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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To be alarmed that he wants to move in.

647 replies

OldLobster · 22/07/2025 12:58

Maybe I'm being too territorial / selfish but I'd like some second opinions...I'd like to add from the start that no children are involved in this muddle!

Met DP about 2 years ago. He had been separated for several years at that point but he and ex-wife put off selling the house while their daughter took A levels and then went to uni locally...during this time he slept in a little annex they had in the garden...no room for doubt there as I have met and spoken to ex-wife who seems nice (but very different personality to DP) she was aware of me from the start and I have observed said annex. Their daughter has now finished her course and started a job away from home and they have just put their house on the market.

From the start DP Used to come round to see me unannounced...staying over gradually became 3 then 4 then 5 nights a week although he would go home to shower, wash clothes etc. At one point he asked if we could spend more time together and I said I'd prefer to keep it at 3 or 4 nights a week...which he ignored. Yes, at this point I should have stood my ground but pathetically, I did not. My house is tiny and I work from home. We split cooking and food costs but I found it quite tiring because possibly due to upbringing and poor boundary management I always felt in hostess mode and behaved in the way I would if a friend or relative came to stay....I love my family but I'd be exhausted if they stayed for months...and miss my own space. I've tried to explain this to him...that this setup is very different from the dynamic or sharing a home together (as I've done with previous partners).

Predictably, and here we enter territory where cocklodger comments are likely and justified, the bills went up, heating, oven on all the time etc. I'd be a little more prudent when living alone. He didn't offer any help or any little token as I would when staying with a friend. Slightly tricky as he is seldom here during the day except at weekends. I've not given him a key. He doesn't live here but spends most of his free time here amd every night.

I felt embarrassed mentioning that the bills had gone up which i did after 3 months, he did actually push back a little when I did so but then started giving me the amount by which they had increased. I felt shoddy even asking.

I'd like a break from this arrangement ...so have suggested that before we look at him moving in properly or of getting somewhere together, we perhaps spend 3 months sharing an off season rental (there are lots of holiday cottages where we live and during the winter these are no more expensive than my mortage). Our incomes are similar but I have a fairly large mortgage that takes up half of mine and DP will, in addition, be getting bank interest on his house sale money. This little break would give me a chance to see what its like to live together rather than in my home where most of the costs and upkeep naturally fall to me. As mentioned, my house is tiny...there's barely room for my belongings
Dps bank interest alone would cover most of the rental and it would only be for a few months.

He likes the idea however has stated that he doesn't want to pay for it all and will only entertain it if i pay half..instead he'd like to stay at mine, paying 400 per month (my mortgage is 3 x this).

I'm not usually tight-fisted but in this case am I, for feeling that he should really be offering to take on this responsibility, just fora few months, as I have done so for 18 months?

OP posts:
3luckystars · 22/07/2025 14:04

What point are you trying to prove ?

You KNOW what he is suggesting is wrong but you are trying to make him see it without saying it. Stop.

Please read the book ‘women who love too much’

You are walking head first into a complete fucking nightmare.

Crikeyalmighty · 22/07/2025 14:06

@OldLobster great suggestion!! lol - it’s very easy to get along with someone when no demands are being made of them, particularly regards money or domestic tasks- it’s a bit like being on holiday when you can eat out every night, no cleaning needed and no demands made

ChrisMartinsKisskam · 22/07/2025 14:06

OldLobster · 22/07/2025 14:02

We get on very well 90 percent of the time but I'm wondering how much of that is because I haven't objected to things...thats why i wanted to try an off season rental for just a few months...it would benefit both of us.

Perhaps I should suggest he rent somewhere ,and I rent my house out (which would just about cover my mortage) and live with him and pay him 400 a month. Not to prove a point but genuinely because we get on well most of the time and perhaps he just doesn't know how to behave in certain situations.

I wonder what type of response the above suggestion will trigger, though :/

Don’t rent out your house
you could get the Tennant from hell
the law is changing making it much harder to evict Tennant

if it won’t cover the cost you will be running at a loss and you will be paying for someone to live in your home

Serpentstooth · 22/07/2025 14:09

Stop it OP, you're not that desperate. He will suck you dry and blame you for his inability to be a grown up. I see this happen a lot, men insidiously sliding themselves into every inch of a woman's life, uninvited yet immovable. I've not noticed it the other way around though. He is a mean and selfish creature OP. Where you think you're showing him love and considering his feelings, he's got his hand out for more, expecting it as his due. I feel furious on your behalf. Lose him, you deserve better.

ZepZep · 22/07/2025 14:10

OldLobster · 22/07/2025 14:02

We get on very well 90 percent of the time but I'm wondering how much of that is because I haven't objected to things...thats why i wanted to try an off season rental for just a few months...it would benefit both of us.

Perhaps I should suggest he rent somewhere ,and I rent my house out (which would just about cover my mortage) and live with him and pay him 400 a month. Not to prove a point but genuinely because we get on well most of the time and perhaps he just doesn't know how to behave in certain situations.

I wonder what type of response the above suggestion will trigger, though :/

Why are you considering playing games though?

Do you actually want to live with him? He doesn’t sound that nice really. Getting on with him 90% of the time is rubbish?

nomas · 22/07/2025 14:12

It’s pretty clear you don’t enjoy living with him, so I don’t know why you’re proposing to jump through all these hoops to prove it to yourself.

