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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

My partner just divulged some of his past to me 3 weeks before we marry

408 replies

Dreamingfever · 06/01/2026 02:30

First of all, I’m going to be mentioning suicide so please don’t read if that will upset you in anyway.
My partner and I have been together for 4 years, we are both in our 50s so won’t have any children together. I have a DS from my first marriage, he has a DD from his first marriage, both now early 20s.

DPs first wife passed away 6 years ago, they’d been split for about 7 years before that and I’ve never pried as to the details of his first wife’s death, not my place nor business.
He didn’t live in the UK for most of his adult life, he’s a dual national so spent most of his life in Spain, his mother is Spanish. His first wife was French.
He had told me that once they split his first wife took his daughter to France, he spent most of the holidays with his daughter (who was 12 by the time they split), would take weekends to visit her. I’ve always thought I couldn’t have lived in a different country to my DS but I wasn’t there, I don’t know what the relationship between him and his first wife was like etc. He seems to have a very positive relationship with his daughter, she lives abroad still (different country from either she was raised in) but he calls her often, visits often and we just flew out to spend Christmas with her.

Tonight he seemed upset, I asked why and he told me it was the anniversary of his first wife’s death. I asked if he wanted to talk about it and he said actually he’d like to tell me about it before we marry.

He told me that his first wife was amazing for many years but when her own parents passed she struggled with her mental health, when they split she asked to take her daughter to her parents home she’d recently inherited and raise her there. He admitted he had been hesitant about her abilities to raise their daughter but he worked long hours, and felt a daughter needed her mother, so agreed.
He then told me that over the years he knew her mother was unwell, an alcoholic he claimed was what he knew. He thought about asking to have his daughter back, reporting it to someone, but feared it would only make things worse. He said he told his daughter she could move home anytime but she never wanted to.
His daughter then moved to a different city for university. Then 6 years ago her mother, his first wife, took her own life, overdose alcohol and prescription drugs.
He arranged everything as his first wife had no living family she was close to, any only child, both parents passed, and her daughter just 19.
He also sold the property and sorted out everything inheritance related for his daughter.

He then said during a deep chat over some wine with his daughter he learned his first wife had been an alcoholic for many years, she never told him as she was scared she’d be separated from her mother. She was honest about her teen years being difficult, often coming home to her mum passed out, making her own meals, taking the metro to school and back unsure of her mothers well being etc.

He admitted he has felt immense guilt since and always finds the anniversary a hard day.

Now I’m conflicted, I feel awful for him. But I worked with young adults and teens for many years and I often felt the excuse of “no one else knew” was a weak one, I’ve always felt it shouldn’t be a child’s responsibility to know when an adult needs help or they need help but someone should be looking out for them, I feel he failed to do this, he knew she was an alcoholic and failed to both protect his daughter and get help for her mother.

This clouds my judgement of him, I feel I can no longer see him as a the devoted father, kind man, and loving partner I believed he was.

AIBU to feel like this? Is it the past, something to be moved on from? Or an indicator that he may not be the kind of man I’ve been made to believe he is?

OP posts:
BrokenButNotFinished · 06/01/2026 17:01

SquishyGloopyBum · 06/01/2026 03:41

Daughter of an alcoholic here.

its a family disease which thrives in secrecy. It’s not as simple as getting them help. Nor would have removing the daughter been simple either.

if he has a close relationship with his daughter now, then they have clearly worked it out between them. It’s not for you to judge. I’d feel differently if they had a strained relationship. But it doesn’t sound like they do.

it’s a very difficult situation dealing with an alcoholic. A lot of the time you are in too deep before you even realise how bad things are.

I don’t think it’s your place to judge.

Daughter of an alcoholic here too - and I absolutely am going to judge.

I lived with both parents, but my father was just emotionally negligent, away a lot with work and left my mother to me. It was an unhealthy, enmeshed relationship. There's a lot written about the emotional damage done to children by addiction and the personality traits it engenders. One of those is the feeling that you're holding the world together in your two hands and it's on you to make it right for everyone. Arguably the daughter was protecting the father too in this dynamic. I would struggle to get past this.

I'm sorry for your experience @SquishyGloopyBum

GCSEBiostruggles · 06/01/2026 17:29

Kubricklayer · 06/01/2026 16:32

"Just filled me" lol. Like she was catching up from an Eastenders omnibus.

Sure tact and sensitivity exist, but also people can recognise that some topics/siutations are off limit to them, and just becuase OP has a close relationship with her father doesn't automatically grant her rights to delve into someone's trauma.

OP has had a perfectly fine relationship with her partner until now. Her getting the details from step daughter serves only to satisfy her only curiousity, which has been presented under the guise of 'wanting to know the person I'm marrying'. It's Insensitive and self-entitlement.

Tbh we only have his say so that they do get on well as it seems she hasn't fully met the daughter? I would be wondering if there wasn't something building up to be said AT the wedding from someone who is going to make sure OP knows about his past, which he is trying to get a spin on before the big day.

