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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:
NewHere83 · 17/10/2025 20:13

Optimist2020 · 17/10/2025 20:09

@SoCatEs do you plan on being so insular as your son becomes older ?

not sure if you have addressed this , but why aren’t you interested in sex anymore ?

A sexless marriage will create many issues x

So if she's still breastfeeding then it's perfectly usual to not be interested in sex - it can kill your sex drive. Not saying it does for everyone. It did for me, but my learning was, once you start you're glad you did!

CremeBruhlee · 17/10/2025 20:14

SoCatEs · 17/10/2025 19:13

I’m a little surprised at the responses.

Maybe it’s just me but I believe when you have children you commit to them fully, they become the singular priority and every decision made should have a positive impact on them. Yes it may not be exactly how you want things but if it’s best for the child that’s what happens.
Growing up I was never away from my parents other than school, my mum was a TA so around any time I wasn’t at school. My dad never really went to the pub or out with friends, he came home every night and both my parents were in bed by 9pm, even when I was a teen and up later than them!
I was under the impression this was pretty standard for families who weren’t living in cities.

DH has lots of French/Swiss/Italian/German friends who all seem to think that children should just slot into the parents life which is where I’d guess his views are coming from.

The best thing for your child at the moment would be to keep his parents in a loving committed relationship. You are at risk of really damaging your child’s future if you don’t at least make an effort to work on this with your husband. If the tables were turned it would sound really bad

LemonLeaves · 17/10/2025 20:14

NewHere83 · 17/10/2025 20:11

You have sex, you risk a baby. Suggesting an abortion doesn't mean the baby should have less impact on your life once it's here.

Agree. But in this case he's done what OP wanted - he changed his job, moved out of London, and is supportive of their savings being used to fund her being a SAHP. By OP's own admission he is an involved father.

In return having an occasional social life, and wanting to feel like she actually cares about him as a person rather than just a human wallet who funds her village lifestyle, doesn't seem that unreasonable.

Fabulously · 17/10/2025 20:16

Crushed23 · 17/10/2025 20:10

He’s married and has a baby. That’s not particularly appealing to young, cosmopolitan, child-free women. At late 20s/early 30s, the pool is plenty deep to find a man who doesn’t have more baggage than Heathrow.

His head could be turned, no doubt, but let’s not kid ourselves that’s he a ‘catch’ and women are throwing themselves at him left, right and centre.

To be honest yeah, 20 somethings are going to want to experience their firsts together with their partner and be put off by “baggage”, but 30+ year olds would be more open minded. From what it sounds like, he has friends who may be able to introduce him to someone as opposed to him getting on tinder.

but in any case, it’s unfortunate that men with kids usually find it easier to date after divorce compared to women with kids. Is OP going to find a village man to live the traditional, old fashioned life with her, as having step children doesn’t easily slot into those old fashioned ideals? In comparison, her husband might not be totally desirable but his ideal lifestyle could likely slot blended families more easily.

Caleb64 · 17/10/2025 20:16

He’s a selfish prick. He won’t change now, he feels
he's been robbed of his old life. Let him go have that life and you move on with your life. He’ll soon see what a prick he is when his friends have children and have to you know…grow up!

Beachtastic · 17/10/2025 20:18

Oriunda · 17/10/2025 19:26

So even your hobbies as a child were controlled/supervised by your parents (brownies where mum was a leader, music taught by dad), and playdates were at your house.

What an insular upbringing. Which presumably you now want for your child.

I was thinking more that everything revolved around her, including friends coming to the house. This might explain a lot.

justasking111 · 17/10/2025 20:19

thisishowloween · 17/10/2025 19:47

Please don't be so offensive.

It wasn't meant to be. My aunt and uncle were and lived this life. Both very clever but totally wrapped up in each other rather. They're together in a nursing home now.

TeaBiscuitsNaptime · 17/10/2025 20:19

Meadowfinch · 17/10/2025 20:01

Also, OP, if you have some friends over while he is away, you will have something to talk about when he gets back. You'll be able to tell him your friends' news and he'll be able to tell you about the trip.

New experiences ! Conversation ! Something to stay up for.

Ya, exactly! That's true, they'll both have things to talk about then when he gets back which could make for another enjoyable evening. As great as men are n all, sometimes it's nice too to get a bit of headspace from them and time to do your own thing!

YRGAM · 17/10/2025 20:19

There are honking loud sirens here for your marriage. You have to start considering his feeling otherwise I'd say it's a near certainty you will end up divorced. That's a lot worse for your child than having two working parents or a dad that goes for a weekend on the piss every few months. Please listen to the many pieces of good advice here and do what you need to do in order to rescue your marriage

AngelinaFibres · 17/10/2025 20:20

SoCatEs · 17/10/2025 19:44

I don’t know it’s very different when it’s DH, 3 minutes away at the bottom of the road, where I could be there in a second if they needed me. Compared to say going out for dinner and leaving DS with MIL who doesn’t know the routine etc.

