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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:
BuzzyBallz · 18/10/2025 04:35

I think you need to accept your marriage is over

Greenmouldycheese · 18/10/2025 04:36

He wants to bugger off for a week to live a single life while you're home raising his kid. So selfish. Did he think that his social life would carry on as normal after having a baby?

pumpkinscake · 18/10/2025 04:39

I can't read the full thread but is the problem the decision to move to a village? That's not for everyone, certainly not for me. I loved raisiing my DS in a city and it allows for a very easy social life to happen alongside family life. A long commute, miles from friends, that's a miserable life I think. Could you move back?

Rowen32 · 18/10/2025 04:47

SL2924 · 17/10/2025 19:46

OP, you are not going to do you child any favours by them being the single and only priority. Especially at the expense of your marriage and the family unit. I feel very sorry for your husband as you seem quite inflexible and unfeeling.

This. You literally wouldn't have him without your husband, you can't make him.number 1 to the detriment of absolutely everything. He can be your number 1 and you can still have a life. Natural separation has to come too, I read this starts to happen about 1 and the relationship with Dad becomes very important, reflect on everything OP.

TheCheekyCyanHelper · 18/10/2025 04:53

SoCatEs · 17/10/2025 19:32

My mum had friends but for the most part I only recall her taking me with her to see them and their children, my mums friends children all became some of my best friends. My parents didn’t drink at all and my dad was similar he’d take me to see his brother once a week and I’d play with my cousins. I don’t recall them ever going out to socialise without me.

That is really unhealthy and sad.

TheCheekyCyanHelper · 18/10/2025 04:55

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 sincerely hope your husband wakes up and runs from this situation you have created for him. Its so unhealthy for him and your son.

kkloo · 18/10/2025 04:55

Rowen32 · 18/10/2025 04:47

This. You literally wouldn't have him without your husband, you can't make him.number 1 to the detriment of absolutely everything. He can be your number 1 and you can still have a life. Natural separation has to come too, I read this starts to happen about 1 and the relationship with Dad becomes very important, reflect on everything OP.

Agreed.
She literally hasn't done anything wrong and she's being blamed for everything. How dare she be happy and be enjoying her baby, that clearly makes her a user 🙄
But as I said in a previous comment if the DH had posted here most would have told him to get a grip and if he didn't want a baby then he shouldn't have had sex and he needs to grow up and stop thinking he can live the life of his 25 year old mates anymore and he has more of a social life than lots of new dads.

Arcencielle · 18/10/2025 05:00

YABU. He feels trapped. The move, the baby… Sounds like this new life you’re referring to has been forced on to him. He clearly wasn’t ready for it. You’re not willing to make any comprise to help ease the pain so I’m not hopeful for the future of your relationship.

shhblackbag · 18/10/2025 05:05

coxesorangepippin · 17/10/2025 16:01

He'll get over it

Or he'll leave. And it doesn't sound like she'll care too much. Except maybe that she will have to get back to work earlier than she'd like.

I'd be miserable as fuck, too, if I were him.

DiaryofaProvincialLady · 18/10/2025 05:16

"He just needs to make his own friends locally" OP states glibly.

Lol.

The man commutes hours to London and back each week for work to fund your 3+ year fantasy perfect village life stay at home baby bubble sabbatical

Every evening he's straight in the door doing childcare/bedtimes

Every weekend you have his nose to the grindstone doing Dad duty and won't allow him to leave the house except for 30 minutes on Saturday when you graciously let him go outside to take the kid to the park whilst you "read a book"

You won't allow him one evening a week in London with friends

You won't allow him a weekend away with friends

You refuse to leave DS for even for 1 hour to give your DH some time with you - its a a "non-negotiable" and you "won't compromise on that"

You have not included him in your new village friendships

When the fuck would the poor guy have the time or space to make these magical local friends? In his sleep???

The bloke can't take a shit without your say so.

He's in a controlling, abusive relationship and needs help to get away from you before you destroy him.

Pilfer · 18/10/2025 05:18

shhblackbag · 18/10/2025 05:05

Or he'll leave. And it doesn't sound like she'll care too much. Except maybe that she will have to get back to work earlier than she'd like.

I'd be miserable as fuck, too, if I were him.

That’s nice. He’ll be paying for some pretty expensive childcare for his 50% while he’s in London and out for late drinks then. Poor guy.

Viviennemary · 18/10/2025 05:18

It sounds a really boring life for your DH. Working all day coming home and putting a baby to bed. I think you should consider moving again to a more lively place.

IamNotBeingUnreasonable · 18/10/2025 05:20

He sounds like a selfish cunt to be honest. It's all poor him. "He needs space", what a pathetic excuse for a man!

