Meet the Other Phone. Protection built in.

Meet the Other Phone.
Protection built in.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to think blended family life is draining us all?

1000 replies

PithyBeaker · 06/04/2026 15:23

DP and I have been together five years. I have one DC from previous marriage and he has three DC from his previous marriage that are with us every other week. No kids together. The kids mostly get on and play well. There is some unhealthy competition with my DC which I don’t like and his kids are allowed much more screen time and watch age inappropriate things at their mother’s. His kids also have more care needs (ADHD, neuro-diverse, etc) than mine. DP and I try to split the cooking but he is easily overwhelmed by his kids (he is also ADHD and ASD) and things run to chaos under his control (laundry piles everywhere, mess, wrappers discarded, etc). I’m not a neat freak at all but the mess drives even me crazy (things like touching handles with filthy hands and not cleaning toilet bowl after a poo). I am often the one laying down rules, enforcing boundaries because DP much more relaxed. The house gets wrecked when they come over (it is my house). We both work full-time. DP and I used to enjoy time together but increasingly in evenings he just games and I go to sleep early. Basically: I am tired and feel like life would be easier if it was just me and my DC. AIBU to think that no matter what happens blending families never really works and I will ultimately be the one sucked dry and drained by this situation, with more net harm than good in the end? I sometimes miss the days when it was just me and my DC and it was peaceful, but also I think I would really miss my DP and my DC would miss DP’s DC. I don’t know whether it would now be more harmful to my DC (who is about to start secondary) to lose DP and DP’s DC - or better for him (and me) in the long run. Help.

OP posts:
SkipAd · 07/04/2026 03:32

Notyouagaindear · 07/04/2026 03:07

@SkipAd I agree but I wonder if it’s due to a people-pleasing trait or low self-esteem - the fear of being single again jumped out at me from the OP. Hopefully as we are all basically saying the same thing, it will give her the prompting she needs to do something 🤞

But don’t you agree, normally on threads like this the OP can’t see it, or is financially trapped (which I totally understand) or is so ground down (which again I totally understand) that they can’t see the wood for the trees.
In this thread, the OP seems to have insight and understanding of her situation AND the financial ability to move on, yet still puts up with it.
I agree, I hope she reads this thread and realises it is time to move on.

Cushionsplease · 07/04/2026 06:29

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

Cushionsplease · 07/04/2026 06:33

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

HoppityBun · 07/04/2026 06:47

PithyBeaker · 06/04/2026 22:00

This is quite unkind. I’m not a doormat. I have people-pleasing issues stemming from an abusive father. Let’s call a spade a spade shall we.

Well, if you want to call a spade a spade, then, perhaps you misunderstand what that means: you’re being a doormat. This people pleasing expression is a modern, sugar coated way of excusing not being able to stand up for yourself. The result is the same.

You are being walked over and your children are having a poor model of family life.

Cushionsplease · 07/04/2026 06:52

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

thepariscrimefiles · 07/04/2026 06:55

PithyBeaker · 06/04/2026 22:26

I’ve also told him how much the coffee meant to me. It’s like he stopped doing it to punish me. Ffs feel like a total loser. I’m a smart woman, I swear. But what an idiot.

Edited

Of course you're not a total loser. You are obviously intelligent and hard working and you have created a lovely home for your DS. You are also kind and empathetic with a history of abuse by your father which makes you very vulnerable to people like your partner.

He love-bombed you from the start and his situation with his neuro-diverse children tugged at your heart-strings. He put on a good show at the beginning but now feels safe enough to drop the caring facade somewhat as he thinks you are smitten enough with him and bonded enough with his children to just put up with it all, despite you starting to realise that everything is on his terms and not fair to you or your child.

You really do need to bite the bullet though and harden your heart. He will emotionally blackmail you and no doubt will have no qualms about using his kids to make you feel guilty. He will accuse you of ruining their lives and will probably turn very nasty. He has already done something similar by ridicuously blaming you for him being 'unable' to save, even though he is living rent free in your home and moaning that you wouldn't put him on your mortgage. His nice guy act has been slipping recently and you have just woken up to the unfairness.

