Meet the Other Phone. Protection built in.

Meet the Other Phone.
Protection built in.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

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:
albalass · 18/10/2025 09:36

You say you have zero tolerance for drugs but that's isn't true. I have zero tolerance and if that was my husband our relationship would have been over as soon as drug use started. Under no circumstances would I allow my children or myself to be exposed to that.

You have extremely low standards for what you expect of a husband and father. You say he was ok apart from the last 5 years, but 5 years is a huge proportion of your children's childhoods. They don't deserve this.

SalmonOnFinnCrisp · 18/10/2025 09:36

Give him an ultimatum and he is going to "chose you" to keep the status quo and keep on doing what he wants.

Including:
Neglecting you and your needs
Neglecting your marriage
Doing coke and drinking.

There is only one adult in the room - its you.

His behaviour is intolerable IMO and I think this marriage is over whether you end it now or later of you continue as you are.

If you any way want to improve things, leave.
You can always reconcile later if he actually steps up and shows change.

Mum2twoandacockapoo · 18/10/2025 09:37

I’ve been where you are , but minus the kids .
my former partner died due to drinking and coke, he spent £180k in 7 months and a LOT of that was due to coke . He’s probably spending a lot of your children’s potential inheritance which is going up his nose and depending on the quanties he could have a heart attack or he could lose his nose .

You’re focusing on the wrong thing atm . He’s checked out of the relationship . Coke doesn’t let the user be a normal human . It makes them selfish and all they care about is getting to the time where they get their next fix.

ADHD can cause a lot of anxiety and depression , my partner had adhd and autism and couldn’t cope with life so this let him be the big party person that they couldn’t be without it . But then the Coke makes them anxious and miserable as they are coming down .

If he’s got stashes this is a bigger problem than you think . HES got a bigger problem than you know . Most people who do coke on a weekend tend to run into it whilst they are out or call their dealer once they’ve had a drink , this says to me he’s doing it a lot more than you know and maybe it’s now part of his normal life . Like it was for my partner and that’s when the BIG money comes in .

He can’t be who you want him to be atm , you need to let him go and sort himself out he needs to hit rock bottom coz atm you’re holding him up and you’re weighing yourself down and focusing on him when you should be focusing on you and your kids . Please put yourself first coz he is putting himself first and not thinking about his family .

FrogsWormsandButterflies · 18/10/2025 09:37

Oh also, no matter what ultimatums you give a coke addict, they will always choose coke.

Lavender14 · 18/10/2025 09:37

Op he's not a good dad or a good partner. He might have the potential to be if he sorts himself but at present, he's not.

He's aggressive, controlling, parenting while high and taking significant risks while neglecting you as his wife and your needs. He's borderline abusive at best.

If drugs are an actual hard line for you then you end the relationship now.

Imbusytodaysorry · 18/10/2025 09:37

@Figamol i stopped reading in the second paragraph.
This is not ADHD this is your dh is a twat .
The paying for services and talking to you all like crap wasn’t enough?
Drug use and lying isn’t either ?

You give this idiot no more chances . He won’t change . He will just find more excuses and use the blame game .

The Plan you have lined up to leave . Put it in place it’s time.

HedgehogCrisps · 18/10/2025 09:38

YABU to even ask him.

Tell him hes leaving. End of.

Mum2twoandacockapoo · 18/10/2025 09:40

FrogsWormsandButterflies · 18/10/2025 09:37

Oh also, no matter what ultimatums you give a coke addict, they will always choose coke.

Can’t agree with this more !!!
They will tell you everything you want to hear but ultimately the weekend comes and that force is too strong.

It’s an addiction at the end of the day and unless he wants to do it FOR HIMSELF he won’t do it .

JLou08 · 18/10/2025 09:40

Nothing in your post sounds good. He's controlling, a drug addict, you and the kids are bottom of his priorities, he's a shit role model to your DC, he's wasting family money on drugs, he'd rather party with strangers on holiday than be with his family, he risks getting arrested in a foreign country which would be traumatic for you DC to see. I think because you've been with him since you were young your failing to see just how bad this is. Don't leave temporarily, leave permanently. Set a good example to your DC, show them your DHs behaviour isn't acceptable.

whimsicallyprickly · 18/10/2025 09:40

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.

