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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Partner's children ignore me/ don't want to know myself or my children.

113 replies

Hellotochocolatecake · 05/12/2025 20:14

Lovely partner of 3 years, engaged, bought house together. Really adore eachother! We are best friends and i know its cheesy but each of us tells the other how lucky we are to have met the other.

We both have kids from previous marriage. His are adults with own kids and marriages, and I have older teens.
Ive always worked full time and im a fairly quiet person with a very small family but a close bunch of friends from different cultural backgrounds, professions etc. I value kindess above anything else.

A while ago, It became very apparent that his adult kids look down on me. This isnt imagined, it's been voiced and demonstrated. His daughter seems to lead this view and told her dad that she had reported back to her brothers that I was really awful. She wants nothing to do with me at all...massive reaction and its because she thinks im not good enough for her dad. Im not very pretty, i dont go to spas or have botox. I certainly dont have a tan nor do i dance on instagram or show weekly montage of the kids on Instagram ( family cookery competitions, wall murals etx) i just dont have time....i guess maybe she thinks im frumpy and boring...who knows.

She is affluent through family money and although doesn't work is able to be very outwardly flash and quite condescending. She has had a stable home with extended family nearby, inherited a huge house with lots of land, appear healthy and happy and all are very lucky with life. Holidays galore, instagram updates showing weekend breaks, family holidays..lots of what appears to be quality time together as a family etc etc, affluence and abundance. Good for them...i am proud to work full time and haven't been abroad for 20 years but i like my life with simple stuff! I'm quiet and revel in time with my kids and quietly with friends. I hope it doesn't appear as though I am jealous...we are just massively different in values. I grew up with money(ill explain later) and hung around girls like her. It neither impresses nor startles me. Its just not who i wsnt to be.

I try to remind myself she is still relatively young and not very experienced with life? And maybe this is why she is so loud about her affluence? She has been massively lucky with health, family support, unending opportunites with money, land, building opportunities and never has to do anything alone. She is slim and beautfiul with a husband that bends to her will...it's quite something to see!
We are clearly very different but the common theme was love for her dad. I'm happy mixing with all sorts of people but she was snarly and "off"from the word go.
I've met her 3 times and each time she has been rapidly cycling between sickly sweet & massively spikey. It was a bit confusing but i gently let her lead the conversation. I could see she was struggling with her dad having a partner...digs about her prep for holidays, silly sort of childish comments about her mum...its always very "me me me" but i figured that was just her so didn't take offence. I must admit it was difficult trying to find common ground. She runs a village group and was massively rude about the poorer mums...she isnt someone I would spend a lot of time with but the world is made up of all sorts of people. I was happy to slowly work on common ground.

Her dad had been single for probably 10 years prior to me...i could see maybe this was difficult for her. I was worried she may feel pushed out, but
I work full time and i am busy with elderly family on saturdays.This leaves my partner every day, EVERY DAY AND SATURDAY to see his daughter and grandkids. Evenings too to be honest if he wanted...
I didnt know why, but the contact slowly stopped over the past year, almost halting about 4 months ago...
I did mention this a dozen times to him, suggesting they meet up (obv without me) and also suggested i cook sunday dinner to get to know eachother.

This fell flat and my partner was very quiet about the whole thing.....

Eventually he told me she had written a manifesto that stated she didnt trust me or feel safe in my presence, and that she had the right to keep herself "emotionally safe. " I'm not perfect but i think anyone would find this difficult to hear....
The absolute shocker was the statement about her "boundaries" and that it wasnt her job to make me feel "comfortable". I was so, so confused as have no idea where this came from. The paragraph concluded with how moving forward, she would have NO contact with me and that she was only prepared to see my partner alone. She hasn't met my children and doesn't want to. She stated that she neither wanted to be my friend nor have a relationship of any kind with me.