Don't feel guilty. Think of your child and get him out.

clover888 · 07/04/2026 07:24

have only read the OP but I‘d cut my losses. There’s does t seem to be a lot in this relationship for you. It sounds like your child will be happier without the others

SpryCat · 07/04/2026 07:28

Your life sounds exhausting @PithyBeaker with no light at the end of the tunnel in your relationship. Guilt is used to keep the relationship going but honestly it’s fizzled out and you’re just roommates.
You are enabling him to pay his ex but if he moved out he would have to live on that money so he wouldn’t be skint.
Your DC would be just as happy if you invited other children round to play and could send them home at the end of the day. You wouldn’t be so drained from putting up with the cock lodger’s needs ahead of your own that your DC would get his happy mum back.

Glowingup · 07/04/2026 07:50

I hope you’re okay, OP. You sound like a kind person and your DP sounds very very selfish and undeserving of someone so generous and kind. But people who take take take don’t see it like that and they have a sense of entitlement.
The renting the flat out sounds ridiculous. Currently it is bringing in zero. If he rents it and gets and agent to manage the rental so little hassle for him, surely anything he gets is more than he gets now. I am astounded that he doesn’t contribute equally to the home. I am also astounded that he prioritises compensation for his ex for giving up her career over you. That is shocking. If he is much younger than you I am guessing his ex is as well so why the hell can’t she rebuild her own career now that he has the kids 50% of the time? It sounds like he makes shit decisions and feels entitled to the help of others to sort himself out.
If he was earning well during his marriage then why is he not earning well now? Ffs the entitlement of someone having three children that they can’t support to adequate standards is maddening.
I would genuinely end the relationship. You can 100% do better than this joke. I promise you. 40 is nothing. You’re financially sorted. You can find a guy who either has no kids or has grown up kids and doesn’t have any of this rubbish going on. I’m often sticking up for blended families on here as I feel many can be too harsh but this guy is awful with how he treats you and makes you feel.

BoxingHare · 07/04/2026 07:51

PithyBeaker · 06/04/2026 21:19

So, this is how it goes: he planned to buy the flat and live in it cheaply to save money for a bigger place. By not getting to contribute to the mortgage on my house he isn’t building towards any future wealth/security, just paying rent (at first but as explained not anymore) and bills on a house he doesn’t own. That’s his rationale. Also says I have expensive tastes/holidays and he has felt pressured to keep up w me. He also blames X for his impoverishment not just me. To be fair.

Why do you let him walk all over you?

You don't even have any conviction about telling him his options

"I'll try and talk to him."

How feeble!

TheBlueKoala · 07/04/2026 08:13

PithyBeaker · 06/04/2026 21:51

Also I have never chosen my partners based on job or financial prospects. Which frankly has perhaps been a huge mistake.

I'm just like you OP and I don't think it's a mistake as long as the partner is as generous as you are and not trying to take advantage. Sadly, this does seem to be the case here; he got a house for him and his 3 kids and now feels settled so doesn't make an effort, hence the videogaming.

Just that he lets you pay for a cleaner to come in after HIS 3 children (he should insist to pay, any reasonable* *person would) proves that he lacks morals and is a cheeky fucker.

You should not feel guilty for saying that you don't want to live with him and his children anymore. Not your monkeys, not your circus. You are responsable for your child, he for his.

You might see a nasty streak to him when you suggest staying together apart because he's got a really nice setup going for him at yours, so be prepared...

Also, his ND kids with less boundaries than what you are comfortable with are likely to have major problems as teenagers. When puberty hit my DS1 (asd) at 12 he turned into a monster ; violence, self harm, refusing school, in and out of psychiatric care. I've been through hell with him and it's still hard (but much much better) at 16. I wouldn't wish that on anyone- there were days when I just wanted to leave this world with him because he was in so much pain and I didn't see a way out. I had ds2 to think about so luckily stayed put in zombie mode. It impacted ds2 as ofcourse well who still sees a psychologist. You do NOT want to put yourself AND your child through this believe me.

PithyBeaker · 07/04/2026 08:28

ImmortalSnowman · 06/04/2026 22:31

You didn't stop him being able to save.

He refuses to rent out his flat, covering the mortgage payments. He pays money to his ex and has the children 50/50. He doesn't pay his fair share in your house. He could easily have quite a nest egg after sponging from you for 5 years. He chose to give his ex YOUR money. He chose not to offset the mortgage. He couldn't be bothered saving because he is punishing you for buying your house early in the relationship.

Do you honestly believe he is going to stay with you in 10 years time when his kids have grown up and don't need your home to house them? He will still have his flat to live in and you will be 50, completely drained and he will up and leave.

