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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:
Thistooshallpsss · 28/03/2026 23:49

I think the birth of a baby separates the men from the boys and shows you their true nature when it really really matters.

Enrichetta · 28/03/2026 23:52

There really is no coming back from this, is there.

Excited101 · 28/03/2026 23:53

It sounds abusive- sorry op. How can you feel anything other than utter regret, loathing and resentment when you look at him? Even the smoking alone is disgusting and pathetic.

CocoaTea · 28/03/2026 23:55

WhosGotTheKeysToMyBimma · 28/03/2026 23:02

I don't know what to say that doesn't sound horrible other than he should be an ex for his behaviour.

Absolutely unforgivable imo.

I also don’t know what to say.

I am sorry @FTM25 this was your experience.

I am so sorry your DH let you down like this.

outerspacepotato · 28/03/2026 23:55

Sorry he's a waste of good oxygen.

I hope you get away from him at some point.

Laura95167 · 28/03/2026 23:55

I understand "men" may not understand birth, may be overwhelmed themselves etc etc.. but giving every grace available, someone was in pain, vocal obvious pain and he slept through it? That's pretty horrific if it was a neighbour or coworker but his wife?.. during labour to deliver his child?

Even if i made every allowance.. getting you to the hospital trumps having a fag. Being "held on to during contractions" is the least he could do. Im flabbergasted he took your hospital bed. And suggesting when youre sore and on laxatives that you endure 5 hours at his mums or be seperated from your newborn is horrific. Horrific.

He should be ashamed, so should his mother. You minimally need marriage counselling to come back from this IMO. YANBU

Tanyya · 28/03/2026 23:56

I became more shocked as I read on.

I think yes, men are often useless. Mine went home to sleep 2 hours after baby born and the 3 days I was kept in overnight before the birth he was just desperate to go home to bed and only stayed 1 night because I begged him in tears.

Mine also took me for a miscarriage procedure (awake so I heard/ saw everything) the most traumatic thing I’ve ever experienced and he wouldn’t wait as I might be ages so he went home via mc Donald’s.

So mine is an arse (plenty more I could say) but I do think yours is worse.

Is he still like this now, just ignoring you/ your needs?

IrishSelkie · 28/03/2026 23:56

Tough to read and even tougher to live through, you have my sympathies.

It is cases like this that convince me that men do not belong in childbirth. Most of them can’t cope and some actively make it harder. I’ve known many to actually faint during the delivery 🙄 because men just can’t handle it.

You would have been better off calling an uber to the hospital and leaving him at home. Then calling your sister to meet you there.

It’s lucky you have a mum and sister nearby that can help you. Why you expected your DH to be any kind of decent support I blame on this modern fad of having dad in the room.

Men don’t belong in the maternity wards at all imho. I know that’s old fashioned but I truly think it is better for everyone.

On the breastfeeding, was that something you had initially wanted to do and he was trying to fight your corner without reading the room? Or did you always want to formulate feed from the start?

Why didn’t you accept his offer to take baby to show his family while you stay home? I am sorry that is on you.

Now the baby is here, how is he? He has apologised, you say it was out of character so has he re-earned your trust yet? Or are there still issues?

MarmaladeSandwich7 · 28/03/2026 23:57

There is a score of 1% for YABU!!! Who the hell can possibly think the OP is being unreasonable?!!
I could hardly believe what I was reading OP. Please don’t stay with this horrendous excuse for a man any longer. I’m so sorry 😢

Meadowfinch · 28/03/2026 23:58

Are you seriously intending to spend your life with this creep OP?

He reminds me of my ex who spent most of the time I was undergoing chemo, whining about how having to drive to see our ds had made his leg ache.

Honestly OP, just get rid of him. He is not on your team, does not care about your happiness or the well being of your child, and puts his mother first. So send him back to her. Ditch him from a great height and be a happy relaxed family of two. And you'll be rid of the ghastly in-laws.

OlderGlaswegianLivingInDevon · 28/03/2026 23:58

I am surprised you are still with him.

levitational · 28/03/2026 23:59

waterrat · 28/03/2026 23:11

I actually felt emotional for you..a total stranger...reading this.

I'm so sorry. Xx

Me, too. If this had happened to me I would be struggling so badly with how I felt about my partner.

I'm really so sorry, OP, and I'm sending you my solidarity, for what it's worth.

tipsyraven · 28/03/2026 23:59

What a shitty, selfish man.

SkaterGrrrrl · 29/03/2026 00:00

Unforgivable. 🌷

LTB

Switcher · 29/03/2026 00:03

Leave him.

Passingthrough123 · 29/03/2026 00:04

Bloody hell, could he have been any more useless? I would find it so hard to get past this. His behaviour was appalling and he totally showed you who he is. It's very easy to say I'm sorry, but I bet he doesn't mean it for a second.

