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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

DS18 might get booted from supported accommodation

114 replies

Baberg · 30/08/2025 14:37

my DS turned 18 last week, he’s been in supported accomadtion for a few months cos i cudnt cope at home anymore. it’s a shared house run by the council with staff around some of the time, they help them learn to live independent and got rules they got to stick to, like curfew and no drink/drugs etc.

it got to the point here i was begging social to take over, he was smashing doors, shouting in my face, stealing from me and the little ones. he nicked my debit card once and spent nearly £100 on weed, i reported it but then dropped it cos i cudn’t face him getting arrested. people will probly say that was stupid but i was scared what he’d do if i didn’t. he’s punched holes in the walls, broken his sisters ipad, brought random girls and lads back at 2am, one time 5 of them sat in the living room smoking weed while my younger 2 was crying in bed. i called the police a few times when it got out of hand, but then felt guilty after and didn’t press charges.

when he moved to supported accomadtion the rules were clear: no guests after 10, curfew 10pm weekdays and midnight weekends, no alcohol or drugs inside, keep noise down, attend meetings with his keyworker, cook and clean his own space. i thought maybe he’d do better with outsiders setting rules cos he don’t listen to me. but i’ve had calls already, he’s sneaking girls in, mates hanging round, loud music, the neighbours complaining. staff found alcohol in his room more than once and say it stinks of weed sometimes. he skips his meetings, refuses to cook or clean, just sits in bed all day on his phone.

worse is some nights he don’t even go back there. i’ll get messages at 3am saying he’s at a mates, or he’ll disappear for two days then roll back in. staff told me they’re not a hotel, he has to follow rules or he’s out. he’s already smashed a door there when they told him off, and they said he’s now on final warning.

part of me feels guilty cos maybe i let him get away with too much when he was younger. i did sometimes give him money even when i knew it would go on weed just to keep the peace. i let him stay out all night cos if i tried to stop him he’d just kick off and i couldn’t face another row. so maybe i made it worse. but at the same time i’ve begged him to behave, begged him to think about his future, and he just laughs in my face.

our relationship now is awful. when he wants something he calls me, when i say no he sends nasty messages. he turned up on my doorstep screaming last month cos i refused to transfer him £20. my younger ones were hiding in their room crying. i didn’t let him in but i sat on the sofa shaking for hours after. i feel like he hates me most of the time.

i’m terrified cos i no if he gets thrown out he’ll come here expecting me to take him in, but i can’t. it nearly broke me last time, i was on antidepressants and i couldn’t keep my younger DC safe. but i can already hear people saying “he’s only just turned 18, how can you let your son be homeless?” and i don’t no how i’ll live with myself if he ends up sofa surfing or worse.

AIBU to say he can’t come back here if he gets kicked out? i feel like the worst mum in the world but i carnt go back to that life, my younger DC need peace and safety.

OP posts:
Baberg · 31/08/2025 12:13

he has dyslexia and dyscalculia but no other diagnosis. i do suspect he’s got mh issues though, especially with the way he’s self medicating with the weed. i tried when he was younger, i did take him to the gp but they didn’t listen, just told him to go to bed earlier and brushed it off, and now it’s worse with the weed on top.

i know the staff are right when they say he needs to be more careful with money and everything else, but he doesn’t want to hear it and he won’t go to them when he’s struggling. he just shuts down and then comes straight to me instead, but i can’t fix it for him anymore.

OP posts:
Shelly369 · 31/08/2025 12:20

Baberg · 31/08/2025 12:13

he has dyslexia and dyscalculia but no other diagnosis. i do suspect he’s got mh issues though, especially with the way he’s self medicating with the weed. i tried when he was younger, i did take him to the gp but they didn’t listen, just told him to go to bed earlier and brushed it off, and now it’s worse with the weed on top.

i know the staff are right when they say he needs to be more careful with money and everything else, but he doesn’t want to hear it and he won’t go to them when he’s struggling. he just shuts down and then comes straight to me instead, but i can’t fix it for him anymore.

This is so desperately sad. He’s obviously been let down by the doctor there, why didn’t they take you seriously? I don’t like how he’s being dismissed here either, a boy doesn’t suddenly become a man on his 18th birthday, particularly if he’s had no male parental input. Nobody would say it about a young woman of that age, to just give up and let her fend for herself.

I was hoping you had an older child who could maybe take him under their wing OP. I think it’s really it’s really important for him to have someone he can talk to, someone who can find out if he needs mental health support.

Shelly369 · 31/08/2025 12:32

Could you try this for support for him? https://www.dyslexia.uk.net

I wonder if they could signpost him for other help/diagnosis.

