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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to still be upset about my DH behaviour during the birth of our DS (now 9 months later)

408 replies

FTM25 · 28/03/2026 22:59

SORRY ITS A LONG ONE

My relationship with DH hasn’t felt the same since the birth. I know relationships change after a baby and hormones play a part, but I feel like I can’t move past how unsupported I felt during labour. He says I should get over it because he’s apologised, but it feels more like an apology to shut me up than real understanding. I’m also questioning whether I’m overreacting and things weren’t actually that bad.

From first contractions to birth was around 42 hours. Baby was back-to-back so labour was very slow and extremely painful. Due to slow progression I went home the first night to labour. I was awake all night contracting and in agony. DH doesn’t function well when tired and I could tell he was getting annoyed, so I went into the front room overnight to labour alone so I didn’t disturb him. At the time I didn’t mind.

Early the next morning I woke him and said we needed to go back to hospital. Before getting in the car he asked to smoke. I said please no as I was in so much pain. We set off, then just before the hospital he pulled over, got out and had a cigarette while I contracted in the car.

At hospital I was only 2cm. I was given pethidine so I could rest between contractions. Each time I woke with a contraction I held onto him, but after a few times he told me I needed to manage them myself because he was tired. He kept talking about how tired he was. I messaged my sister to come as I felt like I was annoying him. When she arrived he went home to shower but was gone 5 hours — he’d gone home to sleep.

While he was gone the pain became unbearable and the hospital couldn’t locate a doctor to sign off pain relief for four hours. My mum had to go to our house and tell him to come back. By the time he arrived they were preparing the epidural. At this point I had been in labour for nearly 40 hours and was 9cm. I was so distressed they had to restrain me for the epidural.

Eventually baby was delivered with instrumental help and an episiotomy. Afterwards we were moved to a ward and DH repeatedly complained about being uncomfortable on a plastic chair while I was lying there with a tear and episiotomy. Two hours later he went home to rest.

I then developed an infection and couldn’t walk or get out of bed. To give credit, when he came back he did look after baby overnight while I physically couldn’t move. But when midwives moved me to a chair he got into the hospital bed to sleep. It didn’t bother me at the time but staff and other mums’ reactions made me feel embarrassed.

Recovery at home was rough. I could barely walk, had infection, hormonal drop, feeding issues (later found to be tongue tie). DH put a lot of pressure on me to breastfeed even though I was in pain and struggling to even sit comfortably. During a home visit the midwife was reassuring me that lots of people are unable to breastfeed and that it doesn’t always work out. DH was standing in the corner repeatedly saying things like “but breastfeeding is best” and “but she should keep trying.” The midwife actually turned to him quite sharply and said words to the effect of “breastfeeding has to work for the mother before it can work for the baby, and right now it clearly isn’t working.” I burst into tears because I felt overwhelmed and embarrassed that even the midwife had picked up on the pressure he was putting on me.

On day 5 we went to the health visitor. On the way home he insisted we go to his mum’s where all his siblings and their children were already gathered and the house was full. I said I wasn’t ready, I was still in pain and just wanted to go home. He got angry and said my mum had been around the baby every day so why was it okay for my family but not his. I tried to explain that my mum wasn’t visiting the baby — she was there to look after me while I recovered, help me get up, sort food, and support me while I was struggling physically and emotionally. He didn’t accept this and said he would just drop me off at home and take the baby himself. I didn’t want to be separated from my 5 day old so I went, crying in the back of the car.

Before we went in I explained I’d been taking laxatives, my bowels were unpredictable and I felt embarrassed using the toilet there with a full house. We agreed that if I texted him to say I needed to go, we would leave straight away. We ended up staying about 5 hours. I texted him saying I was in pain, my stomach was gurgling and I needed to go, but he made me wait another 40 minutes before we left.