SomewhatAnnoyed · 18/10/2025 05:20

araiwa · 17/10/2025 15:32

You're on maternity leave, you've made new friends so you're alright.

He's told you he's not happy and basically you've said fuck off , I don't care

Also OP said she want bothered about losing/not seeing her old friends as she has new ones now. That’s a bit shitty with regards to your old friends, OP. You’re basically confirming what a lot of posters have said in the past about their former close friends coldly and casually dropping them as soon as they have kids as they’re no further use to them with their new lives. I know having a newborn is full on but I hope you’ve shown your old friends some sensitivity. They mattered to you once.

Pilfer · 18/10/2025 05:21

DiaryofaProvincialLady · 18/10/2025 05:16

"He just needs to make his own friends locally" OP states glibly.

Lol.

The man commutes hours to London and back each week for work to fund your 3+ year fantasy perfect village life stay at home baby bubble sabbatical

Every evening he's straight in the door doing childcare/bedtimes

Every weekend you have his nose to the grindstone doing Dad duty and won't allow him to leave the house except for 30 minutes on Saturday when you graciously let him go outside to take the kid to the park whilst you "read a book"

You won't allow him one evening a week in London with friends

You won't allow him a weekend away with friends

You refuse to leave DS for even for 1 hour to give your DH some time with you - its a a "non-negotiable" and you "won't compromise on that"

You have not included him in your new village friendships

When the fuck would the poor guy have the time or space to make these magical local friends? In his sleep???

The bloke can't take a shit without your say so.

He's in a controlling, abusive relationship and needs help to get away from you before you destroy him.

Edited

You’re so far out of line. I hope whatever happened to you that’s made you think your behaviour is appropriate, is something you can recover from in the future.

I truly, truly hope OP doesn’t come back and look at this hellhole of a thread. I wonder where the compassionate people that would’ve given straightforward useful advice in the past have gone. This place is nuts now.

shhblackbag · 18/10/2025 05:50

Pilfer · 18/10/2025 05:18

That’s nice. He’ll be paying for some pretty expensive childcare for his 50% while he’s in London and out for late drinks then. Poor guy.

Maybe that's preferable to him instead of staying in this stifled relationship? I wouldn't blame him.

kkloo · 18/10/2025 05:51

DiaryofaProvincialLady · 18/10/2025 05:16

"He just needs to make his own friends locally" OP states glibly.

Lol.

The man commutes hours to London and back each week for work to fund your 3+ year fantasy perfect village life stay at home baby bubble sabbatical

Every evening he's straight in the door doing childcare/bedtimes

Every weekend you have his nose to the grindstone doing Dad duty and won't allow him to leave the house except for 30 minutes on Saturday when you graciously let him go outside to take the kid to the park whilst you "read a book"

You won't allow him one evening a week in London with friends

You won't allow him a weekend away with friends

You refuse to leave DS for even for 1 hour to give your DH some time with you - its a a "non-negotiable" and you "won't compromise on that"

You have not included him in your new village friendships

When the fuck would the poor guy have the time or space to make these magical local friends? In his sleep???

The bloke can't take a shit without your say so.

He's in a controlling, abusive relationship and needs help to get away from you before you destroy him.

Edited

Absolute nonsense.
He was away in Paris in the summer. He goes to the gym. He has drinks every couple of weeks in London. He could do stuff in the evenings if he made some friends locally but he doesn't want to.

Abusive...wtf...

Pilfer · 18/10/2025 05:53

kkloo · 18/10/2025 05:51

Absolute nonsense.
He was away in Paris in the summer. He goes to the gym. He has drinks every couple of weeks in London. He could do stuff in the evenings if he made some friends locally but he doesn't want to.

Abusive...wtf...

I know, it’s so sad, how this woman managed to trick him into having a baby and moving to the country and having to get the last train home after London drinks and only getting to go on Paris drinking weekends once a year. I’m in tears here.

Pilfer · 18/10/2025 05:53

shhblackbag · 18/10/2025 05:50

Maybe that's preferable to him instead of staying in this stifled relationship? I wouldn't blame him.

You do surprise me.

Dannydevitoiloveyourart · 18/10/2025 05:55

kkloo · 18/10/2025 04:55

Agreed.
She literally hasn't done anything wrong and she's being blamed for everything. How dare she be happy and be enjoying her baby, that clearly makes her a user 🙄
But as I said in a previous comment if the DH had posted here most would have told him to get a grip and if he didn't want a baby then he shouldn't have had sex and he needs to grow up and stop thinking he can live the life of his 25 year old mates anymore and he has more of a social life than lots of new dads.