Home - The Dyslexia Association

https://www.dyslexia.uk.net

Baberg · 31/08/2025 12:51

i do think the bullying affected him more than i realised at the time. i tried to get him out of that environment when the school weren’t taking it seriously, but maybe the damage was already done. my dd is a year younger but she was more like the big sister to him, they were together all the time and she even used to defend him to me when he’d kicked off. they’d go bowling and cinema a lot, she really did try with him. he’s been asking her lately to go out with him again but she’s said no, and i don’t blame her after what he’s done, but i still worry for him.

the only people he sees now are also into drugs and that scares me. i worry about them taking advantage, getting him into dealing or crime, or even sexually, cos he is an addict and if he was desperate enough i don’t know what he’d do. i worry about overdoses as well, or mixing stuff if he ever tries anything harder. it just feels like there’s danger whichever way he turns.

OP posts:
Shelly369 · 31/08/2025 12:59

Baberg · 31/08/2025 12:51

i do think the bullying affected him more than i realised at the time. i tried to get him out of that environment when the school weren’t taking it seriously, but maybe the damage was already done. my dd is a year younger but she was more like the big sister to him, they were together all the time and she even used to defend him to me when he’d kicked off. they’d go bowling and cinema a lot, she really did try with him. he’s been asking her lately to go out with him again but she’s said no, and i don’t blame her after what he’s done, but i still worry for him.

the only people he sees now are also into drugs and that scares me. i worry about them taking advantage, getting him into dealing or crime, or even sexually, cos he is an addict and if he was desperate enough i don’t know what he’d do. i worry about overdoses as well, or mixing stuff if he ever tries anything harder. it just feels like there’s danger whichever way he turns.

It seems it really means a lot to him for his sister to be in his life. Do you think there’s any hope your daughter could forgive him (with boundaries)? He obviously trusts her and I guess what happened caused him acute shame (not easy to deal with when young and sensitive). I think it would help him to have that familial connection again. And it would be a step removed from you with hope that it could go towards repairing your damaged relationship. What do you think?

And the bullying, it’s so damaging particularly as he he had no male to go to for advice (and I’m not judging OP).

Clangingpots · 31/08/2025 13:43

Don’t let anyone guilt you into having him back with ‘he’s only 18’

you know the history and what it did to you.

the best thing you can do for yourself, your other kids and him is to flag him up in writing to as many services as possible.

if he is evicted from his accommodation you email everyone from council, Housing, social service, MH services etc stating very very clearly that he is a ‘Vulnerable adult’ who needs support and housing .

you state in writing that you cannot accommodate him on safeguarding grounds of your other children and yourself - that he falls under their remit due to his considerable needs and a solution needs to be found.

do not give an inch.

you can visit him on neutral ground or phone him etc as much as you want but he cannot come into the house.

unless you’ve had a child go off the rails (we have) you cannot understand and it is so easy for others to judge you when they haven’t experienced the lying, violence etc .

protect yourself and your kids and help him by advocating on paper for his needs.

He is 18 - yes your son but you do not have to accept any responsibility for housing him .

The best thing we ever did for our son was refuse to have him home - as it forced services to start helping him rather than leaving it to us with no professional intervention which is what he needed.

Now we have a great relationship as he has had the mh support and counselling he needed.

sometimes you have to be cruel to be kind in order to get what you need. If services see mum and dad picking up the pieces - they are happy to leave you to it. Even when you are totally bring destroyed by their behaviour and are on your knees begging for help - you are ignored and deemed. Be yo cope.

signpost him to services but definitely don’t house him.

Shelly369 · 31/08/2025 13:50

Clangingpots · 31/08/2025 13:43

Don’t let anyone guilt you into having him back with ‘he’s only 18’

you know the history and what it did to you.

the best thing you can do for yourself, your other kids and him is to flag him up in writing to as many services as possible.

if he is evicted from his accommodation you email everyone from council, Housing, social service, MH services etc stating very very clearly that he is a ‘Vulnerable adult’ who needs support and housing .

you state in writing that you cannot accommodate him on safeguarding grounds of your other children and yourself - that he falls under their remit due to his considerable needs and a solution needs to be found.

do not give an inch.

you can visit him on neutral ground or phone him etc as much as you want but he cannot come into the house.

unless you’ve had a child go off the rails (we have) you cannot understand and it is so easy for others to judge you when they haven’t experienced the lying, violence etc .

protect yourself and your kids and help him by advocating on paper for his needs.