TessSaysYes · 06/01/2026 17:30

You make it sound as if all he had to do was push a button, and his ex wife would have been helped, and possibly alive now... but he didn't press the button. So what kind of man is he really?
You can leave me for any reason, and you don't have to explain yourself.

ERthree · 06/01/2026 17:31

Why do you feel you have the right to judge? As you stated in your post " not my place, not my business" yet here you are passing judgement on a situation that didn't involve you then and doesn't involve you now. Please don't marry the man as he deserves better.

Whyherewego · 06/01/2026 18:03

Snowingtoday · 06/01/2026 16:38

iT APPEARS TO YOU would be more appropriate.
You have no way of knowing she was in any way critical of his behaviour and needed to either make peace with it or forgive it .

Yes you are right of course. It appears to me.
Hopefully other posters will have understood that I was the person to whom it appeared and were not under the impression I had any inside knowledge of DD or her feelings on the matter. I apologise if you were misled by my poor choice of words

EmbroideredGardener · 06/01/2026 18:14

I think you underestimate how good alcoholics can be at hiding their addiction if they're 'high functioning'.

JudyMoncada · 06/01/2026 18:20

She's about to become this woman's step-mother, a role she's only just realised is a lot more emotionally-loaded than she thought

She is about to become this woman's dad's wife. The woman in question is at least 25 at this point, not a child. I know nobody who actually thinks of a step parent who met and married their parent in adulthood as anything other than their parent's spouse. OP's role and relationship with her has not changed at all, unless the daughter asks for it. It is incredibly presumptuous to assume that purely as a result of now knowing something about how her mum died and her dad’s feelings of guilt that that relationship is in the least bit changed.

JLou08 · 06/01/2026 18:24

Do you really believe removing her from her mother and the country she had a life in would be protecting her? It's really not that simple, she wouldn't have stopped worrying about her mother being in another country, she would have worried more, she may have refused to leave, it may have completely broken her relationship with her dad and left her with no adult she could trust. That would've made her even more vulnerable and at risk of running away, exploitation, serious mental health issues.
You're being really unfair and you have been too simplistic and not made an effort to understand the complexity. Removing a child from their main carer is hugely traumatic and it's a very fine balance in determining what would be in the child's best interests.

Snowingtoday · 06/01/2026 18:24

Whyherewego · 06/01/2026 18:03

Yes you are right of course. It appears to me.
Hopefully other posters will have understood that I was the person to whom it appeared and were not under the impression I had any inside knowledge of DD or her feelings on the matter. I apologise if you were misled by my poor choice of words

Edited

Your words didn't mislead me.
But I object to people subtly guiding people to a viewpoint which isn't backed up by facts.

Whyherewego · 06/01/2026 18:28

Snowingtoday · 06/01/2026 18:24

Your words didn't mislead me.
But I object to people subtly guiding people to a viewpoint which isn't backed up by facts.

Edited

With respect ... none of us have any facts. Just a few posts from the OP. It's an AIBU, where in general people pile in with views, most of which are based on limited facts. I've seen other posts with similarly "careless" wording so not sure why I am picked on. But I am respectfully bowing out of this thread now so as not to derail.

Whyherewego · 06/01/2026 18:29

Snowingtoday · 06/01/2026 18:24

Your words didn't mislead me.
But I object to people subtly guiding people to a viewpoint which isn't backed up by facts.

Edited

Duplicate post

Onbdy · 06/01/2026 18:30

I can understand that you’re upset but to cancel the wedding (unless you’re looking for a way out) is a massive overreaction. He has given clear reasons for his actions or lack of actions. Perhaps he thought if he’d removed his daughter then this could have caused the mother’s suicide even earlier? He might have been afraid that the daughter would have blamed him for the rest of her life. The fact that he felt guilty over it shows that he’s not a total arsehole. He didn’t have a kid and have no involvement in her her upbringing, he spent weekends seeing her, spent the summers with her. What speaks volumes is that he has a good relationship with her now. Some of the fathers on MN and the expectations of them do not match the fathers I see in real life. I think you’ll regret ending it over something so trivial.

Scout2016 · 06/01/2026 19:30

I'd feel the same as you OP.

And if a mother had knowingly let her child move to another country with her father who had mental health and alcohol problems then only seen them monthly I think there would be different responses.

Snowingtoday · 06/01/2026 19:46

Whyherewego · 06/01/2026 18:28

With respect ... none of us have any facts. Just a few posts from the OP. It's an AIBU, where in general people pile in with views, most of which are based on limited facts. I've seen other posts with similarly "careless" wording so not sure why I am picked on. But I am respectfully bowing out of this thread now so as not to derail.

I'm not picking on you. You actually quoted me back and disagreed with what I'd said so I replied to you.
However I agree with you about us not derailing the thread any further.

CremeCarmel · 06/01/2026 19:57

GCSEBiostruggles · 06/01/2026 13:01

So never mentioning that her mum committed suicide, was an alcoholic and the dad didn't even notice is the way forward is it? That is something else the OP needs to consider.

