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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:
EnterFunnyNameHere · 29/03/2026 07:21

That sounds terrible OP, he let you down dreadfully. How has he been in the time since? If he has apologised and really stepped up, I'd probably suggest couples counselling to try and process the birth trauma. If not, well, I'm not sure staying together is really viable.

FeministThrowingAPrincessParty · 29/03/2026 07:22

This is awful. How you feel is completely understandable. Not sure how you move forward. Maybe try talking to him again and ask him to consider how he’d feel if you behaved that way if he’d had major surgery? And tell him that his apology doesn’t sound sincere.

Aabbcc1235 · 29/03/2026 07:24

I think that the reason that your brain won’t let you forgive and forget is because we’re programmed to see patterns.

He was completely useless and unsupportive during labour and then apologised.

He was unsupportive for the early days and then apologised.

He was unsupportive when you had pp depression and then apologised.

Your brain knows that the apologies are just words because the behaviour is continuing. And it’s warning you that the pattern will reoccur In the future if you have another baby or you get sick or you get old or you need care.

I wouldn’t stay married to this man - he has shown you what your future will be like and it isn’t good.

IWentAwayIStayedAway · 29/03/2026 07:29

fuck me , he's a grade A wanker. I'm speechless

FailMeOnce · 29/03/2026 07:30

Rounder888 · 29/03/2026 06:43

What a piece of shit! My husband is an annoying tired person (came in helpful as both our kids are great sleepers), but he didn’t mention it once during both my labours/hospital stays. Slept on the floor next to me after one of them as the chair they had available was broken. Was such a fantastic labouring partner, stayed up all night so I could sleep with our second, as the baby wasn’t keeping milk down well. It’s the old saying, if they wanted to, they would. I wouldn’t be able to even look at him if he had treated me like this

This. There are times in life when my husband annoys me (I'm sure the reverse is never true...) but sometimes just the memory of how wonderful he was when I was in hospital and afterwards, when I was at my most vulnerable, is the very thing to make me let whatever minor irritant it is go.

Sleeping in the awful chair, desperate to do anything I needed, and then the care he took off me when I was home, making sure I was fed and watered, splitting the nights when he went back to work because he knew how hard I find lack of sleep, supporting me to breastfeed but regularly reminding me that fed is best and we could combi/formula feed at any point if I needed it and all would be well, being incredibly patient and reassuring when I found sex hard for a long time afterwards, and coming out of his comfort zone to advocate for me when I was vulnerable and needed it.

What you describe is absolutely appalling selfishness and lack of love, and would kill any love I once had for that person.

Mintchocs · 29/03/2026 07:32

You poor thing. Disgusting, unforgivable, lazy, selfish, useless, are just a few words that spring to mind. If I were you I'd leave him at the first practical opportunity and never look back. He treated you absolutely terribly at your most vulnerable time and clearly it continued as you said there was pnd and other stuff you haven't mentioned.

Blessedbethefruitloopss · 29/03/2026 07:33

A selfish, lazy, misogynistic bully. Just the breast feeding point is enough to say you’re not doing this anymore. It’s not about the fact it happened 9 months ago, it’s the fact you know he will never respect you.

BlueAppleCider · 29/03/2026 07:36

I am so sorry. Please find a way to not have him as your partner. He sounds vile.

Shoxfordian · 29/03/2026 07:38

None of this behaviour is ok, don't stay with him

Twooclockrock · 29/03/2026 07:38

I had a similar bitth story, even down to the epiesiotomy and infection.
My DH is udually a dick, and he is now an ex due to his dick behaviour. But he wasnt as bad as this.. not even close.
Sorry OP. If he has apologised and reflected and knows what he did and has now not put a foot wrong then maybe you can learn to live with how he acted. In my case it got worse and now we live apart.

SarzWix · 29/03/2026 07:43

The similarities between your experience and my sister's with her ex are quite chilling. Sadly, in staying with her ex for another 7 years after that, my sister was subjected to gaslighting by that man every time she was sick or injured - she was either never quite sick or injured enough to need his support, or, she was making it up and exaggerating for attention, or he had the same thing but was much, much sicker than her. When she dislocated her knee, but it wasn't healing right, it was all her own fault - she wasn't trying hard enough to recover; she was exaggerating the pain for attention and a free ride etc etc. When scanning showed an issue that had been missed, and my sis had to have surgery to sort it, he did not apologise or admit he was wrong, just carried on being mean and refusing to help until she had recovered. I was the person doing all of the support she needed, cooking, housework and walking their dog for several weeks.
So, I'm sad to say, this is highly likely not going to get any better OP, and your inability to forgive this disgustingly selfish behaviour is a good thing. Your instincts are protecting you, imho, and you should listen to them now, rather than spending years trying to justify his abuse as an 'all men do this' thing, or even worse 'I must have done something to deserve this'.

