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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Am I being entitled or is ex a disgrace?

46 replies

Yellowshooes · 07/03/2026 10:52

I actually don’t know what to think anymore as it’s been drilled into me since dd was born that I’m the problem. I am not perfect, maybe I’m messing this up. I don’t know.

In short, ex left me weeks before birth, he told me he didn’t want to know when dd was born and not to contact him about it. I put in claim for maintenance and he said dd wasn’t his. Absolutely shocked me to the core as he had never suggested this to me and there was no reason for him to think it.

Had to do the dna test. He then was forced to pay. When dd was around 14 months he met her and then turned up once a week to see her for a few hours. He’s recently been more keen to see her in the last year or so, booking annual leave and since she was 2 he’s booked a couple of holidays each year which I’ve also gone on as he’s never had Dd overnight, his choice, and I didn’t feel comfortable leaving her with someone who was almost a stranger.

She is now 4 and a year ago he took a job 5 hours away. He is obsessed with work and status at work and is very self absorbed. I explained the impact this would have on dd to move so far away, he didn’t care. Instead he travelled to see her every weekend and stayed in a premier inn. He’s been doing this for a year.

He has a lot of money and whilst I am not struggling, I’ve taken a lot of sacrifices with becoming a single mother with full care of dd. He is therefore in a stronger financial position. Because of his behaviour during my maternity leave I also spent huge amounts of savings getting through it.

We are now in a situation where he is getting increasingly demanding and cruel to me about various things. He will say things like he’s going to tell dd what I’m like when she’s older, I asked what that means and he doesn’t tell me. If I call out the fact he’s doing next to no parenting because he arrives midday on a Saturday then he tells me he’s busy with work and how dare I criticise his job and I’ve never supported him etc etc which is totally untrue, when in a relationship I did everything to support him. Even though I have a professional job too which is very demanding.

He makes comments that ‘mum doesn’t want me to come to the house’ which of course is true but when dd hears that she doesn’t understand why.

Theres lots more but I’m just totally drained by it all. I don’t think there’s a risk of him trying to get 50-50 as he is too self involved with his job and that would cause him lots of problems. But he’s obviously been pretty nasty in the past.

I am exhausted and feel taking dd out for a day at a weekend isn’t parenting. Nor is paying for a trip every so often. Am I being entitled? Is he doing his bit just in a different way?

OP posts:
Goodadvice1980 · 07/03/2026 17:41

I’m baffled why you would want him to be in contact.

Dextersgoneovertherainbowbridge · 07/03/2026 17:47

If he doesn’t want overnights, would he even take her on holiday if you didn’t go? At 4yrs old she’s not really going to notice if she doesn’t go away with him.

YourOliveBalonz · 07/03/2026 19:01

I think I would have laughed. He denied paternity to avoid maintenance, didn’t meet her until she was 14 months old, and he’s going to tell her what you’re really like one day? OK mate!

Emmz1510 · 07/03/2026 19:06

It sounds to me like he’s pissed off he can’t use DD to get to you and perhaps you going on holiday with them has muddied the waters a bit, much as I can see why you did it. I think he’d like to be able to come to your house to see her, have you do most of the parenting while he’s there and involving minimal cost and effort to him. This man doesn’t care about his daughter, or at least he doesn’t care enough to really step up and be a proper parent. He obviously doesn’t have her in mind when he makes big decisions.
He’s now got no other way to get to you than to just be nasty and petty.
You need to have as little interaction with him as possible. Communication should be strictly only about contact arrangements. Do not respond to anything else he says. Don’t engage in conversation during handover beyond ‘time to go with daddy now, have fun!’ or similar. If he says anything inappropriate just ignore him but text him
another time asking him not to say such things in front of DD and that you are keeping a written record. Do exactly that, in case legal proceedings happen later. Which you should pursue if you feel contact and the way he treats you is having a negative impact on DD.

Icecreamisthebest · 07/03/2026 19:32

Yes he’s a disgrace.

And that will never change and is completely out of your control.

Youve received some great advice about minimising your contact with him. Do that.

But also focus on building your own village and support network. Look into Gingerbread, the single parents charity. Find people whose company you enjoy to go on holidays with. Plan nice things for yourself while DD is with her dad. Make the best life you can for yourself with the understanding that he is unlikely to ever contribute anything positive to that so he should be sidelined from your life other than when it is absolutely necessary.

vincettenoir · 07/03/2026 19:41

Your relationship has broken down and sounds like it’s got a bit dysfunctional. Is there a third person who can act as a mediator for the purpose of contact?

Figuringitoutjustus · 07/03/2026 22:27

I’d say be careful what you wish for….i wish my ex was less involved tbh

cocog · 07/03/2026 22:44

Stop talking to him completely use a parenting app to communicate him visiting and record when he visits cancels or screenshot all toxic behaviour. Don’t facilitate him at all just cooperate with his access to daughter don’t let him in, pass her over doorstep letting him know when to return her give him some info on local places to take her (on parenting app) if your feeling helpful.

RainbowMoonbeam · 07/03/2026 22:51

I don't think you're being unreasonable, but at the same time he turns up regularly and actually pays support. To some extent if you want him to be a more active parent, you will at some point have to let him have unsupervised overnight visits.

ElectoralControversy · 08/03/2026 07:32

Does he come to see her every weekend?! That's quite impressive given his previous performance, but when do you ever get to spend a quiet weekend with DD?

