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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

DH is depressed in our new life

1000 replies

SoCatEs · 17/10/2025 15:16

DH and I are early 30s, we got married 2.5 years ago and a we have an 11 month old DS.
Before having DS I’d say we lived the life of many young London professionals, we lived pretty central, work drinks, days out with friends, any sports event an excuse to meet up with our friends.
A little over a year ago we left London for a small village, it seemed at the time atleast to be the logical choice. For the first few months and while DS was a newborn I’d say we were both pretty happy, obviously we missed our friends but I made a lot of new friends through baby groups and similar so quickly didn’t really miss my London friends. DH is still commuting into London 3 days a week so maintained a much closer friendship with his old friends.
DS wasn’t exactly planned, I was still on the pill and while we’d spoken about children in our future, the timeline was sped up. This has meant that we are among the first of our wider circle to have children, actually of DHs friends we are the first. DHs friends are also all a bit younger than he is at 25-29ish so probably all still a good few years off having children of their own. Obviously his friends have continued their lives as they were a year ago, work drinks, dinner parties, sports etc. DH has had to pull back from this a little, he still goes for drinks after work maybe once a fortnight but has to leave early for the train while everyone else is often out until 2-3 in the morning. A large group of his friends are going to Paris next month for the Paris masters tennis tournament and DH did want to go but considering they all went to Paris in the summer for the French Open I just didn’t feel it fair that he got a second weekend away.
DH today has told me he is depressed, that he is a social person and he finds his life really lonely right now, weekends are spent either at home or on days out with DS which he says he does enjoy but don’t fulfil his social needs. He said he just feels perpetually miserable, he works 8-5, gets home around 6:15/6:30 then it’s his job to bathe DS, we alternate putting DS down to sleep and cooking but either way by the time dinners done I just want to go to bed (DS isn’t the best sleeper and as I’m on maternity leave I do all the night time wake ups, DH does them on weekends). He said that it basically means from 9pm on he’s sat with nothing to do as I’m asleep, some nights he does go to the gym but he said he’s now lacking motivation to even do that.
I asked what it is he actually wants as the reality is we have a DS, whether we lived in Zone 2 or out in the sticks the routine would be the same. I suggested he tries to make some local friends, maybe other dads so he can take DS to the park with them on the weekend etc. but he got quite snappy and told me he didn’t need more friends, he had great friends, he just never gets to see them.
I’ve also noticed he spends a lot of time just sat on his phone, messaging his group chats, or at least that’s what he claims.
The conversation ended with him saying we should consider asking his mum to come and stay for a week and help me with DS so he can go get some space. I asked if he felt there were relationship issues too and he said “I do still love you but you go to bed so early we hardly even get to speak anymore”, I am also aware that the intimacy has declined a lot since having DS but I’m just not interested in sex really at all. He never mentioned the lack of sex and he never pushes for it but I can tell that’s bothering him too.

So I guess my question is, AIBU to think his mum coming to stay for a week so he can go get space isn’t the right solution? I hate that he is struggling but realistically this is our life now, avoiding it for a week won’t have any positive long term impact?

Has anyone else’s DH experienced this? Any advice?

OP posts:
DeQuin · 17/10/2025 15:37

Go back to work. Don’t have more babies just yet. You have prioritised what you think DS needs and have not taken DH needs into consideration. YABU. Family life is a struggle to balance everyone’s needs and the more people involved the harder it gets. DH wasn’t ready yet and you have gone momzilla.

SoCatEs · 17/10/2025 15:37

KimberleyClark · 17/10/2025 15:35

Sounds like moving to a small village was too drastic a move, a nice market town might have been less of a culture shock?

DH and I both grew up in villages which I think is why we landed on village over any of the alternatives. I think I’ve settled right back into village life while DH has stayed more attached to city life.

OP posts:
AmyDuPlantier · 17/10/2025 15:38

@SoCatEsyour son is almost one and well able to survive being looked after by a relative. Your husband is miserable. Your relationship seems to be in trouble.

Maybe prioritise here? Put your DH first for a bit. I can understand why he feels as he does; small town life has not been for me and now the kids are older I am heading back to live in a city.

