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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Fall out with partner over my disrespect.

134 replies

Tracey555 · 07/08/2025 18:41

I’ve been with my partner nearly 3 years, we don’t live together.

I’m struggling with how we resolve arguments and his response to arguments.

English is his second language, and sometimes I know he hasn’t heard or understood something, especially in a social group.

He lives across the road from his local and we go in often, it’s always the same folk in there in an afternoon, 3 men, nice enough, but I have to try and slot into the conversation. Today we were joking about the old exam systems from the 80’s I knew my partner hadn’t understood something, but he was laughing anyway. I stupidly said “well he doesn’t get it even though he is laughing” I genuinely didn’t mean it come across as it did, but felt bad.

When we got back to his, he was acting odd, quiet and he said I had embarrassed him…I apologised, but he was still annoyed and .we ended up arguing and I left. I don’t want to message him as he usually upsets me more with his response, with veiled threats of us breaking up etc, if I don’t message he ignores me until I reach out.

AIBU or is this a bit toxic.

OP posts:
IHopeYouStepOnALegPiece · 07/08/2025 19:31

Tracey555 · 07/08/2025 19:06

No I’m not a bully. But it was to do with our education system and it was a stupid thing to say. I know that. And I have apologised

But you're making him the issue, you're making him out to be the bad guy when you were unkind to him and embarrassed him.

Momstermash94 · 07/08/2025 19:32

You did embarrass him and it was a mean comment, however the silent treatment and threats of breaking up is also an immature approach to resolving an argument. The whole relationship sounds a bit toxic imo.

Tracey555 · 07/08/2025 19:33

I am not saying I wasn’t mean. Yes I was. I don’t expect him to get in touch after that. But what I’m saying in any argument we have, regardless of who was to blame, it’s always me who reaches out, and I don’t mean after a couple of hours, it can go on for days. I wasn’t showing off for attention either, I don’t even know why I said it, but yes I deserve these comments on here obviously, but I was asking for advice on conflict/arguments in general.

OP posts:
Arlanymor · 07/08/2025 19:42

Leaving aside the comment which you know was mean and hopefully will try and do better with in the future…

I think you both have an issue with how you resolve conflict. You said he was acting odd - he was acting hurt, that’s not odd, and it’s a bit of a shame that you couldn’t connect the dots without him having to point out how you had humiliated him. You then say that you apologised but he was still annoyed - he’s allowed to be. He’s working through his feelings and an apology, while being the right thing to do, doesn’t magically erase what happened or instantly make him feel better. You need to let it sink in. Why then did you argue? Because he wouldn’t instantly ‘perk up’? Honest question, why did you argue?

The second issue of his conduct over messages is also problematic. Veiled threats of breaking up are horrible and a tactic designed to destabilise you and put you on edge. That’s unacceptable. He needs to stop doing that, it’s wrong.

When you say you always get in touch because he ignores you - is it the case that if you never made the first move he would never contact you again? Or is it that he needs more space than you do, so you ‘crack’ first because you need communication first? Again, honest question. Because if he needs a week to calm down and to want to talk to you, whereas you can’t go 24 hours without communication then that’s a difference in the way you manage your own emotions and those ways may not be compatible.

hmmimnotsurewhy · 07/08/2025 19:43

Who cares what your intentions were, it means nothing. That was a very nasty thing to have said. Very nasty. I’m doubtful that you are so innocent as such words don’t really pop out from someone who is generally not the problem

Mewling · 07/08/2025 19:47

Had you been drinking, OP?

Agapornis · 07/08/2025 19:49

I'm a foreigner living in the UK. I wouldn't date someone who made remarks like the one you made, because it's hard enough to fit in without dealing with xenophobia.

Neither of you seem right for each other.

Tracey555 · 07/08/2025 19:49

Arlanymor · 07/08/2025 19:42

Leaving aside the comment which you know was mean and hopefully will try and do better with in the future…

I think you both have an issue with how you resolve conflict. You said he was acting odd - he was acting hurt, that’s not odd, and it’s a bit of a shame that you couldn’t connect the dots without him having to point out how you had humiliated him. You then say that you apologised but he was still annoyed - he’s allowed to be. He’s working through his feelings and an apology, while being the right thing to do, doesn’t magically erase what happened or instantly make him feel better. You need to let it sink in. Why then did you argue? Because he wouldn’t instantly ‘perk up’? Honest question, why did you argue?

The second issue of his conduct over messages is also problematic. Veiled threats of breaking up are horrible and a tactic designed to destabilise you and put you on edge. That’s unacceptable. He needs to stop doing that, it’s wrong.

