Meet the Other Phone. Flexible and made to last.

Meet the Other Phone.
Flexible and made to last.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to feel deeply hurt and unsupported by my boyfriend (20w pregnant, toddler, both full time jobs)

62 replies

Unlikelyoptimist · 24/10/2025 13:25

I’m 37, 20 weeks pregnant with my second, and have a 19-month-old DD with my boyfriend (45). We both work full time. We’ve been together for nearly 7 years.

He does nothing around the house. No cleaning, cooking, shopping, laundry, or general household management. I do all of it. I also handle everything for DD, including all pick-ups, drop-offs, night wakes, feeding, and bedtime. He might drop her off once a month if I ask and it fits his schedule.

He works long hours, comes home close to midnight, and often stays up until 2–3 a.m. trading or watching porn. I’m up early with DD, working from home, juggling my job and housework, and then doing full-time parenting until bedtime.

Weekends aren’t much different, he sleeps till midday, then might play with DD while I cook or tidy, he works (few hours from home) most weekends. He’s rarely taken her out alone to give me a break (since she was born, a handful of times for 1 hour max).

Financially:
He earns twice what I do. He covers rent, bills, half the food shop, and nursery fees. I pay for DD’s clothes, food, car-related costs, nanny, health insurance, and most household items. We aren’t married (he doesn’t want to because of his childhood trauma with his parents), so his savings, investments, and pension are his alone.

A few month ago, he gave me £5k as a gift to help with a house purchase that would be in my name but for both of us to live in. The agreement was that he would live there rent-free, since he didn’t want to co-own anything or contribute to the mortgage. The £5k was meant to help with legal fees and strengthen my mortgage application.

That house purchase didn’t go through because my flat hasn’t sold yet (one bed, fully paid out, on my name. It was rented but now empty and back on the market), I’m still looking and considering various options including let to buy, and he knows that. Then two days ago, out of nowhere, I get a text from him at 8pm asking for the £5k back. I panicked and asked if everything was okay he said yes, he just needed it to cover a trading margin and “you’re an adult, you can take care of yourself.”

That line broke me. I always thought we were a partnership, that we take care of each other. I cried myself to sleep past couple of days. I feel misunderstood and unappreciated. I’ve sacrificed and continue to (as most do so I’m not special) to make this work, time, rest, social life, health, while his life hasn’t really changed.

We haven’t been on holiday in over three years, barely go out, and DD has only been to a cafe twice in her life. He’s constantly worried about losing his job, which I understand but who isn’t!

I do love him, he’s loyal (I think), clever, and loves our daughter. He does pay for a lot of stuff. But feel so alone, exhausted, and resentful.

Am I missing something? Is this fair? What would you do in my situation?

OP posts:
Hoppinggreen · 24/10/2025 13:30

Oh dear OP.
You aren't a partnership are you?
He refused to marry you and is tight and you seem to have just gone along with it and you have let him
You have had not 1 but 2 children with him and at no point have you questioned if this is a good idea?
Do you live in his house?
In your shoes I would be planning to leave ASAP

workshy46 · 24/10/2025 13:31

With kindness why on earth did you have a second with him when he was so useless in the first place - total insanity. So he thinks 5k should absolve him of paying anything towards his housing costs. You are a complete mug but you are where you are. I’d be moving on and getting child support and as much as you can as he clearly won’t be helping with any childcare. You really need to examine why you brought a second child into this “relationship “ when it clearly wasn’t one the begin with.

Hoppinggreen · 24/10/2025 13:31

Keep the £5k if you haven't returned it yet and move back into your flat

MsPavlichenko · 24/10/2025 13:35

Sto crying, stop feeling hurt ( fake it till you make it ). Start planning to be a single parent to two ( probably be easier without him tbh ). Move into your place in the meantime, and get your child support claim in. In a year’s time you’ll be so glad you did. The alternative is you’ll be feeling the same as now with another DC in the mix.

Unrulyscrumptious · 24/10/2025 13:45

Sorry OP, YANBU this is unfair. I can't take any man seriously who doesn't want to get married but wants to set up a family with a woman. He wants his cake and a family without you having any financial protection if you were to split. Nothing about legally being partnered has anything to do with his parental trauma, it doesn't make you more of less likely to split up it just means you're both equally invested in the life you're building, he sound like a dick.

FeliciaFancybottom · 24/10/2025 13:45

So he's always behaved like an absolute dick, leaving everything to you. What on earth made you decide to have another baby with him?

TheSandgroper · 24/10/2025 13:48

I’ve just said this on another thread.

Look clearly at the man you have rather than look for a man you don’t have. It’s not as if he has shown your who and what he is. He has shown you what you are in his life and your title is “bangmaid”.

You aren’t married. Walk out, into your fully paid off flat and file for child maintenance. Make a life for yourself that will be safe and fulfilling.

BeeKee · 24/10/2025 13:48

Why did you have children with this man!?!?!

I can't wait to here how you move in to your flat and have to pay for everything whilst he gets away with paying £4.56 a week.

Ridiculous.

PeachyKoala · 24/10/2025 13:49

YANBU

But why are you with him?