He’s bored and lonely, I think maybe a night away from the baby is worth the sacrifice for this man that you love.

BarbarasRhabarberba · 17/10/2025 15:38

SoCatEs · 17/10/2025 15:27

There were a few reasons we moved to a village, he seemed up for it at the time but I can tell he wishes we hadn’t. Our main reasons were all to do with quality of life for DS, schools, space to play, a garden etc.

I honestly never understand why people do this when they have a good life and community/friends in the city. Plenty of children grow up in London very happily. I’m not surprised he’s miserable in a village where he has no friends.

Whereismyfleeceblanket · 17/10/2025 15:39

Tell him it's your turn for some time away. Ask him when is best he has dc alone for the week end. Guess he would have his dm over to do the child rearing..

Or suggest he considers if you split up how he will manage work and a social live with a 50/50 parenting schedule and sleepless nights..

araiwa · 17/10/2025 15:40

SpaceRaccoon · 17/10/2025 15:36

Honestly though he needs to learn to be happy, the child is there now and there's not a lot to be done. Unless he walks out on them I suppose.

But it doesn't sound the child is the issue

He's commuting 2-3 hours daily, bathes the baby then baby and mum go to bed and he's sat at home alone ready for the same the next day. It's sounds shit

Glistening · 17/10/2025 15:41

The life he has now would really depress me too. I think you should support him to get a break.

Yes this is your life now but a break can make all the difference. I sometimes find life with my kids hard (one seriously disabled). if my DH said well tough this is your life now, rather than facilitating a break, i’d have burnt out long ago. In return I support him when he’s had enough,

I think you made a big mistake moving just before having a baby. Too much change all at once. Would you consider working towards a move back to London, even if years away?

wrongthinker · 17/10/2025 15:41

Is moving back to the city a possibility?

Maray1967 · 17/10/2025 15:42

I’m normally pretty tough on whinging blokes, but in this case I think you need to reassess where you’re living. This isn’t working for him and I think you need to accept that. I’d be considering where you can live so he can still see his mates. There’s no way my DH would have wanted to live in a village 20 years ago when we were new parents. Neither would I, though, I must admit.

TheBlueHotel · 17/10/2025 15:43

Whereismyfleeceblanket · 17/10/2025 15:39

Tell him it's your turn for some time away. Ask him when is best he has dc alone for the week end. Guess he would have his dm over to do the child rearing..

Or suggest he considers if you split up how he will manage work and a social live with a 50/50 parenting schedule and sleepless nights..

She's not willing to leave the child even with a grandparent so that's a pointless rhetorical question isn't it?

Lavender14 · 17/10/2025 15:44

What support network do you have around you that enables you both to go out at the same time in the evening or weekends?

I think obviously life has taken a turn he's not expected, and those early months are absolutely brutal on a relationship and I do think it's really hard if you haven't got friends going through that to recognise that it's actually quite normal and common. You're both adjusting to a new life, relationship changes with friends, a new priority and massive changes in your relationship and routines. That's all a lot. However, it doesn't sound like he's addressing this in a mature way. What you said about finding more dad friends, to me, was a perfectly reasonable solution so he can socialise with others who are going through the same things. The issue really is that he wants the freedoms as opposed to the relationships. But that's being a parent and he's going to have to compromise on that.

So a healthy thing to do would be to sit down together and look at your support networks and plan in some date nights, some days out to meet friends, or see if you can host friends at yours. What he can't do is just vanish for a week and leave you holding the baby. That's running away not solving issues and I agree with the pp, if my son did that I'd absolutely be telling him he needs to man up and work with you to find a resolution.

Giving him the benefit of the doubt, he's missing his old life etc but not giving him the benefit of the doubt it sounds like he's throwing the dummy out of his pram because he didn't get his trip away and feels hard done by.

I've recently been through similar changes (new area job friends baby etc) but because I became a lone parent, so there is no social life whatsoever nor is there down time of any sort. Its not easy but all I can do is work with what's in front of me and try to make the best of it with whatever means I can and get counselling for the bits that are hard to accept. And that keeps me going even though I really miss certain aspects of my old life. He needs to do the same and if he can't, then he goes to the gp and get counselling. He doesn't get the luxury of just giving up because you're there to hold the Fort.

