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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:
1SillySossij · 29/05/2025 06:33

JemimaPiddlepot · 29/05/2025 01:14

This is absolute crap. There’s nothing to suggest OP is a hoarder - and even if she was, that’s for her to sort.

I disagree. The things she mentions are torn clothes.... Why would you be hanging on to them?

user1492757084 · 29/05/2025 06:34

Insist that he not throw out your things.

Also make a pact with yourself to be a little more ruthless with unused, old things and try tidying one square metre of your study every Saturday for a while, until you are happier to leave the door open sometimes..

CharnwoodFire · 29/05/2025 06:36

This has to be a reversal, surely?

The OP has clearly got a load of shit that's making the house horrid.
The Ops DH is trying to tidy the house, but the OP won't let him throw out anything, even holey socks/ old recites.

The OP sounds abusive - forcing her DH to live in shit clutter

thepariscrimefiles · 29/05/2025 06:39

TheBroonOneAndTheWhiteOne · 29/05/2025 00:52

Agree.
You need to stop keeping stuff you don't need, which makes the place look untidy.

She only has stuff in her own study and her side of the bedroom. OP's husband is at the other end of the spectrum in that he requires a completely minimalist environment. They are incompatible but he is also a controlling bully.

1SillySossij · 29/05/2025 06:46

Cn you post a photo of the study and 'your side' of the bedroom, otherwise it is impossible to say whether yabu. I am married to someone, who I wouldn't call a full on hoarder, but definitely has those tendencies. I think unless you have experienced it, do not understand how psychologically draining it is to live with, and God knows I am no minimalist. How do you even clean where there's clutter? Everything should have a place, and should not be out. If it can't be put away you have too much. For example, Why are you keeping torn clothes ? Why haven't you got a place to file receipts / documents if you need to keep them safe?

SunnySideDeepDown · 29/05/2025 06:47

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.

He doesn’t sound like a nice man. He’s not trying to see your perspective.

Hes hiding behind something that’s often seen as positive (minimalism) but actually it could be anything. The fact is, he’s regularly crossing boundaries and disregarding your feelings. Hes taking your own sense of power and autonomy in your home. You no longer feel it’s a safe space for you to control your own living.

I think you need a serious talk. If he cares about you or your relationship, he’ll stop. If he doesn’t stop, that’s your answer.

Barney16 · 29/05/2025 06:51

My partner keeps stuff way beyond the time I would, think jumpers with a huge hole in or long past receipts but it doesn't irritate me and I wouldn't dream of throwing out his things. And I certainly wouldn't go through his stuff and randomly throw bits out. What's most worrying is how you describe his reaction if you threw out his things. He doesn't sound like a nice man, he sounds controlling and a bully.

SunnySideDeepDown · 29/05/2025 06:52

1SillySossij · 29/05/2025 06:33

I disagree. The things she mentions are torn clothes.... Why would you be hanging on to them?

That really doesn’t matter.

If he doesn’t like it, he should be talking with OP and potentially ending the relationship if they live incompatibly.

Throwing peoples stuff out without permission is abuse, regardless who’s doing it.

1SillySossij · 29/05/2025 06:53

thepariscrimefiles · 29/05/2025 06:39

She only has stuff in her own study and her side of the bedroom. OP's husband is at the other end of the spectrum in that he requires a completely minimalist environment. They are incompatible but he is also a controlling bully.

But the bedroom is her dh's place to relax and sleep too! He can't do that if he has to look at one side of the room piled high with crap

someonehastoberight · 29/05/2025 06:58

Are you sure you want to stay in this relationship? He sounds awful. Get a lock for the study and keep your stuff in there.

Summerhillsquare · 29/05/2025 06:59

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.

So you have a much bigger problem in that he's a bully, and see's you as competition, that he must beat at all costs.

My exH was like this. I wish we'd split up sooner, he sucked the bloody life out of me in the end.

thepariscrimefiles · 29/05/2025 06:59

CharnwoodFire · 29/05/2025 06:36

This has to be a reversal, surely?

The OP has clearly got a load of shit that's making the house horrid.
The Ops DH is trying to tidy the house, but the OP won't let him throw out anything, even holey socks/ old recites.

The OP sounds abusive - forcing her DH to live in shit clutter

Don't be so ridiculous. She only has stuff in her own study that no-one else goes in and has some things on her side of the bedroom. The socks weren't holey, he just told her that she had too many socks. He is the abusive partner in this relationship. In response to a poster suggesting that she take (not throw away) one of his possessions to see if he got upset, she said:

'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.'

He is a controlling bully and OP needs to leave him. When you say that this is a 'reversal', do you mean that it is really OP's DH who is posting? If it is him, which I very much doubt, he's very honest describing his own behaviour in my above quote as he would be admitting that he is abusive and controlling.

IfYouPutASausageInItItsNotAViennetta · 29/05/2025 07:00

The food and drink stealing is ludicrous. Whatever the reality, it seems like "You're a hoarder" is his go-to trump phrase to 'justify' doing whatever he wants to do - it sounds (to him) a lot more worthy than "I know it was your special treat, but I thought I would take it all for myself anyway, as I am selfish and I think that I matter much, much more than you do".