Overall I just feel like he didn’t meet my needs as a person in pain, let alone his wife. This behaviour was very out of character which is why I’m second guessing myself. Much more has happened since this as well, including me going through PPD and having to leave home to stay with family for support because I wasn’t getting it at home, but this post is already long enough.

I’ve spoken to friends about this who completely agree with how I feel, but I don’t know if they’re being biased because they’re my friends. I’ve also mentioned smaller parts of this (like him stopping for a cigarette and telling me to manage contractions on my own) to some of his family, and it was laughed off with comments like “that’s just men” which has made me question myself even more.

So AIBU? Am I right to still feel hurt by this 9 months later, or am I just being hormonal and overreacting?

OP posts:
SunMoonandChocolate · 29/03/2026 12:11

First of all, let me say how sorry I am that you went through such an awful experience OP.

Far from overreacting, if anything you're under-reacting, as I'm afraid I'm another one who would rather be a single Mum, than stay with this waste of space of a man. What a selfish pig he was, and obviously still is, as someone like this doesn't change.

Going through a difficult labour is hard enough, but having to do it virtually alone when you actually have a husband who should have been beside you every step of the way, fighting your corner, and doing everything possible to help you, is absolutely DISGRACEFUL on his part. As for him forcing you to visit his family, when you weren't ready, and wanted to be able to relax if you needed the bathroom in the privacy of your own home, well to say I'm shocked is the understatement of the century!

What ever you do OP, please don't even consider having another baby with him. Get yourself together as soon as you can, and make plans to separate, this man will NEVER be the partner you deserve.

PenguinLover24 · 29/03/2026 12:13

Who the hell said you're being unreasonable?! I've never said this on here in my life but this post is the exact reason this phrase was created LEAVE THE BASTARD!!! what an absolute insert things that would probably get me banned I honestly haven't felt so angry for a stranger, I'm so sorry! X

HazelMember · 29/03/2026 12:17

Are you still sleeping with him?

bigfacthunter · 29/03/2026 12:19

I don’t know him and this has made me hate him. I’m so sorry you went through this, you deserve much better.

Now he has shown you how he shows up for you when things are hard I think you really need to consider if he want to be with him moving forward. What if you get ill? Will he be traipsing you to his family’s home for 5 hours while you’re suffering the effects of chemo for example? Will he be complaining how tired he is the whole time? Urrrrrgh.

Love to you, you’re not unreasonable. His behaviour was awful and as the saying goes: when someone shows you who they are believe them xxx

Chilly80 · 29/03/2026 12:23

I know you are worried about a fight over custody but you also said he hands your son back to you very quickly so would he really want your son for long periods of time?

decorationday · 29/03/2026 12:23

So are you having to cover your loss of earnings on maternity leave alone then?

"We split bills 50/50. He does now contribute weekly for DS but that was also a big argument initially."

This is appalling. What kind of "good dad" only grudgingly pays for his own child's costs after a big argument?

As for those saying he's apologised to you so now it's about you failing to forgive and "move on" - sorry, but that's bullshit. Saying the word "sorry" is not a get out of jail free card to continue being awful.

It's not an apology if he has continued all the same behaviour. If it had been a genuine apology where he recognised what he done wrong and changed his behaviour, then I expect the op would have been able to "move on" much more easily. Instead, he sounds like a controlling bully.

ChestnutSquash · 29/03/2026 12:24

YourShyLion · 29/03/2026 02:22

It's very odd that you remember things in such forensics detail. It sounds like you have no interest in forgiving or forgetting and ruminate on this. I'd love to hear his side of the story. I'm guessing it would be very different.

Seriously? Show me a woman who doesn't remember her labours and deliveries in forensic detail. My DC are 35 and 28. I remember their births as though it were yesterday - and they weren't traumatic in the way the OP's was. Having a baby is life changing and probably the most painful, challenging experience the majority of women will ever have. Of course women remember.