ChickenBananaBanana · 29/03/2026 00:06

IrishSelkie · 28/03/2026 23:56

Tough to read and even tougher to live through, you have my sympathies.

It is cases like this that convince me that men do not belong in childbirth. Most of them can’t cope and some actively make it harder. I’ve known many to actually faint during the delivery 🙄 because men just can’t handle it.

You would have been better off calling an uber to the hospital and leaving him at home. Then calling your sister to meet you there.

It’s lucky you have a mum and sister nearby that can help you. Why you expected your DH to be any kind of decent support I blame on this modern fad of having dad in the room.

Men don’t belong in the maternity wards at all imho. I know that’s old fashioned but I truly think it is better for everyone.

On the breastfeeding, was that something you had initially wanted to do and he was trying to fight your corner without reading the room? Or did you always want to formulate feed from the start?

Why didn’t you accept his offer to take baby to show his family while you stay home? I am sorry that is on you.

Now the baby is here, how is he? He has apologised, you say it was out of character so has he re-earned your trust yet? Or are there still issues?

Erm I don't know what kind of pathetic male worms you know but I feel sorry for you. My husband was amazing support to me and I'm sure many other men are.

You really blame op for not wanting to be away from her baby who was LESS THAN A WEEK OLD?!

sittingonabeach · 29/03/2026 00:07

@IrishSelkie you need to raise your bar.

I had a complication after labour, needed emergency intervention. All the way through DH was my rock and advocate as well as looking after baby DS.

I am so sorry what you went through @FTM25

Do you still live with him? How is he now as a partner and dad?

ChurpyBurd · 29/03/2026 00:07

That was a horrible read.
You had a traumatic birth made considerably worse by a terrible, selfish partner.
I'm struck that he couldn't control his urge to smoke on the way to hospital, he found it so unbearable that he had to stop to car... yet expected you to grin & bear the pain of breastfeeding?

I'm not surprised that you're deeply hurt & can't let this go.
His actions were grotesque & unforgivable x

What do you need/want?
Do you want to separate or is there something he could do to save the marriage?
Apologies are worthless if nothing changes. Has he always been a selfish arse?

ChickenBananaBanana · 29/03/2026 00:08

Op, you are a sane and good person I'm sure. Would you treat a total stranger giving birth like he treated you? I wouldn't and I'm sure you wouldn't. And this is supposed to be your person who adores you. Please seek help and fuck him off. You deserve so much better and so does your Baba.

ByLilacMember · 29/03/2026 00:11

This was really sad to read, so sorry you went through this. I'd need professional help to process this. If this is something you have capacity to attend I'd not hesitate

Girrafffees87832 · 29/03/2026 00:15

No wonder you had PPD. That really isn't "just men" territory.

The problem is friends and family can never tell you to your face to divorce because you might never do and you'll distance yourself from anyone who says that.

Tothebrig · 29/03/2026 00:16

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

I was fuming for you when I read this, but it got so, so much worse as I read the rest of your post.

I can only add my voices to the rest, OP. What absolutely awful - and repeated - behaviour from him. It's not a one-off. It's who he is.

Men don’t belong in the maternity wards at all imho. I know that’s old fashioned but I truly think it is better for everyone

Many men are amazing. My DH massaged my back for five hours with our first DC, and delivered our second. He was calm, kind and thoughtful throughout. The OP's H is a bad egg, and his behaviour is his alone.

OP, I would seriously thinking about a life away from this man. Don't let him make you think that you're overreacting. When in doubt, read the comments on this thread.

Purplerubberducky · 29/03/2026 00:18

What a horrible man. I bet he’s abusive in other ways too. Hope you can leave and be supported by family

Scripturient · 29/03/2026 00:20

IrishSelkie · 28/03/2026 23:56

Tough to read and even tougher to live through, you have my sympathies.

It is cases like this that convince me that men do not belong in childbirth. Most of them can’t cope and some actively make it harder. I’ve known many to actually faint during the delivery 🙄 because men just can’t handle it.

You would have been better off calling an uber to the hospital and leaving him at home. Then calling your sister to meet you there.

It’s lucky you have a mum and sister nearby that can help you. Why you expected your DH to be any kind of decent support I blame on this modern fad of having dad in the room.

Men don’t belong in the maternity wards at all imho. I know that’s old fashioned but I truly think it is better for everyone.

On the breastfeeding, was that something you had initially wanted to do and he was trying to fight your corner without reading the room? Or did you always want to formulate feed from the start?

Why didn’t you accept his offer to take baby to show his family while you stay home? I am sorry that is on you.

Now the baby is here, how is he? He has apologised, you say it was out of character so has he re-earned your trust yet? Or are there still issues?

Gosh, this terrible ‘modern fad’ of expecting the father of the child to behave like a decent human being. 🙄

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