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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:
Unrulyscrumptious · 24/10/2025 15:27

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.

It doesn't really sound like a thing shifted in terms of him taking your partnership seriously though or committing to you or your family. Paying for things doesn't make a partnership anymore than it does if I always cover the bill when I take a friend for lunch.

Unlikelyoptimist · 24/10/2025 22:33

Thank you all for taking the time to respond. I’ve read through every comment and honestly cried, it’s been eye-opening. I didn’t expect the verdict to be so overwhelmingly one-sided. I genuinely thought I had a good deal and never really questioned the arrangement until that comment from him “you can take care of yourself.” That line completely crushed me (I’m at my most vulnerable now due to pregnancy) and made me look at things differently.

My DD is asleep now, and I’ve had some time to think. I texted my boyfriend this morning to explain how I feel, and we’re going to have a proper chat soon about how to take things forward.

OP posts:
Unlikelyoptimist · 24/10/2025 22:38

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?

Thanks for this! I never thought of asking or even questioning any of this before. Honestly, it just never occurred to me to ask.

We’re going to have a chat this evening about what we do next. He’s back from work a bit earlier today, and I’ve already texted him pretty much what I’ve shared on here.

OP posts:
PinkPonyClubDancer · 24/10/2025 22:40

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.

So in other words you put up with him being a shit partner and dad because he pays for everything. It’s pretty obvious you won’t leave, so yes YABU for choosing this.

FilthyforFirth · 24/10/2025 22:46

I'll be piled on for this message but I see this all the time and I genuinely dont understand it. He is never around, leaves all the grunt work to you, seems a distant father to his child yet in the seemingly little amount of time you do spend with him, you find time to have sex. How you are pregnant again when he has been so shit with your first child? Do you not feel used?

I just dont understand. When DH and I are distant or arguing or whatever, having sex is the last thing on my mind. I want to sort things out and feel close, on the same page etc again before being intimate. I would hate to barely see my partner because he was late working, gaming or using porn, but still make myself available for sex :(

GingerPaste · 24/10/2025 22:57

Wow! He sounds like a pile of shit! And you’re being taken for a complete mug, believing all his sorry excuses about not committing to you.

Tryingatleast · 24/10/2025 22:59

and his response when you ask him to?
Given he pays for so much, he will say he’s exhausted from his job/ providing etc etc. A lot of men (am struggling not to say ‘most’ )think that being principal bread earner means they should be given a break and think women find it easier/ like doing what we do. That or they do actually think there’s magic elves that do all the things that are magically done!!!

TheCosyViewer · 24/10/2025 23:09

What trading margin shortfall was he looking to cover - is he gambling or what ?

I'm guessing, since he hasn't do far, that he won't step up to the plate and if he does, it will only be for a very short time.

Bestfootforward11 · 24/10/2025 23:25

I understand you want a partnership but what you’ve described does not seem one to me. It sounds like you both operate solo but come together at brief intervals. It doesn’t sound like there is emotional intimacy and real care and support, more that you both have functional roles linked by living together and children. You need to be able to really talk with each other and say this is how I feel and what I need. It might be worth exploring counselling. Best wishes.

JLou08 · 24/10/2025 23:26

Move back into the flat. What a vile excuse of a man you've ended up with. Don't let your DC grow up thinking that's an acceptable way to treat someone/be treated. Don't ruin your own life by having him continue to kill all your confidence and self-respect. It sounds like there is nothing good there at all. I wouldn't be confident he loves your DD either, she's just something to pass his time whilst waiting for his dinner by the sounds of it.

Morningsleepin · 24/10/2025 23:29

Traditional roles are when you are married and stay at home while he provides, not that you work fulltime while at the same doing all the housework.

aloris · 24/10/2025 23:30

"Traditional roles" only work if you have the legal benefits of marriage. He may be paying for childcare and rent but you are not benefitting from the savings he is receiving from his higher salary; the same salary that is facilitated by his freedom to work whenever he wants because you are doing the wifework.

Also, you said he is loyal. He is not. He is using you as a bang-maid and bang-nanny.

MyAcornWood · 25/10/2025 04:52

I always thought we were a partnership, that we take care of each other
What on earth gave you that impression? ‘Traditional roles’ is bullshit when you’re working the same hours he is with no protection of marriage either. It’s so sad you seem to have been labouring under the misapprehension that this is a partnership when it’s really been all to suit him.

pinkbackground · 25/10/2025 05:13

The first thing that struck me is when you said you consider this a partnership. It doesn’t seem to be a partnership in any way at all. It sounds like he has it all his way.

LoudSnoringDog · 25/10/2025 06:54

Wow. I thought I had already given out my rosette for Dickhead Partner of the Week on mnet but this one has trumped them.

please take heed of the previous posters great advice. Get away from this piece of shit

thepariscrimefiles · 25/10/2025 07:22

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.

Traditional roles for a man and a woman with children always include marriage. He is having his cake and eating it and being completely unfair to you.

It's also a concern that he isn't really bothered about doing anything for or with his own child. He seems completely indifferent to her.

Summerhillsquare · 25/10/2025 07:37

Hoppinggreen · 24/10/2025 13:31

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

Yeah this. He saw you coming didn't he? Still, lesson learned. Get on the benefits and CMS calculators ASAP before he does another number on you re money.

Abbeymum · 25/10/2025 07:53

The things people put up with for a shag! YABU for having a second child with this man.

GoldenRetriever8 · 25/10/2025 07:57

Please don't sell your flat. You need to keep this as a safety plan. Sounds like it wouldn't be ideal for 3 people but keeping it puts you in a stronger position that you'll never need to worry about having a roof over your and your kid's heads.

DjCatnip · 25/10/2025 09:13

Cover a trading margin...
Does that mean he's lost £5000 on "trading"?

Porn user, gambler, doesn't support you. You need to run while you can.

MidnightPatrol · 25/10/2025 09:20

Yes this sounds terrible OP.

I’d be formulating a plan to leave. Theres more to life than this.

Lalala12345 · 25/10/2025 09:20

Absolutely nothing about this sounds good. What a sad childhood for your toddler. You are essentially a housekeeper, maid and sex service for him and he pays for bills and stuff. That is not a partnership it is a transaction. And he won’t even marry you ffs. Im sorry OP he saw you coming a mile away and he treats you like shit. I would rather live the rest of my life alone as a single parent (which you effectively already are) than with a man like that.

I really hope you have friends and family to confide in and turn to for support. Find your anger. Get organised. Good luck and I hope you leave the fucker x

Lalala12345 · 25/10/2025 09:22

And DO NOT sell any of your personal assets. Keep your job and financial independence at all costs. You are going to need both in the near future by the sounds of it.

PollyBell · 25/10/2025 09:23

So he does nothing so why on earth would he with a, second child, how many more red flags do you need, do not sell

How on earth can you not see this all has disaster all over it

BusyMum47 · 25/10/2025 09:27

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

@Unlikelyoptimist

100% agree! ⬆️

What a dreadful relationship - get yourself & your impressionable daughter away from this awful man ASAP.

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