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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

to ask him to choose Coke or me?

232 replies

Figamol · 18/10/2025 08:18

DH and I are parents of three teens. All have ADHD, it’s stressful and intense but I find beauty and gratitude in the chaos. There’s also the added stress of coming to an age where our jobs are less sure and our earning power will start to reduce etc so lots to think about and plan financially. Our couple life is non existent, despite couples therapy to deal with our parenting differences and the aggressive way he talks to me and the kids and also our lack of ‘couple life’. Despite pleading and his promises, he still has not decided to date me and treat me as a wife while I watch him go out for lunches and dinner dates with friends and work colleagues. I highly suspect he may be paying for services as he did admit to ‘massages’.

Last year during a stressful time at work he accepted to do coke with his younger work colleagues. He has carried on doing it all year, and I can see it makes him moody, sniffly, aggressive. He was taking it in the mornings to focus at work and that surely means he’s been on dad duty while high. He also bought it while we were on holiday in a place with harsh punishments if caught.

We put things on the table before summer and he sought help, he’s having therapy and hypnosis but I made it clear if he hadn’t stopped by Xmas we are done. He was also diagnosed with ADHD and is now medicated for that. He’s lost quite a bit of weight too, We have barely spoken since May but this week we tried to talk. I made it clear he’s crossing so many boundaries - he puts it on me saying I never agree with how things need to run.in the house. He has very very high expectations of how we and the kids should be and finds it difficult to adjust them despite some considerably neurodiversity in our kids. Some wives may have no issue with Coke use. I have zero tolerance for drugs. I have the right to not want that in our relationship and I told him that.

Today I found his stash - it’s just not all going I the right direction, I don’t know what to do, Do I need to give him more time for his treatments to work or do I play hardball and say please leave while you’re still taking it? We have couples therapy booked for the end of November that he instigated as he says he knows I find it easier to talk there. But I’m angry with him as we were doing it for months to deal with the vibe he creates in the house without me knowing he was on coke so basically the whole think was a joke to him in some way.

He’s a good dad, a good partner but not in the romantic sense. I don’t want to break up - we’ve been together since young and could have so much to look forward to once the kids are grown. We have a lot going for us as a couple if we can find our way back but he is so stubborn and in most aspects of life - only his way is the right way which most of the time I’m ok with but increasingly I feel not listened to and unable to take it. I feel incredibly lonely, scared but resolute I won’t walk on this path with him, He says he’s bored of our small circle of friends etc and he does like to party (this I’ve always known and it’s cool even tho when we go on holiday he meets new groups and I’m sidelined while he socializes with them and does what he wants). I tried to book an activity that interests me and he didn’t come - just went to bed for a nap instead and left me to it with the kids.

I could go on - he has my sympathy, I had a breakdown in 2015 with the stress, I feel he’s having his now. But he’s doing it in a far riskier way and seemingly his now actively choosing coke and whatever else over me. Am I being unreasonable to go heavy handed now and ask him to temporarily leave while he gets himself together?

OP posts:
LamonicBibber1 · 18/10/2025 08:51

Look up the meaning of "sunk cost fallacy". It applies to the 25 years of your life that he's wasted, and your difficulty in seeing the light about what he really is.

I would 100% get personal therapy, tell him to leave before the kids find his dangerous class A drugs, and divorce him.

SriouslyWhutNow · 18/10/2025 08:51

PollyBell · 18/10/2025 08:31

Do you want social services to visit?

I hope to god they do, someone needs to keep these kids safe.

Cosyblankets · 18/10/2025 08:51

Here we go
He's such a good dad
No
He isn't

ObtuseMoose · 18/10/2025 08:52

Some people have a very weird definition of a good dad and husband 😐

Throwntothewolves · 18/10/2025 08:52

It's too late to ask him to choose, he already has. End it or expect more of the same or worse for the rest of your lives together.

dunroamingfornow · 18/10/2025 08:53

He’s shown you who he is. It’s up to you what you do with it. I’ve never seen coke and family life ending well though. Apart from anything else, he’s sniffing away the family income. You must know the risk he poses to your children.

