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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:
Lovethystupidneighbour · 29/03/2026 00:22

There’s not a doubt in my mind that you won’t feel ready to leave this relationship, as I imagine he has his redeeming features. But it’s worth noting that you will likely harbour resentment about this for years down the line.

What I’m trying to say, is if in a decade you can’t stand the way he looks, breathes and exists but you can’t pinpoint why and you feel unreasonable for wanting to leave, do not feel bad - he is the one responsible

PurpleNightingale · 29/03/2026 00:22

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?

I am sad that you have had this experience with men.

I went into myself quite a bit during labour but my husbands quiet presence there throughout was very comforting to me. He held my hand when I wanted it, backed off when I didn't and stayed with our baby when I went to go wash. There is no one I can be so uninhibitedly myself and vulnerable around than my husband, I would have wanted noone else there if he couldn't have been. Those first few moments becoming parents together and the shared awe of it all was wonderful.

OP you deserved so much more from your husband. I'm not sure I could come back from what he put you through either.

PeachySmile2 · 29/03/2026 00:22

I could not get past any of that. He sounds like a controlling piece of shit. Being 6 weeks PP myself, I’d be distraught if any of that happened to me. The 5 hour family date on day 5 would have broken me. You deserve better.

Purplerubberducky · 29/03/2026 00:24

ChickenBananaBanana · 29/03/2026 00:06

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?!

All of this!

Candymay · 29/03/2026 00:28

Im so sorry to read this. I was totally alone through pregnancy, childbirth and raising my child. But your experience feels slightly worse.

I would be so resentful. I hope that you can separate if he is not able to change and support you.

WhereYouLeftIt · 29/03/2026 00:30

"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'm not your friend, I'm a total stranger.

Your husband is a disgusting piece of shit; and his family, who "laughed off [his behaviour] with comments like “that’s just men” which has made me question myself even more" - well they're the ones who raised him so I'm guessing the apple didn't fall too far from the tree.

You say his "behaviour was very out of character which is why I’m second guessing myself". Alternatively, this is his real character which he has successfully masked from you until now. Or maybe not that successfully - I feel that if you were to explore your comment "DH doesn’t function well when tired" you'd recall a myriad of times when he has behaved badly towards you.

"I’m also questioning whether I’m overreacting and things weren’t actually that bad."
You are not overreacting, and sadly, things ARE that bad. So sorry. ((hug))

LittleMyLabyrinth · 29/03/2026 00:34

He is a monster. There is no other way to express someone having zero empathy for someone they claim to love when they are at their most vulnerable. Don't let him make you think this is normal. Most men are not like this.
I hope you are getting mental health help for your birth trauma as well.

Purplerubberducky · 29/03/2026 00:36

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?

Stop making excuses for men like this. There are plenty of men that are able to handle the birth of a child. Some of them in their profession! The men you speak of have had their shitty/ abusive behaviour minimised and laughed off all their lives by men and women who have internalised misogyny. It’s not ok and should never be normalised.
She had every right to refuse going to in-laws for 5 hours. I’m sure they’d all met baby etc.
And there is nothing he can do to make this right. He’s still trying to minimise and excuse his behaviour now.

Bebeandgang · 29/03/2026 00:37

I'm so sorry OP. Both my births were fairly similar. They were traumatic and difficult to come to terms with, even with the support of my husband. My husband was my rock and I can't imagine how you feel having dealt with everything alone. You don't deserve any of the things that happened and your husband really should have done better for you and your baby. Wishing you strength to process this and to find a way forward.

LamentableShoes · 29/03/2026 00:44

Stop making excuses for men like this. There are plenty of men that are able to handle the birth of a child.

Exactly.
He didn't behave like that because of was an unavoidable consequence of having a penis. He's a pathetic, selfish, whinging, loathsome arsehole.

My husband did everything he could to help and support me in birth and establishing breastfeeding. When he had to leave the ward he went home and cleaned! And love and support should be the bare minimum!

Icecreamisthebest · 29/03/2026 00:50

I’m so sorry OP. That was a hard read.

You say it was out of character but I’m wondering if prior to this, you ever actually needed him to put you first and give you support? Often childbirth and parenthood are the first times in a relationship ship where the woman’s needs must come first and before that a couple have been used to the dynamic that the man gets priority in all areas of life. Thanks sexism and socialisation.

What I’m trying to say is that this experience may be the true him. That he really isn’t capable of putting you first. If that’s the case then you should consider leaving. Because it won’t get any better.

The fact that he says you need to get over it and he has apologised makes me think that this will be an ongoing issue in your marriage.

I’d suggest that you think very carefully about your future. Go back to work after mat leave finishes. Do not let your career slide. Get some therapy. Build yourself a supportive village. And do think about whether you should stay with this poor excuse of a man

Thelifeofawife · 29/03/2026 00:51

Oh OP, this was so sad to read.

Just echoing what others have said really, but you’re absolutely right to feel the way you do.
Even at the beginning, having to go into another room to labour so you didn’t disturb him - you were in labour with his child!

My ex was with me every step of the way when I had DS.
The only way I could get remotely comfortable during labour was to sit upright, and he sat in a chair opposite me holding me upright all night, while he was fighting the urge to fall asleep. My labour lasted over 24 hours and he was there for all of it, and I was constantly squeezing his hand, he didn’t sleep until a several hours after DS was born, and even then he didn’t really want to leave us.
He was immature in many ways (we were young) but during that time he stepped up, when it really mattered.