I'm a granny. I posted earlier about having my grandchildren a lot. I know the routine because my DIL told me when I first had GC 1 and then when GC 2 was added into being at granny's house without her. If anything changes she tells me and I follow the new thing.Bottle timings, naps, potty training , bedtimes we've done them all in the way she and my son do. Your MIL brought up your son. She knows how to do it all. You seem to have decided that your husband must adapt to the new life but your posts suggest that you won't adapt/ compromise in any way. There isn't the stigma to divorce that there was. You may well wake up one day and find yourself as a single parent.

Didimum · 17/10/2025 20:20

LuLuLemonDrizzleCake · 17/10/2025 19:46

But you can raise kids in London....

Where did I say you couldn’t?

TheSwarm · 17/10/2025 20:21

Honestly op I think that unless you rethink your approach to parenthood and crucially your marriage your husband will - with no small amount of justification - leave you within a year or 2.

He's giving you a warning. You clearly have completely deprioritised your marriage in favour of obsessing over your child. The first year or 2 of parenthood is an absolute slog but as new parents you need to have each other's backs.

Not being willing to leave a one year old with his grandparents to spend a little time with your husband is a clear sign to any person that they no longer matter. Planning to not work for 3 years and barely spending any time together is a clear sign that he's just paying for your lifestyle. Wake up or start planning to be a single mother.

Psychologymam · 17/10/2025 20:21

Stormyday34 · 17/10/2025 17:24

Yikes, your new life makes me want to shoot myself in the head! And I’m a woman and I’ve got 2 children.

Being a parent in zone 2 and doing it out in the sticks is massively different.

It’s not really - I’ve done both and it’s been pretty similar , if anything I’ve a better social life in the sticks! I think the main thing is for some people they hold on to life pre children and others let it go for a few years knowing it will come back. I efb and I was envious as times of other friends being able to go out for evenings/weekends/have more sleep but I knew it wasn’t forever. I was in my thirties too with much wanted babies - I might have felt differently with an accidental pregnancy earlier in life. I think that’s the key aspect of this for her husband - sounds like he wasn’t ready for kids and subsequent move.

Luddite26 · 17/10/2025 20:22

Did he have any say in all these life changes? Did he want a child ? Did you use a turkey baster? Did you visit the sticks one day and sell up and buy a new house without his knowledge?

I remember at 17 feeling fed up on a Saturday night when my gran and grandad used to call on their way to the pub disturbing casualty, then leaving me feeling like I was stuck in and everyone else was out.
It's not fair that he is making you the problem.

IHaveAlwaysLivedintheCastle · 17/10/2025 20:24

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.

Is that a joint decision?

BigFatBully · 17/10/2025 20:24

LemonLeaves · 17/10/2025 20:14

Agree. But in this case he's done what OP wanted - he changed his job, moved out of London, and is supportive of their savings being used to fund her being a SAHP. By OP's own admission he is an involved father.

In return having an occasional social life, and wanting to feel like she actually cares about him as a person rather than just a human wallet who funds her village lifestyle, doesn't seem that unreasonable.

You've hit the nail on the head. As a home-maker, it's primarily the OP's duty to do most of the childcare and household chores. These duties tend to be round the clock but there is the added benefit of not having to wake at an un-Godly hour to commute in to the office and also the ability to take breaks from duties, e.g. household cleaning at their own discretion.

In this specific situation, the OP's husband is also providing a sizable portion of the childcare and being a husband figure to the OP. He's working long hours to bring home a wage and as such, should get a say in what his money is spent on, providing the home maker receives a fair amount of the income for their efforts and that children and utility companies are accounted for. OP gets time to make friends on Mum's Net, so why shouldn't he have time with his friends?

As you say, moving to the country after life in the Capital must feel very isolating, especially if friends have stayed behind. Becoming a parent can feel like your world has been turned upside down and sometimes you need friends to talk about it with.

FairKoala · 17/10/2025 20:25

This is what stood out to me

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

But the routine would change completely
For a start that commute must be a killer even just a few days per week

Also if you and he have friends in London, I appreciate they aren’t at the same stage as you but your dh is still friends with them and just a spur of the moment coffee or a quick drink after work or when walking round the park with DS and not having to think about a huge commute and/or the planning and logistics about what time trains run etc must be exhausting as well as quite lonely

I have known a couple of couples who did what you did from my NCT classes and both moved back. (Lack of jobs, expenses going through the roof and the planning and driving to get anywhere were huge factors in their decisions)

Whilst on paper it looks like it makes sense to do what you did but if one of you is miserable then maybe moving back is the answer

Also how much is it costing you to live where you are now to how much it was before you moved
Take account of things from salary prospects for both you and dh. The cost of dh’s commute. How much more you are spending on petrol/diesel etc and the wear and tear on a car. Also if you are going back to work. Are you too going to be doing the same commute/wfh

I would also suggest that your dh is seeing how this move has the potential of impacting his career/getting promotions as not being able to work extra time on certain days or just stay to talk with colleagues after work or just being so tired that he isn’t functioning at his best on some days is all going to add to the dysfunction

Whilst posters will jump on the weekends away he has and suggest he needs to buckle down. They aren’t appreciating the fact that doing an insane and costly commute and not seeing friends with out a huge plan does take its toll on people
Whilst living the bucolic dream sounds great. It is also very lonely, very boring and very expensive if you don’t want to be there and miss your old life.