Does he think that Tesco has a hoarding problem, because they have food waiting to be bought on their shelves?

LillyPJ · 29/05/2025 07:01

I hate too much stuff and even though I live alone, it's a constant battle to stop it building up! However, your study is your space and he should respect that and never even go in there, let alone throw things away. For the rest of the house there needs to be compromise on both sides but it sounds like he's not compromising at all.

pelargoniums · 29/05/2025 07:03

Has anyone else ever suggested you’re a hoarder, OP? Parents, housemates, visitors? Because I suspect you’re not – maybe a bit messy/cluttery/not a minimalist – and that he’s telling you that you are as one of his many forms of abuse and control. I don’t know any form of hoarding where the person can limit it to their study and side of the bed.

This isn’t going to be solved with a lock on your study door or hiding the Baileys from him.

Totallytoti · 29/05/2025 07:04

Is he abusive or sick of the years of hoarding? We have snippets of your version op - ripped socks, stuff you were going to use, your side of the bedroom messy etc. I wouldn’t be ok with one side of the bedroom a state and just because it isn’t my side I need to put up with it. There’s kids involved, horrible for them to grow up in a hoarding environment.
the very fact that you have a hoard filled study but justify it as you keep the door closed and only you use it, tells me you really are minimising your issue and painting your dh in a bad light.

feelingbleh · 29/05/2025 07:04

No he shouldn't be throwing out your stuff however it depends what you mean by hoarder does everything have its place or have you got stuff stacked floor to celing

TheFunHare · 29/05/2025 07:05

Sorry but I also see DH's side more than others. It sounds like perhaps you both have issues - you to keep, him to streamline. Both are probably related to stress and anxiety perhaps made worse by not being a happy home right now and a need to control your environment. From your DH's perspective if he does the laundry and can't fit any more socks into your socks drawer because it's stuffed full then throwing away a pair with holes in makes sense. Similarly if he vacuuming or dusting and there are loose receipts everywhere he's probably going to be feel frustrated with having to work around loose receipts.

Barney16 · 29/05/2025 07:05

Also I don't think you sound like a hoarder. Perhaps you perceive you are because of comparison to Mr misery minimalist. Lock your study and absolutely do not let him in there. Then sit in your office and contemplate your next steps

PotOfViolas · 29/05/2025 07:07

If someone gave me a bottle of Baileys as a gift and a member of my family took it upon themselves to polish it off and throw it away I'd think they'd gone mad. How controlling.

Riaanna · 29/05/2025 07:11

I can’t tell if YABU. I am not even close to a minimalist but your constant references to you probably having more stuff suggests to me that there is a lot of junk and he’s actually being reasonable. Your examples of what is essentially rubbish - old receipts, ripped clothing etc - suggests that maybe you are the issue. Do you actually return the items? My husband has endless receipts lying around for stuff he’s going to return. Most of them aren’t and the ones that are he never actually returns so we have old receipts and stuff we don’t need that should have been returned. If you need the receipts are you putting somewhere safe and sorting within appropriate timeframe?

Riaanna · 29/05/2025 07:11

TheFunHare · 29/05/2025 07:05

Sorry but I also see DH's side more than others. It sounds like perhaps you both have issues - you to keep, him to streamline. Both are probably related to stress and anxiety perhaps made worse by not being a happy home right now and a need to control your environment. From your DH's perspective if he does the laundry and can't fit any more socks into your socks drawer because it's stuffed full then throwing away a pair with holes in makes sense. Similarly if he vacuuming or dusting and there are loose receipts everywhere he's probably going to be feel frustrated with having to work around loose receipts.

This!

Noshadelamp · 29/05/2025 07:12

Even if op is a hoarder, why does that give her DH the right to throw away her things without her permission?

I'm not even sure op is an actual "hoarder" ie with a clinical hoarder disorder. But if she is, throwing away her things isn't the right way to manage it.

feelingbleh · 29/05/2025 07:15

Noshadelamp · 29/05/2025 07:12

Even if op is a hoarder, why does that give her DH the right to throw away her things without her permission?

I'm not even sure op is an actual "hoarder" ie with a clinical hoarder disorder. But if she is, throwing away her things isn't the right way to manage it.

Because if op is genuinely hoarding as in floor to celing crap I wouldn't accept that in my home not being able to clean properly climbing over stuff plus god knows what's living in it and the smell.

Mightyhike · 29/05/2025 07:15

1SillySossij · 29/05/2025 06:46

Cn you post a photo of the study and 'your side' of the bedroom, otherwise it is impossible to say whether yabu. I am married to someone, who I wouldn't call a full on hoarder, but definitely has those tendencies. I think unless you have experienced it, do not understand how psychologically draining it is to live with, and God knows I am no minimalist. How do you even clean where there's clutter? Everything should have a place, and should not be out. If it can't be put away you have too much. For example, Why are you keeping torn clothes ? Why haven't you got a place to file receipts / documents if you need to keep them safe?

Edited

You may have a point about the bedroom but not the study. As OP is the only person to go into the study, there is no need for her DH to worry about how to clean it, or whether something is out rather than in its place. Would these things really bother you behind a closed door? Her DH should NOT be going in and throwing things away. OP can you keep the study locked?

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