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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:
DisforDarkChocolate · 02/06/2025 17:21

I don't want to be harsh but they are teens, in a new country, living with an absent Dad and his new family. How on earth did you think strict rules were going to go down. As

Miyagi99 · 02/06/2025 17:21

At 17 I’d let boyfriends and girlfriends come over and stay. I had a 21 year old boyfriend when I was 17 and partially moved out to be with him (stayed at home on school nights, stayed at his weekends and holidays).

Of course you should be supporting them financially, can’t believe that’s even in question, they won’t be able to afford rent or living expenses while they’re still at school.

Azureshores · 02/06/2025 17:22

They sound like brats from how you've described them but none of us can possibly know the situation or what their version of events is.

Their dm died when they were young and their df moved countries to be with his new family and let them go and live with their gp's. However you try to frame it, that's how they will see it.

I sympathise but this is why I'd never get involved with someone with a previous family - your dh's loyalty is with them, which is as it should be. They are minors and yes he needs to still pay for their schooling etc. What do you propose otherwise? That they drop out? Is that what you'd want?

arethereanyleftatall · 02/06/2025 17:22

Clayless · 02/06/2025 16:46

What was the alternative, they refused to move to the UK (maternal grandparents were fairly forceful on the “they can live with us don’t uproot them” at that point). I couldn’t move to France (50/50 co-parenting with my ex, he would never have allowed it). DH would have had to abandon our family and our child, not to mention be out of work at least temporarily. It wasn’t feasible.

This was an horrendously selfish decision on your part.

the child he has with you has two living parents

the children he had with his ex had one - him - living parents after the death of their mother

him moving to france, even temporarily, would have resulted in each of his children being with one of their parents

but no, you thought your child should get two parents, and his children, none

That is shocking.

yes, he should be paying for his children to go to school.
no, I’m not surprised they cannot stand you

dontgetmestartedwillu · 02/06/2025 17:22

ByBlueMoose · 02/06/2025 17:20

I'm sure it wasn't easy but he chose to stay in the UK and not chose to live in the country where his DC were living.

It's an unusual choice.

Yes, I agree, I think most fathers would do everything to try to move them over here but I guess they were settled there. In an ideal world OP's DH shouldn't have started another family in a different country from his first-born kids.

SalfordQuays · 02/06/2025 17:22

OP if you died today would you be happy for your ex to stop funding your kids in a couple of years, so they were on their own?

No wonder your step kids wanted to move out because you clearly hate them. The poor kids are now dossing down in random flat shares, and you resent your DH spending any money on them. You even resent them having taken their own possessions with them. Mind-blowing.

FilthyforFirth · 02/06/2025 17:23

Clayless · 02/06/2025 16:50

It’s complicated actually, they split when they were tiny, at that point the whole family was living in Canada. After the split they all moved to the uk, where mum only stayed for 6 months before taking the kids back to France.

Such a shit dad in general then, why an earth would he allow his kids to be moved to another country? I would NEVER live in a different country to my children and neither would DH. If we couldnt amicably agree to live in the same country, both of us would go to court to force it.

Pinty · 02/06/2025 17:23

Clayless · 02/06/2025 16:46

What was the alternative, they refused to move to the UK (maternal grandparents were fairly forceful on the “they can live with us don’t uproot them” at that point). I couldn’t move to France (50/50 co-parenting with my ex, he would never have allowed it). DH would have had to abandon our family and our child, not to mention be out of work at least temporarily. It wasn’t feasible.

They were only 13 and he was their only parent. I think he could have tried harder to make the idea of moving in with you more appealing.

Radra · 02/06/2025 17:24

FilthyforFirth · 02/06/2025 17:23

Such a shit dad in general then, why an earth would he allow his kids to be moved to another country? I would NEVER live in a different country to my children and neither would DH. If we couldnt amicably agree to live in the same country, both of us would go to court to force it.

Yeah and ironically her ex wouldn't allow it so she clearly is aware that involved parents can stop international moves

dontgetmestartedwillu · 02/06/2025 17:24

@Clayless Guess you might not come back but, may I ask, were your DH and his (now deceased) ex-wife together when you two got together?

THEDEACON · 02/06/2025 17:25

YABVU

ForFunGoose · 02/06/2025 17:25

dontgetmestartedwillu · 02/06/2025 17:24

@Clayless Guess you might not come back but, may I ask, were your DH and his (now deceased) ex-wife together when you two got together?

She already said they broke up when the children were tiny.

MorrisZapp · 02/06/2025 17:25

If I've learned one thing from French cinema it's that getting between their native teenagers and a shag is nigh impossible and indeed futile.