SharonEllis · 18/10/2025 08:54

Quite apart from the drugs, He's aggressive towards you & your kids. He has 'high expectations' of your behaviour and how the house should run & doesn't accommodate/understand your kids neurodiversity, or apparently give you any parenting support. He seems to have time to socialise with others at home and on holiday but can't be arsed to do things with you as a family. You haven't said a single thing that suggests he's even a halfway adequate partner or father, never mind a good one. It sounds very lonely for you. I think you need to draw a line as you & your children deserve better.

PollyBell · 18/10/2025 08:55

SriouslyWhutNow · 18/10/2025 08:51

I hope to god they do, someone needs to keep these kids safe.

Yes, the title should be 'should I choose my coke husband or my children?"

And yes I mean every word of that, it is the extremely polite version

UndineSpraggg · 18/10/2025 08:55

The other thing that’s really important to be aware of @Figamol is that the situation with an addict is not static. Overtime their health deteriorates - and this is much more so with Coke than alcohol - especially related to heart health. Mental health implodes. Careers collapse. Relationships and friendships fade as behaviours become intolerable. Finances plummet.

It’s a one way street and a lot of people get hurt along the way. Some things arent reversible. You have to decide how far along this street and how much irreversible damage will your DCs endure before you change direction. You are the only one with agency here to make decisions.

ByShyRaven · 18/10/2025 08:55

It sounds like your husband’s drug use is no longer recreational.

it is likely that your husband is convincing himself that his habit is normal. But when you start using cocaine in the morning, as well as it occupying enough space in his head to seek it out on a family holiday, this is a clear sign that he isn’t someone who is able to control their drug use. It’s likely this will escalate. He’ll probably need to abstain from booze for a while too, until he’s got the coke under control.

I would encourage him to seek help. Irrespective of the other issues your marriage, he needs to get it sorted.

DelphiniumBlue · 18/10/2025 08:56

It sounds like he is addicted to coke, but that is not the only problem. However the rest might well improve if he wasn’t taking it,especially your finances. I don’t understand why you have given him till Xmas to give up. It’s one of those things either youre taking it or you’re not.
If he wants to stop, he can go to Narcotics Anonymous. He is already having therapy, so the fact he hasn’t already stopped suggests he doesn’t actually want to. It’s not quite like giving up alcohol, you can go cold turkey, you don’t have to slowly wean yourself off.
I would say youre no longer willing or able to live with an addict and so he needs to move out by the end of the month if he doesn’t stop. Have a plan in mind as to how you will make this happen. Make sure you have access to all the financial info before you discuss this with him. Are you able to view his spending - eg bank statements? Get legal advice too.

fishtank12345 · 18/10/2025 08:57

Changingplace · 18/10/2025 08:21

If you found his stash your kids could find it too, he’s not a good dad if he has drugs in your home where your kids live and you’re putting them at risk by keeping them in this situation.

You absolutely need to tell him to leave.

100% this, what a stupid stupid dangerous thing!

TallSuzy · 18/10/2025 08:58

What you need to accept OP is that his actions are his choices and you are just accepting them. He knows what you want, he just doesn't care enough about you to do anything about it.

Now it's your turn to decide what you are going to do.

And remember if you always do what you've always done you'll always get what you always got.

You deserve better.

fishtank12345 · 18/10/2025 08:58

UndineSpraggg · 18/10/2025 08:55

The other thing that’s really important to be aware of @Figamol is that the situation with an addict is not static. Overtime their health deteriorates - and this is much more so with Coke than alcohol - especially related to heart health. Mental health implodes. Careers collapse. Relationships and friendships fade as behaviours become intolerable. Finances plummet.

It’s a one way street and a lot of people get hurt along the way. Some things arent reversible. You have to decide how far along this street and how much irreversible damage will your DCs endure before you change direction. You are the only one with agency here to make decisions.

Get out now while you can, and its his fault, addicts lie.

fishtank12345 · 18/10/2025 09:01

Cosyblankets · 18/10/2025 08:51

Here we go
He's such a good dad
No
He isn't

Also this. Im horrified reading this thread. This man is such a threat to his family.

Merryoldgoat · 18/10/2025 09:02

Figamol · 18/10/2025 08:33

The drugs is only a year old- and in the 25 years together it was great for the first 20 or so. What isn’t coming out here is that this is all out of character or at least at the extreme end of who he is.

