Help end medical misogyny. Sign our petition.

Help end medical misogyny.
Sign our petition.

Sign the petition

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Would you stop overnight contact in this situation?

53 replies

Cryingatthegym · 02/01/2026 10:49

I’m looking for some outside perspective as I’m feeling really overwhelmed and don’t want to overreact. This is long because I've tried to include everything.

I’ve been separated from my ex-husband for 18 months and we have two young children aged 3 and 4. They currently spend time with him 2 nights a week.

Before Christmas, I raised concerns about the condition of his house and safety issues. He agreed to sort it, and on that basis I allowed contact to continue. Over Christmas, he took the children away for several days to visit family.

When they returned, my youngest (just turned 3) had a bad head injury that happened during his father’s care. I wasn’t informed and he didn't get any medical attention at the time. I took him to the GP, who made a safeguarding referral to social services.

This prompted me to properly look back through my photos and messages, and I’ve realised there’s a wider pattern I hadn’t fully appreciated before. Over the past 6 months I can see around 22 injuries that occurred during his contact time, including 8 head injuries for my youngest (3 of which I’d consider significant) and 2 instances of sunburn. The injuries are mainly bumps and bruises, but it’s the frequency and pattern that worries me, particularly given their ages.

So as not to drip feed, I’ve been raising safety and wellbeing concerns since we separated. These include:

  • The cleanliness and safety of his home (significant clutter, mess and fire risk).
  • Hygiene (children often returning unwashed or in soiled clothing).
  • Lack of supervision and general safety (including car seat/road safety concerns).
  • Not putting them in appropriate clothing for the weather.
  • Nutrition and routines.

These concerns have been raised gradually over time, not all at once, and when I try to raise things I feel they are minimised or dismissed.

Nursery have also raised concerns about unexplained bruises and my youngest’s wellbeing. They've said they feel the inconsistency between homes may be affecting him. I’ve also had support from Women’s Aid due to past domestic abuse (towards me, not the children) and they've made a number of safeguarding referrals based on things I've told them.

Since the most recent contact I’ve noticed behavioural changes in both boys, including repeated wetting and increased fear around accidents (e.g. being very upset after minor stumbles and worrying about being told off).

Social care have previously advised me that because the children have one protective parent, they can’t intervene unless their father consents, and that if I don’t feel the children are safe I need to exercise my parental responsibility and stop contact.

I’m now considering stopping them from having overnight contact (but allowing daytime contact) because I no longer feel comfortable with the level of risk. However, I’m struggling with guilt and worry that I’m overreacting. This would also mean losing my only real chance for a rest, and I’m already exhausted.

I’d really appreciate honest opinions. Does this sound like a proportionate response? Would you stop overnight contact in these circumstances? Or would you give more time/take a different approach?

Thank you to anyone who makes it to the end of this.

OP posts:
Cryingatthegym · 13/02/2026 08:54

The 2 hour contact has been since the beginning of January, and yes this is the first injury since then.

I think what's making me question myself is because this injury does actually seem consistent with what he says happened, unlike the others. This was a raised bump (which has now gone down a lot overnight) with a large graze. The other times he was quite literally black and blue and it was hard to imagine how it had happened. However, not supervising them closely enough in public was one of the other concerns I'd been raising with him before reducing the contact.

There have been lots of safeguarding referrals raised, including from nursery. Social care have stepped away and closed the case now though as they were satisfied with me reducing the contact.

I thought about asking my solicitor to write to him and logging it that way? Medically I'm not too concerned about him as he's had no worrying symptoms. It's just the context that concerns me.

OP posts:
Mrsclausemunchingonamincepie · 13/02/2026 08:59

Op if he can't keep them safe and unharmed for 2 hours he needs reporting to ss imo.
Yes speak to GP and take photos. You need a solid case he isn't capable of looking after them.

RedToothBrush · 13/02/2026 09:14

Cryingatthegym · 12/02/2026 21:44

Coming back to this thread for some more advice.

I stopped the overnight contact and he's been having them for 2 hours twice a week in a public place. This has been working ok so far.

However my youngest has returned this evening with another head injury (large purplish bump/graze on his forehead). Dad said it happened after he fell forward onto the pavement. The kids have loosely confirmed this story (they're young so not brilliant at relaying information).

How do I respond to this? Do I take him to the GP again to get the injury logged? Tell my solicitor or social services?

What's concerning me is the frequency of the injuries and also the severity of them. Both kids have had head bumps with me recently (from playing/fighting with each other) but neither have had more than a light mark from what seemed like a fair whack on both occasions.

He sent me some messages this evening which I think were intended to undermine me/make me feel like I've been overreacting to these injuries, so my head is a bit of a jumble and I'd appreciate some outside perspectives.

Edited

Get it officially logged. It might be something. It might be nothing. The point is it still happened and you can't give the benefit of the doubt due to ongoing issues precisely because he can't be trusted. Let others make the decision. Not supervising properly is dangerous in its own right.

Your job is to protect your kids. That's it. You are not responsible for how he parents or doesn't parent.

Two hours is still long enough for any of your kids to end up in hospital or worse.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page
Swipe left for the next trending thread