When you say you always get in touch because he ignores you - is it the case that if you never made the first move he would never contact you again? Or is it that he needs more space than you do, so you ‘crack’ first because you need communication first? Again, honest question. Because if he needs a week to calm down and to want to talk to you, whereas you can’t go 24 hours without communication then that’s a difference in the way you manage your own emotions and those ways may not be compatible.

Thank you, you have made some really good points, you are right I did expect him to ‘perk up’ when really I should have allowed him to feel the hurt and process it….we argued because he was silent with me, no eye contact nothing, for me it felt like I was punished, the context didn’t matter, even though I was in the wrong 100%, as this is how it always plays out.

with regards to the no contact, I honestly don’t know how long it Would go on, because yes it is always me who cracks…and he knows that too. I don’t deal with rejection very well, due to my history, that is something I need to work on within myself.

OP posts:
whitewineandsun · 07/08/2025 19:52

Do you often humiliate him like that? I'd be over it, too.

He should just have told you, though, instead of the stupid silent treatment.

OtterlyMad · 07/08/2025 19:52

DoYouReally · 07/08/2025 18:47

You basically publicly announced that he's an idiot.

It's insulting even if accurate.

This made me cackle

whitewineandsun · 07/08/2025 19:53

Agapornis · 07/08/2025 19:49

I'm a foreigner living in the UK. I wouldn't date someone who made remarks like the one you made, because it's hard enough to fit in without dealing with xenophobia.

Neither of you seem right for each other.

This. I'm not there anymore, but I agree.

Tracey555 · 07/08/2025 19:54

whitewineandsun · 07/08/2025 19:52

Do you often humiliate him like that? I'd be over it, too.

He should just have told you, though, instead of the stupid silent treatment.

No I have never humiliated him before.

OP posts:
PamIsAVolleyballChamp · 07/08/2025 19:56

Tracey555 · 07/08/2025 19:54

No I have never humiliated him before.

Would he say the same?

Tracey555 · 07/08/2025 19:57

PamIsAVolleyballChamp · 07/08/2025 19:56

Would he say the same?

Yes

OP posts:
Enrichetta · 07/08/2025 19:57

I don’t want to message him as he usually upsets me more with his response, with veiled threats of us breaking up etc, if I don’t message he ignores me until I reach out.…. in any argument we have, regardless of who was to blame, it’s always me who reaches out, and I don’t mean after a couple of hours, it can go on for days.

This is who he is, @Tracey555 - he won’t change, the whole relationship is both toxic and pointless- so why would you want to stay with him?

Plus, why do you often spend your afternoon in the pub, drinking with regulars who presumably are not real friends? Surely you realise that you could use your time more productively…

Arlanymor · 07/08/2025 19:59

Tracey555 · 07/08/2025 19:49

Thank you, you have made some really good points, you are right I did expect him to ‘perk up’ when really I should have allowed him to feel the hurt and process it….we argued because he was silent with me, no eye contact nothing, for me it felt like I was punished, the context didn’t matter, even though I was in the wrong 100%, as this is how it always plays out.

with regards to the no contact, I honestly don’t know how long it Would go on, because yes it is always me who cracks…and he knows that too. I don’t deal with rejection very well, due to my history, that is something I need to work on within myself.

You’re welcome and thanks for elaborating further. It sounds like you’ve both got into a negative loop in terms of how you both deal with disagreements. You probably both fall into patterns of behaviour - him being silent, you reaching out first to try and instigate communication - neither of which are serving either of you. I wouldn’t go so far as to call it toxic if no one is being deliberately malicious, but I do think you need to alter how you both approach conflict. For me, if someone was being quiet and needed time to process something I think I would say: “Look I am really sorry for what I said, I hope you know I was being thoughtless and I didn’t do it to hurt you on purpose. I am going to go home now and think about how it all came about and you probably want a bit of space from me now anyway. Is it ok if I message you in a day or two?” I know it’s hard to try and be rational when your heart is racing and you have a lump in your stomach from having said something wrong, plus even more so if your rejection issues are kicking in at the same time. But honestly there is a lot of power in removing yourself from a situation before it escalates further and just giving the dust some time to settle. Easier said than done, I know, but trust me, it does work.

TY78910 · 07/08/2025 20:00

I don’t understand how people think an apology suddenly switches someone’s mood back to happy clappy again. You need to let emotions cool. You apologised and argued, leave it there and reach out tomorrow asking to meet so you can apologise again. They’re his acquaintances, you’ve slotted in and are making jokes at his expense. Just actually think about how that makes him feel and tell him that tomorrow. No buts, just apology + I understand the impact. That’s it.