With your DH, I kind of understand with the family situation he may have felt under pressure to go if they had all gathered to see the baby, but where he loses that argument is the length of time you had to stay for, it should have been an hour max.

He sounds very selfish, and you don’t have to get over what he’s done just because he thinks you should. You deserved better 💐

SL2924 · 29/03/2026 00:51

OP, I’m so sorry this all has happened to you. This guy is a total fucking waste of space. He deserves no special credit for looking after baby overnight while you physically couldn’t move- that is the bare minimum of humanity never mind the behaviour of a father and a husband. Raise your bar. It’s frankly no wonder you had PPD with this level of support. I don’t know what to suggest. I’d like to think I would leave someone like this but I don’t know if that advice is helpful. You deserve so much better and this utter scum bag needs to fuck off and never inflict himself on anyone ever again. Was he always such a useless asshole?

Asenseofcalm · 29/03/2026 00:52

@FTM25 I would be hurt for life. I’m so sorry OP that you had to endure all this from the person who is supposed to love you the most in this world.

His behaviour was so cruel and evil. You really shouldn’t be with him.

Oneof1183 · 29/03/2026 00:57

I am so sorry and genuinely sad for you OP. There is no excuse for any man to behave like this at a time when his wife needs him the most but unfortunately sympathy and care are alien to some idiotic men. The sad thing is that they NEVER change, and I can predict that even 10/15 years down the line he will be the same selfish, self centred, ignorant and cruel human being as he was 9 months ago. I hope you find inner peace and help to overcome this and become strong for yours and your child’s sake.

Horses7 · 29/03/2026 00:59

Poor you 🥰
Awful husband!
Btw who on earth is the 1%????

Asenseofcalm · 29/03/2026 00:59

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?

You must be a man?

ChakaKan · 29/03/2026 02:01

It sounds like at no point has he prioritised you, your needs or your feelings and tbh it’s inexcusable to not do that for someone giving birth / a new mother.
I couldn’t be with someone like this. Sorry Op.

Thelifeofawife · 29/03/2026 02:01

Horses7 · 29/03/2026 00:59

Poor you 🥰
Awful husband!
Btw who on earth is the 1%????

Presumably the one who said that men don’t belong on a maternity ward 🙄 (of course, there’s always one)

bigboykitty · 29/03/2026 02:03

You will be an amazing single parent @FTM25 . It's so much easier to do it by yourself than it is with a millstone like your STBX around your neck. He sounds disgusting.

fuchsteufelswild · 29/03/2026 02:03

Are you sure OP he's compassionate and respectful to you as long as you don't dare being in pain delivering a baby? Think about it; failure to address it will let resentment fester. You strike me as someone who apologizes for making a fuss. Some women would get only halfway through this list and file for divorce.

"1. He says I should get over it because he’s apologised

  1. 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.
  2. DH repeatedly complained about being uncomfortable on a plastic chair while I was lying there with a tear and episiotomy
  3. 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
  4. DH was standing in the corner repeatedly saying things like “but breastfeeding is best” and “but she should keep trying.”
6.I explained I’d been taking laxatives. We agreed that if I texted him to say I needed to go, we would leave straight away...he made me wait another 40 minutes before we left.
  1. him stopping for a cigarette and telling me to manage contractions on my own
  2. He didn’t accept this and said he would just drop me off at home and take the baby himself"
andthat · 29/03/2026 02:13

PurpleNightingale · 29/03/2026 00:22

I am sad that you have had this experience with men.

I went into myself quite a bit during labour but my husbands quiet presence there throughout was very comforting to me. He held my hand when I wanted it, backed off when I didn't and stayed with our baby when I went to go wash. There is no one I can be so uninhibitedly myself and vulnerable around than my husband, I would have wanted noone else there if he couldn't have been. Those first few moments becoming parents together and the shared awe of it all was wonderful.

OP you deserved so much more from your husband. I'm not sure I could come back from what he put you through either.

Edited

THIS.

i felt extremely vulnerable when giving birth and my husband absolutely was my rock.

@FTM25 your husband is a total bastard. What he did was unforgivable and if it was me, I wouldn’t be able to get past how completely he let me down.

NoArmaniNoPunani · 29/03/2026 02:14

He sounds awful. I think it's very normal to process birth trauma 9months or more later. There's so much going on in the early days with a baby that your brain takes a while to be able to process everything.

ChakaKan · 29/03/2026 02:17

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?

Sorry but I think this is complete and utter shit.

‘Modern fad of having men in the delivery room’ - it’s 2026 not 1956, men have been supporting partners through birth for decades. Mine did, he was amazing, he did everything he could to support me while I gave birth to his child.
Some men are shit at it because they are self centred arseholes. Like the OP’s husband.

As for leaving a 5 day old baby - don’t know many people who would feel comfortable to do that. Again why was OP’s DH forcing her into this uncomfortable choice? He was again prioritising himself and his family over OP. Completely unnecessary and cruel to put this pressure on a 5 day post partum mother. He should have been making her tea, plumping her pillows and letting her rest at this point.

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.