He is 18 - yes your son but you do not have to accept any responsibility for housing him .

The best thing we ever did for our son was refuse to have him home - as it forced services to start helping him rather than leaving it to us with no professional intervention which is what he needed.

Now we have a great relationship as he has had the mh support and counselling he needed.

sometimes you have to be cruel to be kind in order to get what you need. If services see mum and dad picking up the pieces - they are happy to leave you to it. Even when you are totally bring destroyed by their behaviour and are on your knees begging for help - you are ignored and deemed. Be yo cope.

signpost him to services but definitely don’t house him.

Edited

Glad your child got counselling support from mental health services @Clangingpots .

Clangingpots · 31/08/2025 14:04

Only by us stepping back - (evicting him) did they step forward. We begged for help from early teens and got no where.

getting support for MH is so hard but once he was in supported accommodation - suddenly a care coordinator was appointed and a Sw and things slowly improved for him when he finally got the right help.

it shouldn’t be this hard - but it is.

Shelly369 · 31/08/2025 14:07

Clangingpots · 31/08/2025 14:04

Only by us stepping back - (evicting him) did they step forward. We begged for help from early teens and got no where.

getting support for MH is so hard but once he was in supported accommodation - suddenly a care coordinator was appointed and a Sw and things slowly improved for him when he finally got the right help.

it shouldn’t be this hard - but it is.

But he’s in supported accommodation and isn’t getting help.

Shelly369 · 31/08/2025 14:08

To the 2 posters above, how did you get your children mental health support??

Suns1nE · 31/08/2025 14:29

You aren’t being unreasonable not to let him home. Personally I think you should have pressed charges for previous offences. I say that was someone who was in the exact same situation regarding my sons behaviour and hands down having him arrested was the best thing I ever did for him. 5 years down the line he will tell people the same.

tough love. Is the only way sometimes

Baberg · 31/08/2025 15:09

Shelly369 · 31/08/2025 12:59

It seems it really means a lot to him for his sister to be in his life. Do you think there’s any hope your daughter could forgive him (with boundaries)? He obviously trusts her and I guess what happened caused him acute shame (not easy to deal with when young and sensitive). I think it would help him to have that familial connection again. And it would be a step removed from you with hope that it could go towards repairing your damaged relationship. What do you think?

And the bullying, it’s so damaging particularly as he he had no male to go to for advice (and I’m not judging OP).

Edited

i do think it means a lot to him for dd to be in his life again, he’s always messaging her saying he misses her and wants to see her. but the problem is he hasn’t actually apologised to her, which i think would go a long way. all he’s said is that he didn’t mean to smash her ipad and wishes he hadn’t, but that’s not the same as a proper sorry and i don’t think it’s helped her at all with wanting to see him. she’s still hurt and doesn’t trust him, which i understand.

i agree the bullying was really damaging, and with no male role model around he just bottled everything up and blamed me instead. i do think if he’d had someone else to talk to back then maybe things wouldn’t have got this bad.

OP posts:
Shelly369 · 31/08/2025 15:11

Baberg · 31/08/2025 15:09

i do think it means a lot to him for dd to be in his life again, he’s always messaging her saying he misses her and wants to see her. but the problem is he hasn’t actually apologised to her, which i think would go a long way. all he’s said is that he didn’t mean to smash her ipad and wishes he hadn’t, but that’s not the same as a proper sorry and i don’t think it’s helped her at all with wanting to see him. she’s still hurt and doesn’t trust him, which i understand.

i agree the bullying was really damaging, and with no male role model around he just bottled everything up and blamed me instead. i do think if he’d had someone else to talk to back then maybe things wouldn’t have got this bad.

That makes sense Baberg, everyone wants a genuine apology in order to forgive. Do you think you could try to act as intermediary? It seems such a shame for this one thing to destroy a good relationship and maybe some give and take on both sides could help reunite them.

BountifulPantry · 02/09/2025 19:56

Baberg · 31/08/2025 10:49

they do weekly tickets and day tickets here, he’d probably just get the day one for £6. i know it doesn’t sound loads but even if i give him that he could still use it toward weed if he’s only short a couple of quid, so i don’t really see how it helps much. i don’t mind helping him get to the job centre but i don’t want to feel like i’m just funding the weed again.

it’s about a 45 minute walk into the city centre so i doubt he’d do it. he’d probably just not bother showing up, which then means his UC gets messed up and it all spirals again. it’s about 20 minutes on the bus and the bus stop is literally right outside the job centre so no effort once he’s on it.

Its Only a 45 mins walk. Young man with no job- no excuse.

Say no OP.

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