Meet the Other Phone. Only the apps you allow.

Meet the Other Phone.
Only the apps you allow.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to not really sympathize with a ‘shocking secret’ in my partner’s family?

83 replies

Nightrainrocketqueen · 28/08/2025 14:03

I’ll try to keep this short.
Basically, my partner’s aunt and uncle lost a child to illness many years ago—before either of us were born. I can’t say I’m particularly fond of his aunt; she’s done some spiteful things within the family and tends to act like the “CEO” of it all. His uncle, on the other hand, has always been polite to me, although a bit quiet.

They live in a tiny village on the outskirts of a city where we live and work. One day at work, I happened to mention to a colleague who lives or parents live in said Village, that my partner’s aunt and uncle live there as just as casual conversation. My colleague responded along the lines of, “Oh yeah, I know of them. He’s very odd.” I didn’t think much of it at the time but later mentioned it to my partner. He went a bit quiet and sheepish and confided in me as to what that comment could have been in relation to;

Apparently, back in the early '90s (either before my partner was born or when he was very young), his uncle was arrested after several complaints of flashing at women in parks. He was taken to court, placed on some sort of sex offenders register (or whatever the equivalent was back then), and sentenced to community service or similar. According to what my partner was told by his dad, the incident caused a massive scandal within the family and made his aunt and uncle outcasts in the village for a while.

His dad—who is the aunt’s brother—was livid at first and apparently went straight round to confront him. The uncle's explanation was, “I’m not coping,” referring to the loss of his child years earlier. And that was sort of… it. It was brushed under the rug. The family now seems to tiptoe around his uncle a bit . My partner was told explicitly that it’s not something to ever be discussed and that was the end of it.

Of course, I do have sympathy for the grief they experienced, and I understand mental health struggles. But I still think what he did was really wrong. As a young woman, it makes me feel incredibly uneasy. Women should be able to go about their lives without this kind of behaviour—regardless of when it happened. I also feel for the victims, who likely never got closure. And I can’t help but think: what if he hadn’t been caught? Where could it have escalated? What if a vulnerable or intellectually challenged woman had been involved? It’s disturbing.

Ive come here because I can’t talk about this with anyone as;
A) I’m not supposed to know—it was a family secret,
B) I want to respect my partner.

But I’m really struggling with how to feel about it. From a young woman’s point of view, it just doesn’t sit right with me. I don’t buy the “grieving parent” excuse—it was still a sexual crime.
Am I being heartless?

OP posts:
MissHollysDolly · 28/08/2025 18:07

No, you’re not heartless, you’re shocked. Because if you heard that a stranger had done that (the assaults and the child loss), what type of relationship would you want to have with that person? And how would you think of them? … and now you’re basically finding out that youve been having Sunday lunch with that person. I have been in a similar situation and it took me a while to get through (much because of what you are describing - for everyone else it’s in the past,.. for you it’s not) ultimately, you need to figure out for yourself what type of relationship you want with the uncle and aunt (and think about how you will feel when children come along).
For me, the boundary I settled on was that I attend family events we are both invited to, but I do not proactively have a relationship with that person - they are not welcome in my home. They are never alone with my children (fwiw their now-wife asked a few times when the children were younger if they could come sleep over, I just said no and it wasn’t followed up). I “play along” with the family not talking about it (none of my business / in the past) but if ever there was a situation where it became relevant/ was discussed (ie anyone asked why I do not allow time with my children), I would be 100% honest with why.

godmum56 · 28/08/2025 18:09

MissHollysDolly · 28/08/2025 18:07

No, you’re not heartless, you’re shocked. Because if you heard that a stranger had done that (the assaults and the child loss), what type of relationship would you want to have with that person? And how would you think of them? … and now you’re basically finding out that youve been having Sunday lunch with that person. I have been in a similar situation and it took me a while to get through (much because of what you are describing - for everyone else it’s in the past,.. for you it’s not) ultimately, you need to figure out for yourself what type of relationship you want with the uncle and aunt (and think about how you will feel when children come along).
For me, the boundary I settled on was that I attend family events we are both invited to, but I do not proactively have a relationship with that person - they are not welcome in my home. They are never alone with my children (fwiw their now-wife asked a few times when the children were younger if they could come sleep over, I just said no and it wasn’t followed up). I “play along” with the family not talking about it (none of my business / in the past) but if ever there was a situation where it became relevant/ was discussed (ie anyone asked why I do not allow time with my children), I would be 100% honest with why.

I agree.

SmurfnoffIce · 28/08/2025 19:34

And if you're honest with yourself - are you really concerned about the victims of his rumoured flashing from a past time ? Or are you invested in family drama/gossip ? (It's much easier when it's not your own to revel in stuff like this )

This. You’re acting like you’ve found this out about your partner, rather than an uncle by marriage you barely see.

I hate to tell you, but if this was an ITV drama, they wouldn’t be casting Sheridan Smith or Suranne Jones as the nephew’s wife. Maybe someone who had a bit part in Emmerdale.

IHaveAlwaysLivedintheCastle · 28/08/2025 19:38

SmurfnoffIce · 28/08/2025 19:34

And if you're honest with yourself - are you really concerned about the victims of his rumoured flashing from a past time ? Or are you invested in family drama/gossip ? (It's much easier when it's not your own to revel in stuff like this )

This. You’re acting like you’ve found this out about your partner, rather than an uncle by marriage you barely see.

I hate to tell you, but if this was an ITV drama, they wouldn’t be casting Sheridan Smith or Suranne Jones as the nephew’s wife. Maybe someone who had a bit part in Emmerdale.

Ignore this OP. I don't know why you should have to keep this secret. I wouldn't want anything to with the aunt or her him.

SmurfnoffIce · 28/08/2025 19:41

IHaveAlwaysLivedintheCastle · 28/08/2025 19:38

Ignore this OP. I don't know why you should have to keep this secret. I wouldn't want anything to with the aunt or her him.

Keep it secret from who, though? The family
already all know!

IHaveAlwaysLivedintheCastle · 28/08/2025 19:42

SmurfnoffIce · 28/08/2025 19:41

Keep it secret from who, though? The family
already all know!

I suppose pretend OP doesn't know and not take any account of it in her relations with this pair.

PrincessofWells · 29/08/2025 00:00

TonTonMacoute · 28/08/2025 16:48

I would worry more about the men who are committing these crimes today, rather than those doing it 30 years ago.

They don't normally stop, and the behaviour tends to escalate so everyone does need to be concerned.

PrincessofWells · 29/08/2025 13:26

ShrankLastWinter · 28/08/2025 16:47

It’s grim and of course it would change the way I thought about him.

If he hasn’t reoffended in all this time, then there probably isn’t any reason to think he will.

But I would keep my children away from him and I’d avoid being alone with him myself.

You wouldn't necessarily know whether he has reoffended, they can be very clever, that's how they get away with abusing children and women for so long. Just because he hasn't been caught it doesn't mean he has stopped offending.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page