Swiftie1878 · 29/03/2026 12:27

He’s a self-obsessed little shit.
Please start planning your exit. This isn’t going to get better.

weareallcats · 29/03/2026 12:31

This is genuinely one of the most shocking posts I have read on mumsnet. I hate him. I would leave. You have your mum’s support and financial independence - I honestly wouldn’t think twice.

LamentableShoes · 29/03/2026 12:33

PenguinLover24 · 29/03/2026 12:13

Who the hell said you're being unreasonable?! I've never said this on here in my life but this post is the exact reason this phrase was created LEAVE THE BASTARD!!! what an absolute insert things that would probably get me banned I honestly haven't felt so angry for a stranger, I'm so sorry! X

Often people vote YABU then say it's 'because you are unreasonable to still be with him' or some silly answer.

wrongthinker · 29/03/2026 12:40

Of course you can't move past it, OP.

He treated you disgustingly, with such disrespect and such a lack of care and empathy.

He is spiteful 'sometimes' because 'sometimes' is currently how often he feels he can get away with it. As you already see, he's getting more and more comfortable with being spiteful 'a lot of the time' because he thinks he has you trapped.

I get the fears about not being with your baby all the time. You need some proper advice and support here. Talk to a solicitor about what your options are. Talk to Women's Aid. Figure out realistically what splitting up will look like in both the short and longer term. Factor in that your child is currently growing up in a house where there is abuse and neglect. Factor in that abusive behaviour only gets worse, and couples counselling is NOT going to help. Individual counselling might help you to feel more confident and stop doubting the evidence of your own experience.

JennyForeigner · 29/03/2026 12:46

Divorce the fucker. That is unforgivable from start to finish.

Hohumitsreallyallthereis · 29/03/2026 12:47

I remember it all in forensic detail. I also had a back to back labour and the pain was hideous and the epidural didn’t work. 27 hours of awfulness and I remember every minute. DH did everything he could,

Honestly I would leave

GinaandGin · 29/03/2026 12:52

Divorce
He is a selfish, entitled, nasty piece of work

askmenow · 29/03/2026 12:53

OP, was yours an arranged marriage or how did you get together with this man?

I’m genuinely struggling to understand how you didn’t see these traits in him before the birth of your ds.
I know it doesn’t help now but really…. can you not see how selfish, abusive and controlling he is? And the enabling nature of the rest of his family.
If my own sin had treated my DIL in such a cruel and derisory manner during childbirth he’d have had short shrift from me.

The first months with your ds are irreplaceable and your DH has soured the experience. That will be your memory forever.

Open your eyes and see your future!

Whatever you choose to do, DO NOT have another child with this monster.

ShetlandishMum · 29/03/2026 12:57

I had been a single parent after 2 weeks.

How is things now?

SlightlyTerrifiedButPolite · 29/03/2026 12:59

OP my heart breaks for you that you are even questioning if you are being unreasonable. I think this is what can happen when you’ve lived with someone who turns everything back on you and makes it a battle to get basic needs acknowledged. You are not the problem here.

You say he quickly runs out of patience with DS… I can’t see him enjoying having to do it all solo. And he sounds lazy. You might get less of a fight out of him than you think, despite him having a spiteful side.

You deserve so much more 💔💔💔. I could never forgive a man who behaved like that when I was at my most vulnerable and made it all about him. It’s the ultimate betrayal sorry not to make you feel any worse.

I think you may find everything is easier without this dark cloud you’re living with. And when you are worried about a legal fight, just the fact you are still there with him and have made it through this shows that you are more resilient than you realise. I wouldn’t have been able to take it

Frugalgal · 29/03/2026 13:00

What do you mean there was a big row to get him to contribute financially for his own child???

Are you serious??

Wtf???

You know you can't have any more children with this selfish pig?

I get you don't want to think about handing your child over to this awful person in a shared arrangement and absolutely he will go to war and try to get some custody in order to avoid paying child support but every day of your life spent with him is a day of your life wasted.

