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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Step kids have moved out, DH is still funding them

308 replies

Clayless · 02/06/2025 16:35

Hi, apologies if this gets long.

DH and I have been together 8 years, he is half British, half . He has 2 children, twins who are 17. I have 2 children who are 14 and 12, together we have a 6 year old.

Until last summer DHs children were living in France, for various reasons they have come to live with us and do their last 2 years of school. While in France DH would see them on all their holidays including a long stint with his parents in the summer and he paid for them to attend an international school. Their mother passed away when they were 13, but they continued to live in France with their maternal grandparents as they didn’t want to move and he couldn’t move due to work and our child together.

Anyway when they arrived here we immediately enrolled them in independent schools, we shifted rooms about including having my 14 and 12 year old share as we only have a 5 bedroom house. We were excited to have them and have enjoyed having them live with us.

However, things seemed to take a turn after Christmas, I think they struggled with our more structured approach to parenting vs the more laissez faire style they were used to. Little things like knowing where they were at any given time, no boyfriends/girlfriends in their room. They only turned 17 in the middle of May.

His DD was easier than his DS. She immediately got a part time job saying we didn’t give her enough money and she hated being in the house with us. She works Saturdays and Wednesday evenings in a restaurant. Through this she met a 22 year old lad and they started dating. We said under no circumstances could he stay in her room but on several occasions we’d come home from work to him and her cuddling in her bed. She would also lie to us and say she was sleeping over at a friends but actually be at his.

His DS on the other hand would swear at us, tell us we were controlling etc. He would leave his room a total mess, he refused to do any chores, occasionally skipped school and just generally had no respect.

Now about 5 weeks ago (so still 16). We had taken my children and our little one to see my parents for the day, his 2 didn’t want to come. We got back and everything more or less was gone from his DD’s room. All her clothes, her expensive keyboard we bought, her expensive tennis rackets, books everything. When we asked his DS where she was he said she’d decided to move in with her 22 year old boyfriend. He refused to give an address and said “don’t worry I’ll be out of here soon too”. Eventually we were able to talk to her and she said she would still go to school but she wasn’t coming back to live with us as it was depressing and made her miserable. She kept pointing out she was 16 and could legally move out. We have been able to find out she’s living with her boyfriend in a flat share (seriously doubt the landlord knows she’s there or her age). DH was devastated but has decided not to force it.

2 weeks later his DS moved in with his maternal cousin (sleeping on his sofa) and is refusing to come back too.

DH is insisting he will still pay for their school, and is sending them money for the tube/clothes/food. He said the only thing he won’t be providing for them is money for rent as if they can’t afford that they can always come back here. He said he also won’t be asking them to return any of them items they took.

AIBU to think if they want provided for they should live here and if they are happy to no longer live here then we shouldn’t provide for them anymore?
We are struggling to make everything work financially and it feels like he doesn’t see that our child together and my children are now going without so his kids can through a strop!

OP posts:
BIossomtoes · 04/06/2025 17:28

ButteredRadishes · 04/06/2025 17:20

They can't be that poor... Are they not claiming universal credit? Getting help with their rent?

I'll bet they haven't actually cut back to essentials.

I can't believe he's been applying for multiple jobs every day for 6 months and got nowhere... Perhaps he just isn't trying hard enough?

Edited

You really haven’t got a clue, have you? Do you know how much a single person gets on universal credit? Even the civil servants at the Job Centre acknowledge you can’t live on it.

Ignore it @Newname71. I’m sure your boy greatly appreciates what a decent parent he’s got.

ButteredRadishes · 04/06/2025 18:02

BIossomtoes · 04/06/2025 17:28

You really haven’t got a clue, have you? Do you know how much a single person gets on universal credit? Even the civil servants at the Job Centre acknowledge you can’t live on it.

Ignore it @Newname71. I’m sure your boy greatly appreciates what a decent parent he’s got.

Oh so he hasn't claimed it then...

And I'll put money on the fact he's not properly job hunting... He could find work easily if he wanted. It's funny how when my BIL wa made redundant, he worked as a Amazon and Uber delivery driver for the month or two that it took him to find a "proper" job in recruitment to replace his one he lost

But I guess it's easier watching his mother financially cripple herself...

Newname71 · 04/06/2025 18:34

ButteredRadishes · 04/06/2025 17:20

They can't be that poor... Are they not claiming universal credit? Getting help with their rent?

I'll bet they haven't actually cut back to essentials.

I can't believe he's been applying for multiple jobs every day for 6 months and got nowhere... Perhaps he just isn't trying hard enough?

Edited

They’re only entitled to about £7 a week UC.
They’ve cut back as far as they can.
He’s applied for many, many jobs. I know how many because I have his login details for Indeed.
He did get one job through an agency but as soon as April came the firm got rid of all the agency staff. (Budget cuts)
He’s registered with every agency in the area.
There are genuine and valid reasons he’s not having much success.
At the end of the day I’d rather suffer financially myself than see them fail in their first home together. I have my reasons for this.

DeftLemonTraybake · 08/06/2025 12:02

Askingforafriendtoday · 03/06/2025 08:06

22 and 17 is not that odd, 4.5 to 5 years between them, nothing! Girls mature more quickly than men as is well known

No, what's 'well known' is adult men preying on female DC and justifying it by saying they're 'mature'.

Then society which is a patriarchy going along with it for centuries.

It's one of the reasons feckless parents, Police, social services, and other agencies gave for not protecting female DC from abuse by grooming gangs. As well as the more isolated incidents of grooming and abuse.

JayaRo · 08/07/2025 20:44

I would contact social services for support and advice, particularly given the DH situation. They are still legally considered children under the law in the UK, so safeguarding legislation will still apply.

RedSammis33 · 19/01/2026 14:08

It's pretty clear you have zero sympathy for those kids. I can just imagine how poorly you treated them for both to flee the household.

You're trying to be careful in crafting your post, but we can all read through the BS. You mistreated them, they left.

And now you want your husband to abandon his kids because you don't see them as part of your family. Would you abandon your children if he decided he didn't want to fund their education any longer? No, you wouldn't.

You're honestly a terrible person.

thankfulnessisnotbizarre · 25/01/2026 18:18

Poor kids. You got all of this man and the kids have not got their mother nor their father....

thankfulnessisnotbizarre · 25/01/2026 18:20

also your husband is not half and half. If one of his parents was/is British , he is automatically fully British, no matter his French side or what the French law is

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