

You must know this isnt right for yourself.
You cant keep backing down he is bullying you .
What makes you stay in this relationship are you actually happy this isnt what a healthy relationship/marriage is x

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