22Flowers · 29/03/2026 07:48

Marriages have ended in the delivery room.
Mine did. Yours has. It will not get better. You are already coping better without him. Please call a halt to this now and make a new life for yourself and your child. Your family and friends will applaud and support you.

seriousandloyal · 29/03/2026 07:48

That was really upsetting to read as a stranger so no wonder you are still upset about this OP. From what you have written I would say your husband doesn’t think of you as a real human being at all. If everything is going well for you both he may be nice to you but as soon as trouble comes he only thinks of himself and you are an inconvenience to him. This is not a good man or one to stick by and I would advise you to detach yourself mentally from him first, not expect anything more from him so you can’t be disappointed and really focus on how to get away from him and make a nice life for yourself. I’m so sorry you went through that giving birth, you deserved so much more and that is his fault and not yours. Look forward now, don’t look back x

BramStokey · 29/03/2026 07:53

I've read quite a few posts about men behaving badly during labour over the years, and I think this one may be the absolute worst. You are not being unreasonable to still be upset.

If he was wonderful the rest of the time then maybe you could put it down to a weird reaction to stress, but it sounds as if he's always dreadful and puts you last at every turn. Would you consider ending the marriage?

CheeseyOnionPie · 29/03/2026 07:53

I’m so sorry you went through all of this. You are not being unreasonable to still be upset about this - I would never stop being upset about it. It’s not normal and it’s not “just men”.

Your DP is a selfish shit. I would never have another baby with him and I’d be making plans to leave him. What’s the point of a relationship when he’s like this when you’re in your time of need?

SentFromIpheon · 29/03/2026 07:53

That was genuinely awful to read. I am so sorry he took away this experience from you. It's bordering on abuse. Your feelings are totally valid. What a selfish selfish wanker.

theleafandnotthetree · 29/03/2026 08:04

MagicHouse · 29/03/2026 02:41

Sounds like my exh who among other things decided he wanted a lengthy shower before driving me to hospital with my first (I was in the last stages of labour as it turned out). With my second he decided he needed some snacks and drove me to hospital via the supermarket where I proceeded to have contractions bent over a shopping trolley. He was always complaining about the "lack of sleep" too, despite the fact he took himself off to the spare room to sleep all night every night while I dealt with my little reflux baby waking every hour. I also had the endless visits with his family and friends, after a similar birth to yours. It might not be what you want to hear, but divorcing him was the best thing I ever did. I'm not surprised you feel upset at what you went through. Keep talking with your own family and friends to get the support you need.

Similar story here. My now ex husband was a total let down when I had both of my children. Not on the scale of the OP but selfish and careless nonetheless. The knowledge of that, of who he was at these very key moments in our lives never left me and I wasn't backwards in reminding him of it when many years later, he badgered me constantly as to how I could possibly want to leave this prince of a man. I had the combination of uselessness with know it all attitude (eg re breastfeeding) that the OP describes was particularly galling.

Pipsquiggle · 29/03/2026 08:10

He's a twat.
Honestly, I can't believe someone would behave like that and be a decent person once this episode was over.
I suspect he's a grade one wanker for most of the rest of the time as well.

BellesAndGraces · 29/03/2026 08:11

I don’t really know what to say other than I’m so so sorry and I hope you never get over it and leave him. I think it would be helpful to have counselling to help you process some of this and get you strong enough to leave him.

JG24 · 29/03/2026 08:12

This feels so extreme is there a cultural difference between you? Was he raised in another culture where men just aren't involved in care/children?

Francestein · 29/03/2026 08:13

This is the real him. He’s not there for you. He is incapable and unwilling to put your needs ahead of his own. Neglect is a form of abuse. He is not loving or kind, but entitled and disrespectful. He is not your partner in life.

SpryCat · 29/03/2026 08:13

When you were at your most vulnerable he revealed his true colours, he is only interested in himself and your health and happiness is irrelevant to him. He will never have your back only his own and he will only get worse.

SunnyRedSnail · 29/03/2026 08:19

@FTM25 the fact he stopped for a cigarette rather than taking you to the hospital as you were in agony says it all. The rest isn't surprising. This man clearly thinks of his own needs above yours.

I guess the question is whether you can ever actually forgive and forget something like this or ever respect him. I'd struggle.

I'd certainly never have another child with him that's for certain!

CrowMate · 29/03/2026 08:21

What an upsetting read. I am so sorry OP.

Timble · 29/03/2026 08:21

I don’t know what your DH was like before the birth or how he is now but your birth experience alone would have me hating him. I’d have lost all respect for him. I think I’d have left and stayed with parents, he was making your post birth experience unnecessarily difficult. He was lazy, selfish, uncaring and cruel when you needed him to be putting you and your needs first. I’d be seriously reconsidering the relationship if I were you (though I’d probably have left straight after the birth tbh). I can be quite black and white in my thinking but life is too short. We need to be surrounded by those who love us and show us that they care, not poor excuses for man children!