IHaveAlwaysLivedintheCastle · 17/10/2025 20:26

SoCatEs · 17/10/2025 15:33

Tbh I don’t feel comfortable leaving DS with anyone yet, in his entire life DS has never been away from me for more than maybe an hour? I don’t feel ready to leave DS with anyone who isn’t myself or DH yet.

That's ridiculous

LemonLeaves · 17/10/2025 20:27

FairKoala · 17/10/2025 20:25

This is what stood out to me

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

But the routine would change completely
For a start that commute must be a killer even just a few days per week

Also if you and he have friends in London, I appreciate they aren’t at the same stage as you but your dh is still friends with them and just a spur of the moment coffee or a quick drink after work or when walking round the park with DS and not having to think about a huge commute and/or the planning and logistics about what time trains run etc must be exhausting as well as quite lonely

I have known a couple of couples who did what you did from my NCT classes and both moved back. (Lack of jobs, expenses going through the roof and the planning and driving to get anywhere were huge factors in their decisions)

Whilst on paper it looks like it makes sense to do what you did but if one of you is miserable then maybe moving back is the answer

Also how much is it costing you to live where you are now to how much it was before you moved
Take account of things from salary prospects for both you and dh. The cost of dh’s commute. How much more you are spending on petrol/diesel etc and the wear and tear on a car. Also if you are going back to work. Are you too going to be doing the same commute/wfh

I would also suggest that your dh is seeing how this move has the potential of impacting his career/getting promotions as not being able to work extra time on certain days or just stay to talk with colleagues after work or just being so tired that he isn’t functioning at his best on some days is all going to add to the dysfunction

Whilst posters will jump on the weekends away he has and suggest he needs to buckle down. They aren’t appreciating the fact that doing an insane and costly commute and not seeing friends with out a huge plan does take its toll on people
Whilst living the bucolic dream sounds great. It is also very lonely, very boring and very expensive if you don’t want to be there and miss your old life.

Commutes can be a killer, and I agree also with your point about being able to see friends.

However, I'd question whether it actually suits OP that it's not so easy for him to see his friends. If you look at her earlier posts, she's already said that she doesn't like them and never has done since the start of the relationship.

Trendyname · 17/10/2025 20:28

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?

Sadly he was not ready for a dad life. Not sure what to advise you. If you want to continue this marriage, you need to move closer to London than where you are now and let him have his social dose more than what he is getting now. Will that work for you?

Pessismistic · 17/10/2025 20:28

Hi op your posts are very much about you and how happy you are how your loving being a mum etc. yes kids are your number one priority but compromises have to be made in relationships unless you have what you want and it’s fuck him im alright jack. If he did go out with his female friends he might end up cheating because as you say you don’t even want sex now. If this was all the male perspective a lot of people would be saying Ltb. You say it’s not fair on your ds that daddy isn’t there for another weekend but he will still have you. You’re being selfish tbh. I think you need to decide if you want to be married because your dh needs to have some sort of life and wife as well.

Amba1998 · 17/10/2025 20:30

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.

Woooooowwww in a world where men rarely talk about their mental health let’s just tell them all to “learn” to be happy

Beachtastic · 17/10/2025 20:30

Tigger1895 · 17/10/2025 20:01

I heard something yesterday that ties in with what you said… Some men want a wife and children, however, they don’t want to be a husband or father.

Some women want children, but don't want to be a wife.

Labamba78 · 17/10/2025 20:30

Caleb64 · 17/10/2025 20:16

He’s a selfish prick. He won’t change now, he feels
he's been robbed of his old life. Let him go have that life and you move on with your life. He’ll soon see what a prick he is when his friends have children and have to you know…grow up!

This is really unfair. Of course his life has to change, but it seems like OP has got everything she wants whilst her husband has given up everything when she doesn’t even want to spend time with him and goes to bed at 9! He’s even moved jobs because the OP had an issue with his old one - despite not wanting to work herself, and she wants him to give up all his mates and find “new local” ones.
He clearly didn’t want a baby but even the OP describes him as an involved father who does bath etc every night. I don’t understand what’s selfish about wanting to have a life that involves not being completely ignored and manipulated by your partner, and allows you to do some things for yourself?!

YRGAM · 17/10/2025 20:30

OP seems to be completely in denial about the fact that she's not going to be in a position to use 'their' savings to take a few years out if her husband leaves her, which there is an active danger of him doing very soon

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