Arlanymor · 07/08/2025 20:02

TY78910 · 07/08/2025 20:00

I don’t understand how people think an apology suddenly switches someone’s mood back to happy clappy again. You need to let emotions cool. You apologised and argued, leave it there and reach out tomorrow asking to meet so you can apologise again. They’re his acquaintances, you’ve slotted in and are making jokes at his expense. Just actually think about how that makes him feel and tell him that tomorrow. No buts, just apology + I understand the impact. That’s it.

Good advice.

Tracey555 · 07/08/2025 20:06

Arlanymor · 07/08/2025 19:59

You’re welcome and thanks for elaborating further. It sounds like you’ve both got into a negative loop in terms of how you both deal with disagreements. You probably both fall into patterns of behaviour - him being silent, you reaching out first to try and instigate communication - neither of which are serving either of you. I wouldn’t go so far as to call it toxic if no one is being deliberately malicious, but I do think you need to alter how you both approach conflict. For me, if someone was being quiet and needed time to process something I think I would say: “Look I am really sorry for what I said, I hope you know I was being thoughtless and I didn’t do it to hurt you on purpose. I am going to go home now and think about how it all came about and you probably want a bit of space from me now anyway. Is it ok if I message you in a day or two?” I know it’s hard to try and be rational when your heart is racing and you have a lump in your stomach from having said something wrong, plus even more so if your rejection issues are kicking in at the same time. But honestly there is a lot of power in removing yourself from a situation before it escalates further and just giving the dust some time to settle. Easier said than done, I know, but trust me, it does work.

Thank you it’s hard to break old patterns, but if I haven’t already messed this up, I will try. I think I reach out because I’m scared the relationship is over I guess.

OP posts:
Tracey555 · 07/08/2025 20:07

TY78910 · 07/08/2025 20:00

I don’t understand how people think an apology suddenly switches someone’s mood back to happy clappy again. You need to let emotions cool. You apologised and argued, leave it there and reach out tomorrow asking to meet so you can apologise again. They’re his acquaintances, you’ve slotted in and are making jokes at his expense. Just actually think about how that makes him feel and tell him that tomorrow. No buts, just apology + I understand the impact. That’s it.

Thank you I know I messed up, I need to give him the space he needs for now

OP posts:
Tracey555 · 07/08/2025 20:13

Mewling · 07/08/2025 19:47

Had you been drinking, OP?

No I had not, and if I had it wouldn’t be a good excuse would it.

OP posts:
Ilovelifeverymuch · 07/08/2025 20:14

Mrsttcno1 · 07/08/2025 18:46

You deliberately embarrassed him and are wondering why he’s unhappy?

Yes she was wrong which she admits but the bigger issue here is how he handles and resolves conflict. Unless OP is always insulting him in public as opposed to a one off careless remark which this seems to be, his way of dealing with conflict is childish and abusive.

Yes he has every right to be upset but she has apologized and they should discuss it, apologize and move on like adults rather than ignoring her for days and playing silly games via text with abusive words and threatening to break up.

@Tracey555 you need to find a way for both of you to get on the same page about how to handle conflict and issues if not you should walk away.

Mewling · 07/08/2025 20:17

Tracey555 · 07/08/2025 20:13

No I had not, and if I had it wouldn’t be a good excuse would it.

No it wouldn’t, you’re absolutely right. I’m just wondering why you spend your afternoons in a pub with him and his mates. Having been in a relationship like that, it’s a particularly toxic way to spend your time on a daily basis.

CalmTheFuckDownMargaret · 07/08/2025 20:20

Why would you draw attention to him in such an embarrassing way?

Tracey555 · 07/08/2025 20:21

Ilovelifeverymuch · 07/08/2025 20:14

Yes she was wrong which she admits but the bigger issue here is how he handles and resolves conflict. Unless OP is always insulting him in public as opposed to a one off careless remark which this seems to be, his way of dealing with conflict is childish and abusive.

Yes he has every right to be upset but she has apologized and they should discuss it, apologize and move on like adults rather than ignoring her for days and playing silly games via text with abusive words and threatening to break up.

@Tracey555 you need to find a way for both of you to get on the same page about how to handle conflict and issues if not you should walk away.

Edited

Thank you for your kindness, yes we have a long history of this style of conflict communication, I have never said anything like this to him before or in public, in fact the very opposite, I am usually a supportive partner, I feel ashamed for what I said.

But I now feel anxious, I haven’t reached out as he will need space, and he hasn’t contacted me, so I will have to sit it out now.

OP posts:
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