I would never have wanted to be her friend!, had no intention of trying to be a step mum...all these judgements on 3 meetings.... i was happy to quietly do what you do with families and quietly get along.
Im utterly mortified, hurt if im honest and absolutely aghast for my partner.
Up until this point he maintained that she was etherel...absolutely perfect in every way but this has blown his thouguts and beliefs about her and his parenting completley into the air. He isn't himself at all, doesnt see the grandkids as doesnt want contact with her. Its awful and undoubtably will be "my" fault in all her families eyes.
Ive asked my partner what i can do to fix it, i wondered about going up to the house with flowers to say we maybe got off on the wrong foot (i dont remember any issues other than some slightly odd snipes from her... but would absolutely listen to any concerns she has as maybe i did say something wrong?) i

The other week, it dawned on my partner ...that no one else in her side of the family, his son in law, the siblings or in laws have spoken to him either or tried to broach it at all. He was very very close to them, always baby sitting all the grandkids for the weekend to facilitate holidays, school runs, taking them swimming, dropping shopping off, meals out for 10 to 15 of them etc etc...a really thoughtful man...always running about for them..and now zilch. Its as though she has rallied to punish him for being with me.

Ironically....although ive had to fight for everything all my life....my background is actually very affluent and my dad is a multi millionaire.
When my parents divorced he still owned multiple properties (12 as well as th3 fsmily home) It was an odd set up but i left home v young..and i didnt benefit from love, stability, roots or any assistance. My mum trailed off with a new husband and my dad hid money cleverly...
My father doesn't believe in silver spoons in mouth and is a slightly eccentric recluse....and I accept this.

His money is his and for all i know, he might spend it all before he dies (which actually is HIS business)
I wonder if she would see me differently if she realised about the money...but this makes feel sick as firstly the money isnt mine...but also what sort of person judges on money like that?

I earn enough to cover our bills, i have lovely kids and thoughtful friends snd a partner I adore. I feel fulfilled but this issue with his kids has broken my heart.

Is there anything I can do to try to repair this? We are getting married next year and his daughter refuses to acknowledge it.
My partner won't discuss it other than to say that he lives in hope that she will "come round".
I have a terrible feeling that historically she gets everytjing she wants and will sabbotage the relationship/ marriage.
Im not sure what I can do..

OP posts:
hattie43 · 08/12/2025 07:29

She sounds insufferable OP and I’m not sure what you can do to alter this as she won’t meet you . I think you just have to live your life and hope age and wisdom changes her mind .

Bearbookagainandagain · 08/12/2025 10:56

Just to bring a different perspective @Hellotochocolatecake , I'm not sure it has anything to do with how they were raised by your partner, or your DIL current lifestyle.
I have seen extreme reactions from adults around me about their step parents - especially daughters when their dad meet someone after a long period being single.

For instance, once of my friends and her sister cut off contact with their dad for months when he started dating a neighbour (their mum died about 10 years ago, they are both in their late 30s).
My friend, who's normally very reasonable, was making completely crazy theories about that woman and her intentions. Absolutely everything she said or did was interpreted in a negative way. And her dad suddenly became in her eyes that weak and gullible old man, when he is only in his 60s! Deep down, they just saw this as a huge betrayal from this part, of them and their mum.
My friend ultimately came around and now see her dad regularly, but her sister is still low contact and it's been going for almost 2 years now.

My dad also remarried 7 years ago (parents divorced a long time ago), and one of my sisters keep making sarcastic comments to us about how he always prioritise her over us, she will get the house, etc etc. She won't say it to her face, but there is a lot of childish jealousy in the way she speaks about her.
It's absolutely not justified or rational, my dad has always been very clear about his will, my step mother is absolutely lovely and never tried to overstep in any way shape or form.

I'm afraid there is nothing for you to do, any attempt to contact will come across as harassment. It's really up to them to get over the situation. I think your partner should try to maintain context though.