Eufyon · 08/03/2026 07:36

I don’t think we are hearing even a tiny fraction of the full story, and @Yellowshooes is not going to return.

The Op hates him but has been supposedly on multiple holidays with him. I imagine that the Op actually wants a relationship with him… and that lies at the root of it all

Otterbabiesholdhandstosleep · 08/03/2026 07:37

He is an idiot. The worst he can say to your daughter about you is that you don’t want him in the house. The worst you could say about him is that he left you both just before she was born and didn’t want to know her at all.
Obviously I don’t think you should tell her those things, certainly not at age 4, but I’m astounded he doesn’t yet realize he is playing chicken here.

zzzexhaustedzzz · 08/03/2026 09:10

Speaking from the POV where my children are now all grown up, but had a father who I had to separate from, who it sounds is a similar case to your ex….
I had the same weird threat ‘I’ll tell people what you’re really like..’ I think it was a kind of transference, ie he was worried I’d do that about him. He was a bully at a time when I was a vulnerable and lonely young mum. He was/ is mentally very unstable. When I started seeing a new partner (he’d already been seeing others) he lost the plot, his existing drink problem got out of hand. He dragged it through courts when he was unable to care for them properly. I wish I’d minimised contact and interaction from the start, realised and accepted that he was the person he showed himself to be. As it is I enabled his contact and encouraged him to have a relationship with our children. They now think/ know he’s an idiot. Looking back I did the best I could and listened to those who said they should have a relationship with him. But I clearly remember my solicitor telling me off the record that in my shoes she’d move as far as possible from him. She had the right idea. He nearly destroyed me (eg I spent over a year with debilitating depression) ruined my relationship with my partner, ruined my final year of a degree…. Don’t forget your own right to and need for a good life.

Dogmum74 · 08/03/2026 09:54

Why on earth are you going on holidays with this man? You need to get a court ordered visitation schedule set up, and he either sticks to it or he doesn’t, and if he doesn’t, do not be accommodating him for other days. And I mean this nicely, stop being a wet wipe, if he is nasty and says nasty things, tell him that all this information will be documented with your solicitor and potentially will reduce his contact

Dogmum74 · 08/03/2026 09:59

Totally agree

fivepastmidnight · 08/03/2026 10:24

Next time he says he's going to say this that and the other and as long as your child's not there obviously I would just reply fuck off you cunt. who do you think you're talking to. Two can play at that game and obviously I'd have to tell her that you denied parenthood and then didn't want to pay and didn't want to see her. obviously don't actually carry this out. I would not be going on holiday with him nor allowing him to take her away I think you need an official agreement court order that assigned set days and times and that you communicate through an app other than that have nothing to do with him.

Ireallywantadoughnut36 · 08/03/2026 18:24

Yep, everyone is right, just formalise and minimise all contact. If he says something cruel just ignore. If it becomes repetitive/harassing (e.g. multiple messages that aren't to do with dd) then you can apply to the court for an order to set boundaries for you (I think it's a non molestation order or similar, I'm not sure but my friend has one for her ex and he now may only discuss the childcare arrangements, significant life events impacting the children etc or she can report him to the court).
He's a d*ck and dd will grow up working that out herself, whatever you do, don't tell her. Remain neutral outwardly when discussing her dad with her.
You need to get comfortable with the fact he is your ex. Don't have anything to do with him other than as a co parent. He isn't part of your holidays, social life, he doesn't dictate how you feel about yourself and what he thinks about you is none of your business.

Yellowshooes · 10/03/2026 18:13

Eufyon · 08/03/2026 07:36

I don’t think we are hearing even a tiny fraction of the full story, and @Yellowshooes is not going to return.

The Op hates him but has been supposedly on multiple holidays with him. I imagine that the Op actually wants a relationship with him… and that lies at the root of it all

@Eufyon sorry, wasn’t intentional disappearing, DD has had a bug! I did want to give things a go at one point (yes, madness) but it was through wanting a typical family set up for dd. The holidays were purely for dd, I can’t afford to take her myself

OP posts:
Yellowshooes · 10/03/2026 18:17

Otterbabiesholdhandstosleep · 08/03/2026 07:37

He is an idiot. The worst he can say to your daughter about you is that you don’t want him in the house. The worst you could say about him is that he left you both just before she was born and didn’t want to know her at all.
Obviously I don’t think you should tell her those things, certainly not at age 4, but I’m astounded he doesn’t yet realize he is playing chicken here.

@Otterbabiesholdhandstosleep thats the thing though isn’t it, I can’t ever tell her what he did as she’d be so hurt. So he can probably successfully paint me as the person who kept him at a distance unfairly

OP posts:
BudgetBuster · 10/03/2026 19:28

Yellowshooes · 10/03/2026 18:13

@Eufyon sorry, wasn’t intentional disappearing, DD has had a bug! I did want to give things a go at one point (yes, madness) but it was through wanting a typical family set up for dd. The holidays were purely for dd, I can’t afford to take her myself

No holiday is better than a weird holiday pretending to play happy families. Imagine how confusing that is for the poor child?

Hope your daughter is well and that you've taken on board some of the comments from people here telling you to be more grey rock with him.

Hankunamatata · 10/03/2026 19:51

Well I think you need to distance yourself.

Perhaps make communications by text message - keep it purely to updating him on dd and making arrangements for dd.

Do.not get involved woth conversations with him on anything but dd. If he says mean things just ignore it and grit your teeth

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