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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:
AtomHeartMotherOfGod · 07/01/2026 01:12

Stressedoutmummyof3 · 06/01/2026 02:58

If they were living in a different country to your DP, how would he know how bad things were? It wasn't like he could pop in and see them after work.
Perhaps he should have made his DD come and live with him, but I doubt he'd have a good relationship with her now if he'd made her leave her mum when she didn't want to.

I really agree with this. He made one bad call - to be passive rather than active in protecting his DD, and like StressedOut says, had he come in and taken the decision from her, I don't know if it would all have worked out well anyway. He also doesn't have your experience and perhaps just didn't know that being passive was a bad idea. I'm sure he acted in a way he thought was most considerate of his DD's wishes.

Looking retrospectively at the situation brings to mind a line from Brian Potter in Phoenix Nights: 'Ahhhh - coulda, woulda, shoulda.' Is that what you want to break up over or do you consider his actions truly negligent?

mathanxiety · 07/01/2026 01:55

Dreamingfever · 06/01/2026 02:54

I think that’s an over simplistic take. Yes you can’t force someone to receive help, but it shouldn’t have been on his child to decide what was best for her. Children can often feel a sense of duty to their ill parent. Asking a child to effectively blow up their own life isn’t reasonable, as the adult and parent you have to step in and do what is right by them, his daughter should never have been in position where she had to choose between her own well being and looking after her mother, it was her fathers job to prevent that.

Kindly, OP, you need to develop a better understanding of the dynamics involved in a child's relationship with an alcoholic parent.

Less judgement, less of the high horse, and much more appreciation of nuance are needed. You are seriously underestimating the loyalty of a teenager to a dysfunctional parent, and how an.alcoholic creates a world of dysfunction in everyone involved with them.

If the father and daughter now have the foundation of a relationship that can be built on, I think you should take it from there and leave the past behind you.

Glowingup · 07/01/2026 06:42

Lightwell · 07/01/2026 00:03

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?

He did talk about it. Just not in the apparently acceptable timeframe. Just out of interest, when is the cut off for when you must have told your partner absolutely all trauma and difficult events in your life? And when you do tell them stuff it counts as lying by omission rather than opening up?

GCSEBiostruggles · 07/01/2026 09:20

Glowingup · 07/01/2026 06:42

He did talk about it. Just not in the apparently acceptable timeframe. Just out of interest, when is the cut off for when you must have told your partner absolutely all trauma and difficult events in your life? And when you do tell them stuff it counts as lying by omission rather than opening up?

Generally before you marry them and they commit their life to you. Surely you can see how she is now marrying someone she didn't know before?

Honestly men seem to barely care what a woman is like, her interests and background, but for women knowing how you were raised and why you have turned out the way you have is most of the attraction. Morals matter.

Penguinsandspaniels · 07/01/2026 09:27

As I have a husband who has died and then remarried / when I was getting to know dh 3 / we spoke about dh 1. How he died etc

I find it really weird that it wasn’t spoken about even very briefly when they met

cooldarkroom · 07/01/2026 09:54

Not read all comments. But IMO, the fact that he travelled monthly, plus holidays to see his DD, & now has a great relationship with with her, is a sign that the circumstances have not had a lasting detrimental effect on DD.
I think the XW would have done good job of minimisibg her drinking when he visited. It would also be a massive challenge to wade in & remove the child from Mothers care & out of the country.
particularly if you dont have proof, the money to go to court, dont speak the language, & aren't actually in the country to deal with the process.
Had he succeeded, he would also be removing his Dd from her home, school, friends, native language…against her will

Glowingup · 07/01/2026 13:11

GCSEBiostruggles · 07/01/2026 09:20

Generally before you marry them and they commit their life to you. Surely you can see how she is now marrying someone she didn't know before?

Honestly men seem to barely care what a woman is like, her interests and background, but for women knowing how you were raised and why you have turned out the way you have is most of the attraction. Morals matter.

Edited

No I can’t see that she’s marrying someone she didn’t know. He had a traumatic relationship with his ex wife and feels guilty about what his daughter endured. That doesn’t make him a different person. It’s not like his confession was that he’s a serial killer or that he’s married already to someone else.

StarfromtheNorth · 07/01/2026 17:12

I find it wild that people marry others without really knowing them

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