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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:
DaisyChain505 · 18/10/2025 09:13

You are very contradictory.

You can’t tell us all of this awful information about him and in the same breath say he’s a good father and a good husband.

A good father and good husband doesn’t do any of the things you’re talking about.

You’ve given your all and tried therapy. If he hasn’t changed now, he isn’t going to.

Time to do right by your children and leave.

Floatingdownriver · 18/10/2025 09:15

Unless there is a whole lot you’ve held back, he is NOT a good dad or a good partner. LTB

Shutuptrevor · 18/10/2025 09:16

He needs to leave, before someone who knows he’s looking after the kids whilst high reports you BOTH to Social Services.

Raise your bar.

Allthings · 18/10/2025 09:16

What has stood out for me is that you have hardly spoken since May and despite the coke and everything else you think he is a good father etc.

If you can’t extract yourself from this situation, you need to seek support to allow you to do so. You and your children will have already been damaged by this, but you all deserve much more than this. If you can’t extract yourself for you, do it for your children.

theriseandfallofFranklinSaint · 18/10/2025 09:18

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

He speaks to you like shit and you've barely spoken since May, do you really think that things will turn just peachy when the kids have left home?

Readyforslippers · 18/10/2025 09:18

Good dads don't take drugs. Protect your children from him.

IDontHateRainbows · 18/10/2025 09:19

Rather than say 'choose coke or me' you say im not tolerating being in a relationship with a drug user this is my red line im leaving and see how much he fights to keep you which nay involve giving up coke. But put the ball in his court cos ultimatums don't work. And be prepared that he'll say he wants to give up, and probably will mean it at the time , but 99% he will relapse

Iwanttoliveinagardencentre · 18/10/2025 09:19

You have had too much of so called “therapy” which shows in how you write and the fact that you can’t see the wood for the trees.

Chuck this loser out.

That will be £250 please.

TwistedWonder · 18/10/2025 09:20

You say you have zero tolerance for drugs but you’re married to a coke head who has cheated and lied time and time again with pretty much no consequences.

He’s not a great father, he’s a weak pathetic lying loser who gaslights you into being to blame for him being a twat.

You know the answer- you need to take action

THISbitchingwitch · 18/10/2025 09:21

Op you do need to make him leave. I don't think you will yet because you think you can get him to change. Only he can make himself change and if he was going to he would have done it when this all first came out

I hope you find your strength to end this before its too late

RidiculousRed · 18/10/2025 09:22

My ex regularly took coke and I thought I was zero tolerance for it, but in reality I said something along the lines of "you need to stop or our relationship is over" and he carried on but I didn't end things. He was also a heavy drinker and gambler and again I gave an ultimatums and never followed through with them.

It wasn't until I was pregnant and our older child found a wrap of coke on the sofa that I knew things were seriously wrong. Even then, I didn't end things. I told him he can't do it in the house and got mad incase he did it when there was a baby in the house and the baby found it. He seemed shocked but I dont think he stopped.

I ended our relationship when our baby was 2 months old as I finally realised he was never going to change. Not for me. Not for our older child. And not for a baby.

Your partner is not a good partner doing all the things he's done. Why are you bothering to go to couples counselling? What do you hope to gain from it? He is selfish and won't see your point of view. I bet he will twist things you bring up in moments of vulnerability and use them against you. You don't need to feel like he helped you in 2015 so you need to help (and turn a blind eye to all the things he is doing) now.

Please, read your post to yourself out loud, or get your phone to read it out to you and hear it with fresh ears. Protect your peace and your children’s safety and end this relationship.

toomuchfaff · 18/10/2025 09:23

If youre having to type "choose coke or me" - you may as well not. He's made his choice; youve been there all along, youve not spoken since May, not been a coupke for ywars - there is no "You" that he wants to choose or he would have done it.

Hes not a "good dad &partner" - far from it. Stop deluding yourself and stop minimising his actions. He hasnt chosen you or you wouldnt be typing this post. An ultimatum is not the right way to go. You can only impact YOUR choices not his.

You have the choice to accept his behaviour or leave - those are your choices.

MrsMoastyToasty · 18/10/2025 09:23

He needs to leave . Then he can snort coke in his own house using his own funds and in his own time.

StewkeyBlue · 18/10/2025 09:24

Did the speaking aggressively to you and the kids pre-date the coke?

You have been together since young. Head down in dealing with ND kids. Experiencing aggressive behaviour, him going for Massages’’ . Do you even know what a happy healthy relationship feels like?

I would ditch the couples therapy, he can’t even be arsed to arrange to go for lunch with you, and spend some time with a therapist, or some appropriate self help books, exploring what YOU need to be happy that does not depend on another person changing who they are.

Robertsmithsnan · 18/10/2025 09:25

You say you have zero tolerance for drugs but that’s not true. You are allowing this in your life.

HashtagSadTimes · 18/10/2025 09:27

Of the people I know who are the parents of teenagers and who do coke, basically all of them introduce their kids to it.

He would be straight out on his arse as a protection measure for the kids.

You say you have zero tolerance to drugs but your actions demonstrate otherwise. You are tolerating his drugs in your house and around your kids.

Middle aged coke users are universally cunts - including the ones who are Mumsnetters getting huffy reading that comment. They are paying for people to be raped and murdered for 15 minutes. Absolute Cunts.

FrogsWormsandButterflies · 18/10/2025 09:29

3 months ago I found out my (now ex) OH was a coke addict. He was hiding it very well, functioning day to day and had no idea. I’ve seen people on coke and know the signs but he was so immune to it that he was able to function. I found out because the police knocked on my door at 7am and arrested him for viewing indecent imagines of children online. It all came out then.
He is on bail awaiting trial.