You’re in denial and that’s ok but you need to accept the truth.

This is minimising the reality:

And you’re lying to yourself. You don’t have zero tolerance to drugs - if you did he’d be gone.

He’s not a good husband/partner/father - you’ve had to have counselling about his aggression to all of you ffs.

You need some support to see the reality of your relationship rather than the rose-tinted version.

CountFucula · 18/10/2025 09:02

It’s out of character because he is now a drug addict. He cannot be trusted to be a husband or father. He is a drug addict right now and the best thing for you and more importantly - your children who are having this ABSOLUTE SHIT SHOW modelled as parenting, is that you separate immediately.

Serpentstooth · 18/10/2025 09:03

Drugs? Prostitutes? Ignoring family over his own indulgences? I suggest you cut your losses before be remortgages your house behind your back. Don't think 'he would never do that'. He would, you know it, save yourselves and stop facilitating him.

Beamur · 18/10/2025 09:07

Kindly, I think you are a bit deluded that all of your problems are down to his coke use and if that stopped everything would be fine.

Girliefriendlikespuppies · 18/10/2025 09:07

He is not a good dad or partner.

Im not sure what mental gymnastics you’re doing to make believe he’s a good man.

Bishopstail · 18/10/2025 09:09

I think he'd choose the coke and his party lifestyle. You deserve so much better.

Driftingawaynow · 18/10/2025 09:11

I am not zero tolerance to drugs and I wouldn’t put up with this. The thing about Coke is it’s not something to phase out. It will be easier for him physically to just stop. However what is obviously difficult about This is the psychological side of it which he clearly has no interest in dealing with. I wonder how much of your family money is going up his nose. He is presenting a safeguarding risk to the entire family in multiple different ways, taking it to another country is off the charts stupid. I’m addition, his moods, his shit treatment of you, potentially prostitutes?

love, from the outside, it seems like the biggest problem you’ve got is fear of splitting up with him. Think of it like this- it might hurt a lot while you’re doing it as you let go of the dream of growing old together, but you will adjust to that. At the moment you’re a frog in a pot of increasingly hot water. You could be happy and recovering your dignity and self respect right now, you could be so much happier and deserve this as do your kids

Daleksatemyshed · 18/10/2025 09:11

Your DH needs to see reality Op, he may have been OK for 20 years but he's now a grown man whose checked out of family life more and more for the last 5. He needs a sharp shock and being asked to leave would do that. Be prepared that he might leave and find a single life is what he wants, it's not a sure thing that he'll want to change

FOJN · 18/10/2025 09:12

What you have written does not describe a good dad or partner. It describes a man in middle age who is resentful about the responsibilities he participated in creating keeping him from behaving like a carefree 20 something.

You do not have a zero tolerance attitude to drugs, he's been taking coke for a year and you haven't asked him to leave. If he has a stash at home and is taking it in the mornings before work then he has a problem, he's not using it recreationally. He will not stop using until he's had enough. You can threaten him and he will make promises he fails to keep and you will keep repeating the cycle until you accept this is how things are or he decides he wants to deal with his addiction. He will always choose coke until he's ready to admit it's a problem. Right now I suspect he thinks you are an uptight, nagging wife.

He needs to leave and you need to make plans for how he can see the children without putting them at risk because of his drug use. Protect yourself financially otherwise he'll snort away your financial security. I suspect you will think I'm being dramatic because you have become so accustomed to his appalling behaviour you don't even think it's that bad.

TLDR: you are both deluded and your marriage is over because he's a coke addict.

PermanentTemporary · 18/10/2025 09:12

I can’t believe what he has accustomed you to.

I opened this thread thinking that your husband had an addiction to Coca Cola. That’s laughable isn’t it? But it’s not, because it is not normal to take class A illegal drugs just to make it through the day, to keep them in the house you share with your kids. It is strange, dangerous and frightening. It’s also setting an example. How will you feel when your kids start doing coke?

The person he was for all that time has gone and he probably isn’t coming back. His own choices and actions have driven that man away. I don’t know what changed 5 years ago but I bet there was more to it than that.

Zero tolerance? Great. Ring the police. Too much? Get him out of your children’s home.