This is who he is now. You've asked him to change. He hasn't

Kick him into touch today

Hoppinggreen · 18/10/2025 09:42

He is a cheating coke head who treats you like crap, why are you looking forward to a life with him post DC?

Parky04 · 18/10/2025 09:43

How can he be a good dad if he has drugs in the house! He will always choose drugs over you so I would spit up.

BustyLaRoux · 18/10/2025 09:43

I think the coke is the least of your problems. It’s a convenient “problem” to focus on, but your issues sound deep seated and insurmountable to me. The coke is almost a distraction.

liveforsummer · 18/10/2025 09:45

If you give him that ultimatum the chances are he will just try to hide it better. A year is plenty time to become an addict and addicts don’t stop from another’s day so, they just get more deceitful.

Stillspotty · 18/10/2025 09:46

I think that by giving him 7 or 8 months to stop taking cocaine that you gave him the impression that you weren't that serious about it, so he's continued to take it, and quite likely won't be stopping at Christmas.

You may have had a great first 20 years, but you're having a miserable time now. Peehaps a trial seperation now, to see if things are better or worse without him in your life and home.

rainbowsandraspberrygin · 18/10/2025 09:48

Not read every response but my view is that you don’t have a zero tolerance. You’ve tolerated too long.

you need to leave with your kids to keep them safe. What he then does is up to him. What you do after that will be seen. But for now - get out.

nutbrownhare15 · 18/10/2025 09:50

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.

This is who he is now though. There's no incentive for him to change if you are going to carry on putting up with it. Even if he had been a great partner for 20 years, there is no excuse for his behaviour ever as you have described it here.

chosenone · 18/10/2025 09:51

You are minimising and excusing a lot of abhorrent and selfish behaviour here. He is prioritising younger colleagues and potential use of sex workers!?

Find your boundaries and barriers and stop allowing him to walk all over you. Have some self respect for everything you do and want to achieve in your life. An ultimatum is only worthwhile if you follow through so make a plan.

In my case, I had the house valued and worked out what I could afford if we sold and I bought alone. I worked out what would happen to the DC and what I’d be entitled to. Got my plan together and gave DH an ultimatum ( not coke but a different habit/ addiction). To be honest I didn’t pussyfoot around him offering help and support as I felt that was form of enablement. I laid down my expectations, put a time limit on it and allowed him to be the grown up he is.

He chose his family.

I really hope you can do the same, or move on and out of there. You, and your DC deserve better.

Discogirl23 · 18/10/2025 09:53

I’m so sorry you’re going through this and I’m also sorry people are being so harsh to you on here. It’s easy to be black and white when you’re not living it. Your husband has
addiction issues and unfortunately people in that situation cannot be helped unless they want to help themselves. You can support but the sad fact is that you can’t change his behaviour. He has to do that for himself. I can understand why you are reluctant to take action as you can see the potential of your relationship but unfortunately that potential will never be realised unless he deals
with his addiction. You’ve got a choice to make about whether you stay and live the way you are at the moment or step back and let him deal with it. Please remember this is not in your control and try and access some support for yourself. AlAnon is super helpful to families of addicts and can give some great advice. There are also a variety of podcasts and online supports on codependency and addiction that might be helpful. Huge hugs to you, it’s not easy.

SkinnyOatFlatWhiteForMePlease · 18/10/2025 09:55

Parky04 · 18/10/2025 09:43

How can he be a good dad if he has drugs in the house! He will always choose drugs over you so I would spit up.

This. You also don’t have a zero tolerance approach, you have been tolerating it now for a year.
No decent parent reacts to a time of financial uncertainty by blowing £££ on coke.
He needs to go, for your children’s sake.

Treesandsheepeverywhere · 18/10/2025 09:55

He has made his choice, it's now time for you to choose yourself, your self respect and the kids.

Just because it's new behaviour, doesn't make it excusable. He is being a bad father and husband.