I think it's fair for you both to look realistically at what life would be like if you moved back, but from the way he's talking I think you'd be home alone with a baby a lot which would end the relationship for me anyway. And I think there's a risk of that if you do move back.

I do think you need to look at routine as you are becoming ships in the night and while I felt the exact same about leaving ds at that age, my marriage definitely suffered for it (not to the extent it ended completely but contributing factor). Your ds is very important obviously but so is your marriage and you need to begin to ease yourself in to being an individual and a wife as well as mummy again. This is totally hormonal and mummy bear instinct to keep your baby close so they're safe. But that doesn't mean they won't be safe with anyone else, unless you have reason to think his mum or other family won't look after him properly? You could start small and build it up which worked for me? I also think you need to try and stay up past 9 a couple of times a week and make a little date out of that too and do board games or movie or something.

Offsoon · 17/10/2025 15:44

SoCatEs · 17/10/2025 15:28

No we have some savings so I will be taking a couple of years out, probably until DS is 3 unless we have more children.

Risky given what you outline and fact you seem suspicious of him. (Which I would be)

ComfortFoodCafe · 17/10/2025 15:44

He wasnt ready to be a dad, thats why hes depressed. He still wants the young, free & single lifestyle.
Do not have more kids while hes like this, the fact you mentioned it while hes so depressed is actually very concerning. Its like “im alright with my new life but you can fuck off and get on with it.”

Fabulously · 17/10/2025 15:44

To be honest his life does seem miserable to me, as someone in their 20s on a decent income in London. He’s basically had a complete culture shock where every aspect of his life has changed. You have said you’re not interested in sex etc so even your relationship has changed. That hasn’t even stayed strong.

Obviously you have a child and you’ve easily adjusted to essentially turning into your mum and mirroring her life - but I don’t think his fears are unusual. I think a lot of parents find it hard to adjust to parenthood and the fact you’ve left London for a village hasn’t helped but rather compounded matters. Maybe you should have tried an interim place to live instead of going from living in the most developed part of the country, to the complete opposite. For me, even though I think raising kids in London wouldn’t necessarily be ideal; I wouldn’t immediately jump ship if I became pregnant. I think leaving London and raising a baby would lead to me feeling like your husband.

JeminaTheGiantBear · 17/10/2025 15:45

‘This is his life now’ really really won’t cut it if you want to stay together. Nor will listening to the people calling him a selfish prick.

In my experience commuting is very often a disaster. It can have a devastating effect on relationships for a whole range of reasons. I would always recommend trying it first - ie by renting for a year or so- before committing yourselves by buying on the basis that one of you will commute.

I don’t really think having his mother for a week is going to help at all- agree with you there.

It’s drastic but I would try letting out the house and renting back where you were, to see if that improves things. If it does, that’s the change you need to make.

It is not unreasonable for your H to feel lonely & want to see friends. Or to miss sex! Plus I don’t really understand why you stopped him going away. That kind of ‘two weekends is too much’ approach does not bode well.

Also I am genuinely a bit puzzled about why you would need his mum for him to go away or step back for a week (if that is what is envisioned). I have 3 kids & do know how very tiring the first couple of years can be, but in the absence of major issues like illness/PND do not really see why you’d need help just for a week. (And honestly, without meaning to be cruel, being a single parent really is shattering, a lot worse than being alone for a week - I know because I am one- & if you can avoid that by being open to solutions & compromise now, & keeping your relationship, that would avoid a lot of pain).

Crapola25 · 17/10/2025 15:45

@SoCatEs I think some of the comments on here are unfair. We also left London 5 years ago and moved abroad to a European city. DH moved first and a year later I moved when I found out I was pregnant. Despite being a very sociable person DH also complains that he is lonely BUT he does nothing to help himself. I've managed to go out and make new friends. I've also introduced the husbands of my friends to DH but the problem is he can't be arsed. What did your DH think would happen when he moved to a village if he had no intention of meeting new friends. Bizarre! I think its unfair for him to dump this on you and quite frankly he needs to get off his backside and have a reality check. Alot of men struggle when life changes when they have a baby. Him hankering after his old life whilst living away isn't going to help - he needs to accept that. Sure he can see the old friends regularly but if he wants to make it work in the village then he needs to make an effort.
Totally get why you left London - i loved it before having kids. But would not want to raise a family there. Also it's just become very expensive.