Tell him he can’t move in. End of.

UrbanFan · 22/07/2025 14:12

No no no no no. Get rid of him. He's a bludger and he's using you. 1 more night is 1 more night too many.

Linenpickle · 22/07/2025 14:15

You’re being a walkover and he’s trampling all over you. Stand your ground or end it.

PebbleDashAtOne · 22/07/2025 14:19

Get rid of this parasite. 😡

DisappearingGirl · 22/07/2025 14:22

I know people who met in later life who never lived together - they each have their own place and stay over at each others' sometimes. You don't have to rush to move in with him. He should get his own place and he should be the one playing "host" sometimes

Goodadvice1980 · 22/07/2025 14:24

Chuck this one back in the bin 🗑️ OP.

Has he got a gold plated cock and/ or wallet? No, he hasn’t. He is a manipulative scrounger.

In this life the givers have to have boundaries because the takers don’t have any!

3luckystars · 22/07/2025 14:25

Do you think he would want to live with you if he owned outright a big huge house and loads of money? Is he moving in with you out of love and desperately wanting to live with you, or for financial reasons??

Wake up. Neither of ye want to live together. That’s what it looks like. Be strong !!!

OldLobster · 22/07/2025 14:31

ZepZep · 22/07/2025 14:10

Why are you considering playing games though?

Do you actually want to live with him? He doesn’t sound that nice really. Getting on with him 90% of the time is rubbish?

It's not that I'm playing games it's that (stupidly) I would give living with him a try in those circumstances.

OP posts:
TheFinePrintess · 22/07/2025 14:31

The reason you get in 90% of the time is because he’s got you dancing to his tune! Start pushing back and this will soon drop

Daleksatemyshed · 22/07/2025 14:31

You've let him stay every night but he's not living with you, that doesn't work Op and on top of that you've treated him like a guest, he must think he's got it made.
You're not going to be able to backpeddle into a sensible arrangement now, he's got used to being spoilt by you and that's what he expects in the future, he wants to be your lodger with a small payment but lots of perks on the side, that's not love, that's him being selfish.
In future @OldLobster start as you mean to go on and learn to say No

RosaMundi27 · 22/07/2025 14:32

Why doesn't he rent a flat/house on his own, and invite you over to stay for a few nights a week, for say, a year?

Steelworks · 22/07/2025 14:32

Another thread whereby a (soon to be) homeless man eyes up a single woman with property.

He’s working plus will have money from the house sale. He can rent and you can visit him at his house! There’s no need for you to live together at this stage.

Steelworks · 22/07/2025 14:33

@RosaMundi27 snap!

tryingtobesogood · 22/07/2025 14:37

OldLobster · 22/07/2025 14:02

We get on very well 90 percent of the time but I'm wondering how much of that is because I haven't objected to things...thats why i wanted to try an off season rental for just a few months...it would benefit both of us.

Perhaps I should suggest he rent somewhere ,and I rent my house out (which would just about cover my mortage) and live with him and pay him 400 a month. Not to prove a point but genuinely because we get on well most of the time and perhaps he just doesn't know how to behave in certain situations.

I wonder what type of response the above suggestion will trigger, though :/

It makes more sense for him to get his own place and you visit him there for a while. It will help you see what he is like when he is responsible for his own finances and for hosting you.

it will also be telling if he reacts badly to you setting boundaries/saying no.

pinkdelight · 22/07/2025 14:38

"perhaps he just doesn't know how to behave in certain situations."

What kind of allowances are you making for this man?? Why is he allowed to get to this age, taking the piss out of generous women who give him the benefit of the doubt? He's just gone through one divorce. If he's not capable of self-reflection and decent fair behaviour already, he's not going to suddenly learn it. He is selfish and will never consider your needs.

OldLobster · 22/07/2025 14:39

Daleksatemyshed · 22/07/2025 14:31

You've let him stay every night but he's not living with you, that doesn't work Op and on top of that you've treated him like a guest, he must think he's got it made.
You're not going to be able to backpeddle into a sensible arrangement now, he's got used to being spoilt by you and that's what he expects in the future, he wants to be your lodger with a small payment but lots of perks on the side, that's not love, that's him being selfish.
In future @OldLobster start as you mean to go on and learn to say No

Exactly. Sage advice. Back peddling isn't possible now.

OP posts:
Chamomileteaplease · 22/07/2025 14:41

I like the idea of him renting his own place and you staying over there a few times a week.

See how he likes the boot being on the other foot. I can bet you he won't have stupid host syndrome!

What;s the rush for living together anyway? You have a lot to sort out before getting to that stage!

MollyButton · 22/07/2025 14:43

I’d just get rid. He has been pushing at your boundaries all the way.
I suspected the resolution with his ex wife is because he has no more excuses to stop them selling the marital home and/or she has put her foot down.

ButterCrackers · 22/07/2025 14:43

You don’t want live with him and this is fine. It sounds like it’s the easy option for him so he’s keen to not have to do anything - no looking at places, moving in, bills etc. He thinks he can move into your ready made home. Tell him no that he can’t move in. Keep your place as yours. If he’s a respectful partner he’ll respect your decision.

amicisimma · 22/07/2025 14:43

"...which he ignored."

So if you ask for something that doesn't suit him he ignores you. Nice. Not. Doesn't bode well for the future.

And remember that no man falls in love as fast as one who needs somewhere to live.