Gall10 · 08/12/2025 11:07

Achangeintone · 08/12/2025 07:07

1105 posts you’ve made @Gall10

Time is something you have

Probably 1103 votes on AIBU….i never read the post..just randomly click on yes or no depending on my mood!

Dweetfidilove · 08/12/2025 11:54

A manifesto 🙄😅?

I wouldn't date a man with dependent children, because I don't want the responsibility and often turmoil that comes with these relationships. For that same reason, when I decide to date a man with grown up children, I sure as hell am not signing up for this misery either.

You've met and you both don't like each other - that is fine. You can maintain a relationship that is separate to that with his children. Do not get in the way of his relationship with them, but if they want to be idiotic enough to ruin that relationship on their own, let them. Adults can make decisions for themselves as they see best.

You also have to accept your children won't have a relationship with them. Do you children even want this or is it your own desire to blend one big happy family, in order to validate the relationship?

Follow your husband's lead and let the chips fall where they may. Life is too short to be keeping the door open for misery in your life and relationship.

Idontjetwashthefucker · 08/12/2025 12:57

Gall10 · 08/12/2025 11:07

Probably 1103 votes on AIBU….i never read the post..just randomly click on yes or no depending on my mood!

Wow, you're so edgy 🙄

Millytante · 08/12/2025 13:17

Gall10 · 05/12/2025 20:44

Sorry… I don’t have time to read this post…can someone summarize?

🙀

Millytante · 08/12/2025 13:41

themerchentofvenus · 07/12/2025 09:13

@Hellotochocolatecake your partner's daughter clearly has issues.

I think your partner needs to challenge her and get to the bottom of this because writing a manifesto against someone she hardly even knows is mentally unstable.

He should confront her and ask her what exactly the issue is. Perhaps her marriage is actually awful and she is jealous? Perhaps she thinks you are going to take all his money?

I'm not surprised your partner feels so disappointed to have his daughter turn out like this.

I’m not sure he’s loaded. OP’s father is, certainly. I took it that he must simply be retired.
I think it was the remark about her not having been abroad in twenty years, and shes bern with this man for three of them.
If he’s well off you’d think a treat of a weekend abroad were doable.

Maybe buying a house with OP necessitates selling the original family home, and even adult offspring can get weird about that.

Achangeintone · 08/12/2025 14:07

Gall10 · 08/12/2025 11:07

Probably 1103 votes on AIBU….i never read the post..just randomly click on yes or no depending on my mood!

And you’re in the mood (and have time) a lot

Achangeintone · 08/12/2025 14:08

Which side is super wealthy… the OP’s boyfriend or his ex?

and sounds like they all live in a commune, Amish-style

Achangeintone · 08/12/2025 14:11

Millytante · 08/12/2025 13:17

🙀

Ignore @Gall10 making out rushed off her feet

On mumsnet. A lot. Lotta lot

Achangeintone · 08/12/2025 14:12

Gall10 · 08/12/2025 11:07

Probably 1103 votes on AIBU….i never read the post..just randomly click on yes or no depending on my mood!

No you have actually commented
not just voted

Gall10 · 08/12/2025 22:28

Achangeintone · 08/12/2025 14:12

No you have actually commented
not just voted

Really? Where do I find this statistic?
is that now 1162…or whatever?

Wowthatwasabigstep · 09/12/2025 09:12

OP your partners daughter is correct to be cautious about you, the kindness above all else brigade makes me bristle and are rarely actually kind, for goodness sake get on and live your life and stop obsessing about your partners daughter.

Ultimately for many people blood is thicker than water so your partner may well opt for his family. If I was one of his children I would also be concerned that if/when he marries you, if he predeceased you, you would inherit his estate unless robust provision is made for his children in his Will to reflect the marriage or assets are held in trust. You have know him for 3 years why should you and your heirs inherit what he amassed presumably with their mother.

Your father being wealthy is a red herring and you would be minded to keep that in abeyance, your father may choose to leave it all to the dogs home. It is only guaranteed when it is in your bank account.

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