I cannot believe you know he’s sniffing coke in the morning to get through the day, you’ve been able to find his stash and you think he’s been high around the children and you’re still living with him. My ex hasn’t stepped foot in the house since the day he was arrested.
I now have a social worker who is amazing, she is there to make sure I keep the children safe, their school also know. If your children are under 18 and the police become involved it won’t look good on you that you were aware of his drug use and continued to let him live in the house. Regardless of trying to get him help, he should leave until he can prove he’s clean, or leave and be free to fuck his life up without doing the same to you and the children.

FrogsWormsandButterflies · 18/10/2025 09:29

HashtagSadTimes · 18/10/2025 09:27

Of the people I know who are the parents of teenagers and who do coke, basically all of them introduce their kids to it.

He would be straight out on his arse as a protection measure for the kids.

You say you have zero tolerance to drugs but your actions demonstrate otherwise. You are tolerating his drugs in your house and around your kids.

Middle aged coke users are universally cunts - including the ones who are Mumsnetters getting huffy reading that comment. They are paying for people to be raped and murdered for 15 minutes. Absolute Cunts.

This 100%

Ivelostmyglasses · 18/10/2025 09:29

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.

How long has been speaking to you all aggressively , refusing to date you and using prostitutes?

thecomedyofterrors · 18/10/2025 09:31

Well you’re not zero tolerance for drugs. Kindly, you have a tough life with an awful husband and difficult children (not saying they’re not lovely and loved.) You are putting a positive, blaze spin on life- him socialising, missing your activities etc. Have a moment of clarity, reflection and reality. He is doing coke. He is seeing prostitutes. He doesn’t care about you. What does he Do for the children. Does he speak kindly to them and cheer them on or demand behaviours and respect which isn’t earned?
He’s awful. It just depends whether you’ve the courage to face that and act upon it.

LorrieTosh · 18/10/2025 09:31

He’s a good dad, a good partner but not in the romantic sense

You have reason to believe “he’s been on dad duty while high” on coke, which you identify as making him moody and aggressive. Is that him being a good dad?
You “highly suspect he may be paying for services as he did admit to ‘massages’.” Is this him being a good partner?
You started couples therapy in part due to “the aggressive way he talks to me and the kids”. How does persistent coke-addled aggression towards both you and your innocent children fit with your assessment of him as a good dad and partner?

You’ve “barely spoken since May” but this week you told him he was crossing boundaries, only for him to flip it back onto you: “he puts it on me saying I never agree with how things need to run in the house.” If he won’t take responsibility for his behaviour nothing is going to change.

I’m sorry OP, he’s not a good dad, he’s not a good partner, and he doesn’t give enough of a shit about you or your children to even keep his drugs out of the house, let alone stop his disgusting behaviour. You need to be the responsible adult in this situation, prioritise your children’s wellbeing, and get them away from this horrible man.

oviraptor21 · 18/10/2025 09:34

You need to at least separate while he sorts himself out.

beewho · 18/10/2025 09:34

Agree with the things everyone else has said OP.
He is an addict and he is going to ruin you mentally, emotionally and financially.

IMO you should contact the health professionals working with him to inform them. To be frank with you I’m surprised he hasn’t had a medical emergency already.
ADHD meds + coke is incredibly dangerous.

People with ADHD are significantly more likely to develop a substance abuse problem.
Google it, there have been thousands of studies.
One of your DCs will eventually find his stash.

If you choose to stay with him and he doesn’t get help you, sin all likelihood you will find that:
• You will lose your DCs, they will be taken into care.
• At least one of your DCs will develop an addiction of their own.
• They will have terrible adult relationships.
• The Police will be at your door and they may not knock first.
• Strangers will contact you and demand money. Or else. And they will hurt you if he doesn’t pay.
• You will be left penniless and homeless, all as you move closer to retirement.

Tell him to leave OP. For the safety of you and DCs.

Sassylovesbooks · 18/10/2025 09:35

Some of his behaviour is likely the ADHD. However, he's a grown adult, choosing to engage in risky behaviour - prostitutes, taking drugs and buying drugs in countries with harsh penalties. He's not a child, who doesn't know right from wrong. He clearly has a need to control, because he expects you and the children to behave in particular ways and essentially do as he says. You're expected to put up with his behaviour and shut up. This isn't a marriage or even a relationship. You are constantly trying to manage his erratic behaviour, which is now even worse due to taking coke. If you found the drugs, your children could have easily done so too. Having someone in the house who's keeping drugs in it, and taking them is not a safe situation for your children. I appreciate you've been together a long time, and being on your own would be scary, but surely it would bring you some normality and peace, rather than being surrounded by chaos? Your priority is your children, not your husband. You can't stop him from self-destructing his life, but you can stop his behaviour from destroying yours and your children's by ending the marriage. You can't help your husband, he needs professional help to quit the drugs (but it will only work if he wants to stop) and probably adjusting his ADHD medication (assuming he's even taking it). It's not fair on your children growing up in this toxic environment, and it will damage them long-term.

wrongthinker · 18/10/2025 09:36

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

Sorry, I think you are completely delusional. He's not a good dad - he goes off taking drugs and taking terrible risks that endanger his whole family. He's not a good partner - he barely even speaks to you. He lies, he prioritises his addiction over you and his kids.

You are also not being a good parent by continuing to enable his drug taking and other behaviours. You need to protect your children from him. Tell him he needs to leave. Get him out of the house and then you can start figuring out what the future looks like.

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