Glistening · 17/10/2025 15:45

Whereismyfleeceblanket · 17/10/2025 15:39

Tell him it's your turn for some time away. Ask him when is best he has dc alone for the week end. Guess he would have his dm over to do the child rearing..

Or suggest he considers if you split up how he will manage work and a social live with a 50/50 parenting schedule and sleepless nights..

Do not take this advice! This is such an antagonistic approach to the person you love admitting they’re unhappy.

OP you won’t want to hear this but I’ve seen your post about taking time Out from work and I wonder if that’s really a good idea. If he’s already resentful this seems pretty certain to exacerbate things. It sounds to me that your marriage is already in danger.

Could you go back very part time?

KitsyWitsy · 17/10/2025 15:45

Why couldn’t he have the weekend away? You’re the one who doesn’t want to leave the baby. Not him.

I feel sorry for him and at least he’s communicating. This is your warning.

Itsallabouttea · 17/10/2025 15:46

Yeah I feel for him to be honest and I'd usually have no time for blokes not pulling their weight. I'd be totally miserable in his situation and I guess the danger is if it's not addressed he'll become more and more lonely, bored and resentful. Is there any possibility of moving back nearer to friends? Just because you have a kid doesn't mean life has to stop

ComfortFoodCafe · 17/10/2025 15:47

KitsyWitsy · 17/10/2025 15:45

Why couldn’t he have the weekend away? You’re the one who doesn’t want to leave the baby. Not him.

I feel sorry for him and at least he’s communicating. This is your warning.

Yep, can see him packing his bags if op doesnt meet him half way.

Mumwithbaggage · 17/10/2025 15:50

Sounds like you're very attached to the baby who's nearly a year old if you haven't left them for more than an hour!

Moving to a village nearly broke my spirit and we were only on the outskirts of London. I've lived here 27 years and still feel down when I've had a day in London. Do more fun stuff together and both find the people you were. Yes babies change you but they needn't change you that much!

Fabulously · 17/10/2025 15:51

TheBlueHotel · 17/10/2025 15:43

She's not willing to leave the child even with a grandparent so that's a pointless rhetorical question isn't it?

I think it’s a pointless ultimatum anyway. Let’s be honest he’s in the better situation here. He could divorce OP, earn a good enough income to live the lifestyle he wants, find a new partner with a good sex life, and detach from parenting if he wishes.

Whereas for the OP, being a jobless single mum would be more crippling.

Katypp · 17/10/2025 15:51

Whereismyfleeceblanket · 17/10/2025 15:39

Tell him it's your turn for some time away. Ask him when is best he has dc alone for the week end. Guess he would have his dm over to do the child rearing..

Or suggest he considers if you split up how he will manage work and a social live with a 50/50 parenting schedule and sleepless nights..

And that is such a brilliant suggestion to make everything OK.
I honestly sometimes wonder why women have partners at all, when their needs, opinions and happiness are utterly expendable at the alter of the mum, dressed up of course as the baby's needs
I find it utterly baffling how some posters can ve so heartless, nasty and downright cruel - but I suppose they think it makes them sound forthright and strong.

MagnaICe · 17/10/2025 15:51

Is his idea that his mum comes so she stays with you and help you with what? - or she stays with the baby and you both go away?

Catpiece · 17/10/2025 15:52

I feel sorry for him. He’s having trouble adjusting to his new life and responsibilities. He must feel like the rug has been pulled from under his feet. One minute he’s one of the lads the next minute he’s doing bath time. It’s hard. Thing is, we all have to make the transition into a fully formed adult. Life isn’t one big jolly-up. Hopefully he’ll mature and grow to appreciate his good fortune x

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