So you think if a woman posted here that her husband only allowed her to spend 1 evening a fortnight away from her 11 month old baby, went to bed at 9pm every night so did not spend time one-on-one time with her at all, refused to go on dates because she didn’t want to leave the baby with MIL or anyone other than its parents, no longer had sex with her and didn’t want to discuss the lack of intimacy, only allowed her to take the baby on her own to the local park for less than an hour at a time, and didn’t let her go on a weekend trio with her friends because babies need to be with their mothers - you think we would side with the husband?

I think OP sounds anxious and that anxiety is manifesting as control over her husband and baby’s routines. As a result her husband is depressed and the marriage is in trouble (even if OP doesn’t realise it).

Goshgoshgosh · 18/10/2025 05:59

This is very sad. You don’t seem to be able to or want to connect with how your husband is feeling. Perhaps it’s better to cut him loose. It’s no wonder he’s depressed. I’m normally inclined to stand up for the woman but you seem very disconnected and he needs more than that.

kkloo · 18/10/2025 06:07

Dannydevitoiloveyourart · 18/10/2025 05:55

So you think if a woman posted here that her husband only allowed her to spend 1 evening a fortnight away from her 11 month old baby, went to bed at 9pm every night so did not spend time one-on-one time with her at all, refused to go on dates because she didn’t want to leave the baby with MIL or anyone other than its parents, no longer had sex with her and didn’t want to discuss the lack of intimacy, only allowed her to take the baby on her own to the local park for less than an hour at a time, and didn’t let her go on a weekend trio with her friends because babies need to be with their mothers - you think we would side with the husband?

I think OP sounds anxious and that anxiety is manifesting as control over her husband and baby’s routines. As a result her husband is depressed and the marriage is in trouble (even if OP doesn’t realise it).

I 100% think that if a woman said she was only allowed to go out drinking every fortnight that everyone would tell her to get a grip.

There is no suggestion that he's not allowed to do anything in the evenings when she's in bed, she said he has went to the gym in the evenings and he could easily start some hobbies in the evenings, it doesn't sound like she's stopping him from doing that at all.

If her husband was wrecked tired because he was up with a baby that wasn't a good sleeper I don't think anyone would be berating him for sleeping and expecting him to sit up with her.

She hasn't said that he has suggested any dates, just that she didn't want to leave the baby in response to posters suggesting it. When she asked him what he wanted to change the only thing he mentioned was that he didn't get to see his friends.

If the man was the one who had been pregnant and had the baby then people would tell her it was normal for him to have no libido at this stage, and in the OPs case he hasn't even tried to discuss the lack of sex with her, she said he seems bothered but perhaps he's just not interested in it either and she's sensing the overall tension/disconnect and putting it down to lack of intimacy.

She also never said that she only allowed him to take the baby to the park, just that that's where he takes the baby. Has he ever tried to take him anywhere else? We don't know that information.

spoonbillstretford · 18/10/2025 06:08

He sounds like he needs to grow the fuck up fast or fuck off to me. Nobody can be out every five minutes or on constant weekends away when you have kids. At best you each have some time with friends and to go away together. It won't be long until other friends will be in the same boat. But you will be out the other side quicker having started younger.

kkloo · 18/10/2025 06:11

Pilfer · 18/10/2025 05:53

I know, it’s so sad, how this woman managed to trick him into having a baby and moving to the country and having to get the last train home after London drinks and only getting to go on Paris drinking weekends once a year. I’m in tears here.

The responses on this thread are absolute bullshit and not at all in line with real life relationships and how family life is when there's a baby in the home.

The man is still going out drinking, he still got to go abroad, he can get out in the evenings but people are completely ignoring all that and acting like it's not normal and it's abusive and he should be allowed to go on as many trips abroad as he wants and get to stay in London every week overnight to go out drinking for longer, and that that is what is normal when you have a young baby? Completely batshit.

Also pretty much no one who moved from an area would be ok with their partner going back to stay there once a week to drink and have an escape from their new life when they had a baby because they 'missed their friends', people are literally telling lies on here about what's normal and what isn't.

wordler · 18/10/2025 06:12

@Pilfer the OP’s DH is expressing his unhappiness with their joint situation while still taking his full part of family life.

For him living in the small village environment isn’t working. That doesn’t make him a bad partner or Dad - perhaps just incompatible with the OP.

OP doesn’t want to compromise at all.

But a marriage is a partnership so don’t you see any responsibility on her part to help facilitate a family life which works for both of them?

Whether that’s moving back to a more city life to reduce to commute and be nearer to old friends, or be more flexible over babysitters to facilitate more couple time, or be more flexible over bedtimes to facilitate more couple time, or be more flexible over him spending a couple of nights in the city a month to reduce his commute and facilitate time with his friends.

Or plan to go back to work before the three years she’s taking to facilitate a joint income which would allow them to buy a place closer to old friends with more outside space?

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