ForeverTheOptomist · 29/03/2026 13:02

If you think that you might leave him, I'd suggested that you spend time getting ducks in a row. This will give you a position of power and will work wonders for your surety and confidence. Get all the legal help that you can (possibly legal aid?), work out logistics, and when you are quietly confident, go for it (...technical term).

Lugol · 29/03/2026 13:05

ChestnutSquash · 29/03/2026 12:24

Seriously? Show me a woman who doesn't remember her labours and deliveries in forensic detail. My DC are 35 and 28. I remember their births as though it were yesterday - and they weren't traumatic in the way the OP's was. Having a baby is life changing and probably the most painful, challenging experience the majority of women will ever have. Of course women remember.

Ignore.
It will be one of those sad bastard men who love to come on any thread like this and tell the woman how wrong she is and pretend to be a woman whilst sticking the boot in at 2 in the morning.

Like anyone gives a shit what they think. 😂

HattiesBag · 29/03/2026 13:12

Whats wrong with him that he is so tired? Weed? Gaming? Anyway, he sounds horribly selfish and self centred

notacooldad · 29/03/2026 13:17

Atrocious behaviour.
I am disgusted with him on your behalf.
It's not 'it's just men'
I've seen plenty of men in my family and with in my friendship circle who step up and do absolutely everything they can to support mum.
Dh, would make bottles so he could feed ds1 so I could sleep. He would batch cooking so I had food while he was at work. He arranged for family to come in and help when he worked a long day and kept in touch. The list is endless of what he did to help. Thirty years later he still puts me and the "kids" first.
Op, Do you think your 'D'H will be putting you first in decades to come if he cant even show up now?

trumpisruin · 29/03/2026 13:18

Like so many men he defaults to being a horrible selfish bastard.
I would keep him on a very tight leash, never let him get away with anything again, and have a plan ready just in case.

Itsyourcircussodontusemyclowns · 29/03/2026 13:19

I do understand the worry of having to leave him alone with your son without your supervision and you are therefor reluctant to split up.
Also I think it is a genuine worry that he will fight you hard, just out of spite. He has acknowledged he is spiteful and his behaviour as you described also shows his lack of empathy and grand egocentrism.
When he does win in court, how will his spite fuel him when he is alone with your son, it is a horrific question playing in your head I assume.
Still these are things you will have to deal with. You have to leave.
Have him take you to court. He will have to pay, at least half of the costs. But it will have to be on his initiative. And it might make him not wanting to take that step.
Plan for this. Look forward. You know him best. Will he be the one caring for your child on his own or will he drop him at some relatives?
Pre think and block these options.
You just think of the best plan beforehand without lawyers, so that it is in black and white you are being fair and playing nice.
Make sure this plan is made and is water tight and in your favor but substantiated.
And save proof of everything. How he pressures your child. Pressures you. Save print screens of texts in which he nags about paying or caring for your son. Ask such things in texts from witnesses so you have those to save.
Make videos. Take pictures. Write letters. Actively make him show his true colours.
You are not under pressure now so you can think clearly and build this file. I also think this might give you a little super power feeling and it will strengthen you, as you are fighting for your childs well being.
Reading your story I am pretty sure there will be a day he will do something so bad you will have to leave instantly and the pressure will be on.
Please be aware of how he already changed you into doubting and unvalidating yourself and your needs and feelings. This will only go further and make you lose yourself more. You have a mother and a sister behind you, that is a lot. Tuck away any sense of shame, he should be ashamed for how he behaves, not you. Don't defend him.
And don't tell him about your plans.
You can do this. You need to.
❤️

SlightlyTerrifiedButPolite · 29/03/2026 13:19

YourShyLion · 29/03/2026 02:22

It's very odd that you remember things in such forensics detail. It sounds like you have no interest in forgiving or forgetting and ruminate on this. I'd love to hear his side of the story. I'm guessing it would be very different.

It’s called a trauma response, you absolute ghoul

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