He adds nothing to your life! Sounds like your life will be easier without him.

Not to mention the staying up watching porn into the early hours, YUK!

thecomedyofterrors · 24/10/2025 13:53

He sounds disgusting. How on earth did you convince yourself you were in a partnership? When and where did you learn it was okay or normal to be treated like this- like shit! It’s a mockery of a what a relationship or partnership should be. You’re being cheated into believing it’s remotely okay.

AllThisTime · 24/10/2025 13:58

I always thought we were a partnership

Based on what you have said, I don’t understand why you would think that.

Luna6 · 24/10/2025 14:03

OP you are worth more than this. He is living like a single man and taking advantage of you. There seems to be no joy in your lives. Please think seriously about moving on without this man.

Blinkyblinky14 · 24/10/2025 14:04

So this is a complete personality transformation from before you had a child with him or went on to a second pregnancy?

No, I didn’t think so

Blinkyblinky14 · 24/10/2025 14:06

£5k??

a poxy £5k to help with a house purchase?

Drop in the ocean surely

EvangelicalAboutButteredToast · 24/10/2025 14:14

he has a high earning but high risk job that he could lose at anytime. He is using you as stability without the emotional intelligence to understand that having two children means you are anything but stable and you require him to balance you or else everything is at risk of falling down.

My advice is to not buy a house right now. Sell your flat and ensure you keep your equity in your name and if need be lock it away. As he might try abd use it to gamble with it. My next advice would be to get away from him. He brings very little to your life ashes from some degree if financial support which he could give you in the form of child maintenance.

Agix · 24/10/2025 14:14

YANBU, but - lovingly as possible - you've been an absolute mug. He is taking advantage of you.

You've had his children (I imagine taking time off work, getting no more than SMP for a lot of it) whilst allowing him no obligation to support you, allow you to build up your own savings. No security. You're working full time, taking care of the kids and the house, he lives there rent free.

You may love him. He does not love you. Could you imagine him taking the piss pit of him like this? You don't treat those you love like that. You are not a partnership.

Whilst I fully believe that getting married should far from be a woman's goal in life... If you're gonna have kids with a man, rely on a man, live your life with a man as if you were a partnership... Make sure he wants to marry you, and do it.

I'm sorry OP. You're better than this.

Blinkyblinky14 · 24/10/2025 14:17

e. I always thought we were a partnership, that we take care of each other.

despite him doing f**k all around the house and any childcare?

Mischance · 24/10/2025 14:27

So .... he spends hours watching porn, but has neither the time nor the inclination to be a real father or partner in the chores of smile life.
I honestly cannot think of a good reason for you to be with him.

Mischance · 24/10/2025 14:27

Smile should read family ...

LittleMissNumber · 24/10/2025 14:46

What made you think you were a partnership? It's completely clear from your post how he feels about you.

Was he helpful around the home before the first child was born?

SkaterGrrrrl · 24/10/2025 14:59

So sorry OP but he sounds awful. Honestly I would leave. Best of luck to you and your kids, a better life is out there.

Unlikelyoptimist · 24/10/2025 15:16

Just to clarify a few things since a few of you asked why I ever thought it was a partnership.

He’s always paid the lion’s share of expenses, full rent, bills, nursery fees, and most groceries, so I did see that as his contribution, while mine was handling childcare and the house. That’s what made it feel like a partnership to me, just with different roles.

No, he’s never been hands-on around the house, but earlier (when we conceived the second child) on he was more present, available on weekends, not working or trading as much in the evenings, so I had him around more. Now he’s back to 5 days in the office (mandated), and he’s never around.

I’m fine with traditional roles in “he provides, I nurture” type of setup. I didn’t expect him to be as involved with childcare as I am, I just expected his financial contribution to reflect that balance fairly, given he earns twice what I do.

As for why a second child, it’s because I love him, and over the summer he really did seem different. He said he wanted to contribute more towards the house I’m buying, worked more from home, and was much more present and supportive. That gave me hope that things were improving.

So it’s not that I went into this blind. It’s that things have shifted quite a lot recently, and now I’m trying to understand where that leaves me and what’s fair.

OP posts:
Unlikelyoptimist · 24/10/2025 15:17

Hoppinggreen · 24/10/2025 13:30

Oh dear OP.
You aren't a partnership are you?
He refused to marry you and is tight and you seem to have just gone along with it and you have let him
You have had not 1 but 2 children with him and at no point have you questioned if this is a good idea?
Do you live in his house?
In your shoes I would be planning to leave ASAP

We are renting, he fully covers the rent and bills.

I have a small one bedroom which I was renting, now trying to sell.

OP posts:
Hoppinggreen · 24/10/2025 15:18

"Traditional roles" are fine if its what you both want AND you are married
Without that Legal protection you are a bit screwed
At least you have a flat and a job though

Blinkyblinky14 · 24/10/2025 15:19

He does nothing around the house. No cleaning, cooking, shopping, laundry, or general household management. I do all of it. I also handle everything for DD, including all pick-ups, drop-offs, night wakes, feeding, and bedtime

and his response when you ask him to?