Sunnygin · 02/06/2025 17:27

ButteredRadishes · 02/06/2025 16:44

Okay. So they live in France away from their Dad (why did dad fuck off and live in a different country?) Then when they were 10, his dad had another child... Then they were 13, their mother died. Dad still didn't do anything... So they lived with GM for 2-3 years...and then we're uprooted to live with the (basically) absent father in a different country to live with the woman and children he chose over them.

Hmmm , I wonder why they're struggling... 🤔

Oh, and now Step mum thinks they should somehow magically be able to fund themselves at 17 ... Whilst having no mother, a father that owes them she'd load of love and time and no other options of somewhere to live.

Edited

This...poor youngsters....unfortunately not going to get any better.....the Dad now has a major issue....you as stepmother need to be very supportive..to his first children..even as young adults
...especially as they have lost their mother 😥

ByBlueMoose · 02/06/2025 17:28

dontgetmestartedwillu · 02/06/2025 17:22

Yes, I agree, I think most fathers would do everything to try to move them over here but I guess they were settled there. In an ideal world OP's DH shouldn't have started another family in a different country from his first-born kids.

But they weren't settled there.

OP said her DP and ex split up when the twins were tiny and they all lived in Canada, they all moved to the UK but the ex left after 6 months taking the kids back to France.

And DP decided to stay in the UK.

I'm wondering why?

It was years later their Mother died and they were settled there.

Mwnci123 · 02/06/2025 17:28

YABU

Nailedier · 02/06/2025 17:28

FilthyforFirth · 02/06/2025 17:23

Such a shit dad in general then, why an earth would he allow his kids to be moved to another country? I would NEVER live in a different country to my children and neither would DH. If we couldnt amicably agree to live in the same country, both of us would go to court to force it.

So... you would live in a different country to your children if a court sided with your exDHand he took them? Or if he wanted to move to Nepal or somewhere and the court agreed you'd up and move there too? No questions asked.

I know people want to shit all over this guy but in reality the children's mother was the one who chose to move them away from their father. That's on her. Yes, he didn't follow them (we don't know the reasons why) but you can't really put all the blame on him.

MissPobjoysPonies · 02/06/2025 17:28

arethereanyleftatall · 02/06/2025 17:22

This was an horrendously selfish decision on your part.

the child he has with you has two living parents

the children he had with his ex had one - him - living parents after the death of their mother

him moving to france, even temporarily, would have resulted in each of his children being with one of their parents

but no, you thought your child should get two parents, and his children, none

That is shocking.

yes, he should be paying for his children to go to school.
no, I’m not surprised they cannot stand you

All the children in this scenario have two living parents except the step DC. Everything this poster has said makes me feel so sad for those DC. So much disruption, such a young age OF course there were going to be problems - these should have been anticipated by everyone involved and some form of settling in/counselling should have been a priority.

Im not a fan of piling in on an OP but I find little cause to defend them to be honest. 😢

Nanny0gg · 02/06/2025 17:29

Clayless · 02/06/2025 16:50

It’s complicated actually, they split when they were tiny, at that point the whole family was living in Canada. After the split they all moved to the uk, where mum only stayed for 6 months before taking the kids back to France.

Was he not able to prevent that?

CopperWhite · 02/06/2025 17:30

Can you actually hear what you’re saying? They are kids! Of course their father still needs to be financially supporting them, even if they have found that they are too unhappy living with a step family. You couldn’t be less supportive of them if you tried. This is proper evil step mother. You would never cut off your own 16 year old.

Smallhaircut · 02/06/2025 17:30

You don’t sound very nice.

Namechangefordaughterevasion · 02/06/2025 17:30

Those poor children.

He should me messaging/calling/visiting them everyday asking them to come home. He should reassure them that h isn't going to force them but letting them know that they are loved and wanted, reassuring them that between you all you will work out house rules that everyone can live with. They NEED to know they have a home they can return to at any time.

PorgyandBess · 02/06/2025 17:30

Is this for real?

Of course he should continue to support them financially. Those poor kids have had what sounds to me like a crap time.

You’re coming across very badly here, OP.

grapesstrawberriespleass · 02/06/2025 17:31

This whole post reeks of “me, me, me”. They’re his kids you realise? Teenagers who seem to have had a really rubbish time. I’m not surprised they’re a bit bratty. It’s obvious you don’t like them. I can’t imagine them living with you was very fun for them either!

Zezet · 02/06/2025 17:31

This is insane and you sound cruel.

Obviously he pays for them, and given where you guys are at, you should relax the rules if that's what keeps them home.