Why would a young person want
to talk about that? They might want to put it behind them and Op might have n been seen as part of a fresh start.

Op, do you love him and his daughter?

Penguinsandspaniels · 06/01/2026 20:06

SnoopyPajamas · 06/01/2026 16:19

You may not possess them, but tact and sensitivity do exist. How do you think anyone has difficult conversations? You play it carefully and adjust based on the responses you get.

She doesn't even have to say the words "your dead mum". Don't be so glib.

"Your dad just filled me in on the full story of what happened with your mum. I wasn't aware until now" + offer condolences is a fine soft opening. Then follow her lead.

What @SnoopyPajamas said. A gentle but subtle way to start the chat

Penguinsandspaniels · 06/01/2026 20:08

EmbroideredGardener · 06/01/2026 18:14

I think you underestimate how good alcoholics can be at hiding their addiction if they're 'high functioning'.

True also

dh hid a lot from me and I didn’t reliese the extent of it tbh

Cadenza12 · 06/01/2026 20:14

Klopchampion · 06/01/2026 03:49

It reads to me like you are looking for an out - do you not want to marry him and are latching on to this as a way to justify the fact that the wedding is in three weeks and you’ve realised you don’t want to go ahead with it?

Just what I was thinking. You sound incredibly judgemental.

Barrenfieldoffucks · 06/01/2026 22:35

Dollyfloss · 06/01/2026 09:23

This is such a weird take.

I’d be very concerned if my dp of 4 years had never spoken about what happened to his dead ex wife and mother of his child!

It isn’t “lovely” of him at all to have eventually told her - this should’ve been discussed a long time ago.

If I had a friend in a 4 year relationship who had no idea what had happened to her partners ex who’d died I’d be more than a little worried for her.

Really shocked at some of these responses!

It isn’t that weird to me tbh, some things are very private. The loss of an ex partner to suicide is quite easy to see as one of them. If the OP had asked how she died and he had lied to her, then that would be one thing. But I wouldn’t see it as ‘lying by omission’ that he never shared it without prompting, as that implies he felt he had something to cover up. Which I don’t feel he should have felt.

There are all sorts of parts of my life prior to meeting DH that I haven’t told him, because they’re private and sensitive to me…and some that involve others are not mine to share.

Andouillette · 06/01/2026 22:40

GCSEBiostruggles · 06/01/2026 17:29

Tbh we only have his say so that they do get on well as it seems she hasn't fully met the daughter? I would be wondering if there wasn't something building up to be said AT the wedding from someone who is going to make sure OP knows about his past, which he is trying to get a spin on before the big day.

They spent Christmas with her. This may have been the trigger for DP giving OP the truth about his ex wife. Maybe he discussed it with his daughter, going a little further, she may have suggested his almost wife should be given that truth before the wedding.

Perrylobster · 06/01/2026 22:58

JMSA · 06/01/2026 02:47

Hi OP. I think I’d feel the same as you. You sound very emotionally intelligent. None of this would sit easily with me, and the phrase ‘too little, too late’ comes to mind with how he handled everything.
Maybe it’s just me, but I also find it surprising that this has all come up so late in the day. To my mind, it would be natural for a couple to talk about how she had died.
I’m very open though, so maybe just me!

This sums up how I would feel too

Lightwell · 07/01/2026 00:03

Glowingup · 06/01/2026 14:36

Well if it means he now won’t marry someone who judges him and thinks he’s a shit dad then it’s worked out quite well. I doubt it’s the timing really, she’d probably have judged him even if he’d told her straight away. Despite it having nothing to do with the OP and relating entirely to the relationship between father and daughter.

But is she judging him for being a shit dad (her OP didn't sound like it) or is she judging him for being a person NOW unable to talk openly about the most significant emotional courses of his life?

ClairDeLaLune · 07/01/2026 01:00

TalulahJP · 06/01/2026 09:40

realistically what could he have done. She had custody and she chose to return home, where she presumably had friends and family.

he couldn’t compete with that but did his best to visit regularly while working and presumably providing financial support.

she probably hid the extent of her alcoholism. my mum did. if you haven’t loved an alcoholic you probably won’t appreciate what it’s like. only the daughter would know the full extent.

he needs counselling. you are judging him far too harshly. he is judging himself far too harshly. his daughter still loves him. why shouldn’t anyone else.

the past is not your business. it only came up as it was her anniversary date. just the timing is upsetting. i think youve got pre wedding jitters.

i’d still marry him if i loved him.
dont if you don’t.
just look at who he is today before you decide.

Agree with this.

I think he didn’t tell you the whole story before because of some ill-judged loyalty to her and wanting to protect her privacy, and not wanting you to think badly about her. I would give him the benefit of the doubt tbh.

ClairDeLaLune · 07/01/2026 01:01

Also the fact that he has a positive relationship with his DD speaks volumes I think.

Bones101 · 07/01/2026 01:09

As a physician I see this sort of stuff all the time. I think a lot of men are guilty of this but he clearly regrets it so I would take that as a good sign.