If one of the kids found his stash and overdosed, would you still say, it's new and a one off?

Nanny0gg · 18/10/2025 10:05

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.

No. This is who he is NOW

Why do you think you're less important than him?

How much money is he sniffing up his nose?
What if he gets caught?
What if your kids find it?

What is the point?

Howwilliknow122 · 18/10/2025 10:07

ToKittyornottoKitty · 18/10/2025 08:47

So he’s a druggy and shouts aggressively at you and the kids, doesn’t want to date you and probably spends money on prostitutes. But you’re still pretending his a ‘good dad’ and don’t want to leave. You are an absolute mug and neither of you are being good parents by allowing this to continue. Poor bloody kids, they deserve better than the pair of you.

I think the only mug here is you perhaps. Don't be so nasty. It really isnt as easy as ppl make out. Op is probably hoping he will change, especially when we went to therapy she probably wanted to see it through. Op probably does need some tough love now but what you wrote is just vile.

TicTac80 · 18/10/2025 10:10

From experience (with my XH), I can promise you that the addict will do all they can to hide their addiction, justify it and basically hoodwink/gaslight EVERYONE around them. Oh and they won't just give up because you have given a "drugs/whatever they're addicted to or me" ultimatum. I'm so sorry to sound harsh, but that's pretty much the truth. You will tie yourself in knots to try and fix things for him, but if he is not prepared to (or wants to) fully and honestly engage with things, then forget it. My XH went through private residential rehab (and it cost a five figure amount of money) when we were together...he didn't engage in the rehab, because really he didn't want to. I thought he was going to AA/alcohol counselling etc...he wasn't. He paid lip service to me so that I thought he was trying (and so that I'd get off his back!). He even tampered with the alcohol test kits that I bought to check on him. He admitted that one to me this year.

You can't control their addictions/behaviours etc...but you can control how you react/act in this situation. I know you had the good 20yrs together. I know you want him to get better/sober/clean. Of course you do. So did I...but I was in love with a ghost (the lovely guy I met/married was gone). And I know that you're probably trying hard and doing absolutely anything to try and get things fixed. I did too. But what's your hard limit/boundary? Mine was a combination of things: waking up to the realisation that I really couldn't do anything to fix the problem; finding out the extent of the addiction and that he was likely drunk/high (he also took coke - I found that one out later, I thought it was just alcohol. Haha, "just"!) whilst looking after the DC. I'd tried to shield the DC from his drinking/when he was drunk. The lightbulb moment was when I immediately took stock and stopped him having unsupervised contact with the kids. When I found out the extent of his drinking (and the fact he took drugs) I reported all this to schools and SS, and took advice from my solicitor and from SS to ensure DC were properly safeguarded. We separated on a temp basis so that he'd work on getting clean/sober and work on our marriage. That didn't work...he continued using/drinking and an OW (who also used drugs) came out the woodwork. So I filed for divorce. I also got a PSO to stop him having unsupervised contact with DC as I didn't trust that he was sober/clean when looking after the DC. Judge did a CAO that said that the DC were not to have any overnight stays with him.

FWIW, XH's been clean for about 4/5yrs and sober most of this year. But coming off the drugs and off the alcohol were both done under his terms and because HE wanted to sort his addictions. He has acknowledged the problems that were caused by his addictions and has worked hard to resolve these and get back on an even keel. He's done well, and is doing great. Importantly, we are able to do things as a family (I'm not back with him!!) which was not possible before. All the begging/pleading/ultimatums wouldn't have worked for him before because he wasn't ready/prepared to deal with it then. I wish you luck x

Edit: PM me if you want. I'm out later today and tomorrow, but if you need to chat, I'm happy to x

Sequinsoneverythingplease · 18/10/2025 10:14

I put up with a lot from my alcoholic ex. I get the co-dependency I really do, but your husband is using coke around his teenagers and has an actual stash in the family home? You need to get him out immediately. He knows he shouldn’t be doing it, he knows it impacts on your children and marriage and continues anyway, because he wants to, he won’t give two hoots about an ultimatum. He should have been out the moment you knew he was using.

Swipe left for the next trending thread