This is what I’m afraid of.

OP posts:
Buscake · 07/04/2026 08:32

OP I haven’t been in this position but I was in a v long term abusive relationship. I too grew up in an abusive household. I too feel stupid for not having seen what was actually really clear to lots of people around me

I have three kids. If I’d asked them when I was in the marriage if they wanted us to divorce they would have fought tooth and nail to prevent such a rupture. But I didn’t. I got us out. And they are all so so much happier and free and able to express themselves. They openly talk about the abuse, the atmosphere, th parts they hated. So although it’s admirable you are trying to prioritise your child’s views, please do bear in mind that he may be trying to protect you and/or cling to the idea of the family he has. In a calm protected safe household of just the two of you he may come to realise what happiness and peace truly looks like.

PithyBeaker · 07/04/2026 08:33

BoxingHare · 07/04/2026 07:51

Why do you let him walk all over you?

You don't even have any conviction about telling him his options

"I'll try and talk to him."

How feeble!

”I’ll try and talk to him” means I am going to tell him he can live separately and we can still have a relationship. I say “try” because I think he will just tell me to fuck off and it will be over which is going to be hard (we’ve been together five years) but I am steeling myself for it. Don’t call me feeble. I’m not.

OP posts:
PithyBeaker · 07/04/2026 08:36

GreenhampsterAndEggs · 06/04/2026 23:06

After years and years and years of lurking, THIS is the thread that finally got me to sign up to Mumsnet so I can comment!

I'm sorry this is very long.

OP, your story is so familiar. In my late 20s, I came out of a very bad marriage, and ended up in another relationship almost straight away. He was a lot older than me, good job, interesting, intriguing, etc. I was charmed. Completely. And he had two small boys he was raising on his own, after his partner had died. I thought I knew what I was doing. I was happy at first.

Long story short, within 18 months, I knew that the relationship was wrong, but I did nothing, believing it would change, he would change, the kids would grow up, leave home, something would change. What happened was that I changed. I was no longer the independent young woman I had once been. He just charmed and gaslit and threatened and cried and blamed and lied until I didn't know what to believe anymore. He was a complete narcissist. In the entire time I was with him, he never once apologised for anything. Everything was my fault. My one saving grace was that I had my own job and my own home.

I ended up spending all of my late 20s and 30s waiting... helping to raise two very difficult children/teenagers, putting everyone else's needs and wants first, while my then-partner chipped away at every remnant of independence I had left, and I let him.

At age 39, after having wasted nearly all of my fertile years, thinking things would change, I was diagnosed with cancer. The treatment I had ruined any remote possibility of ever having my own child, and I felt bereft. Something in me clicked, and I said to myself 'if you have only 12 months to live, is this really how you want your last 12 months to be?'. And that was the final straw for me. And it still took me another 2 years to leave the relationship because I had no confidence left and no friends (all my friends were his). I couldn't even leave the house alone except to go to work.

OP, I knew after 18 months that things were not working, and yet I stayed for another 15 years! I had so much anger afterwards about the wasted time, but believe me, once your life is your own again, you won't care about "wasted time".

Decades later, I still have moments nearly every week when I remember what my life used to be like, and I am absolutely gleeful that I have my own life back again, that I am still alive to enjoy it!

I think you know that things are not right for you and your DS. And I think you know what you need to do to make your situation better. Don't worry about the time you have invested, think about how much more time you have left to make a happy life for yourself and your DS. I am thankful that you own your own home, so many women do not, and are stuck. Your DS will be happy if you are happy.

Remember what they always say: when he shows you who he is, believe it. I did see, and I did believe, but I denied it. For far too long. No relationship is worth giving up your whole self for. I very much believe that you will need to make whatever changes are necessary. No one else will do this for you. When you are ready you will make the right decision for yourself. I wish you strength and happiness. You are worth so much more than what you are getting right now.

I’m glad you’re ok. Thank you for posting. I keep thinking I don’t want to waste my time. If I had 12 months to live, this isn’t how I would spend them. Thanks again for posting 🙏 it was particularly compelling.

OP posts:
Aluna · 07/04/2026 08:37

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

I meant in terms of love-bombing and presenting as a caring man in a difficult situation. He seduced her with an attentive version of himself, and a sob story about his divorce and bad luck, which vanished once he got his feet under the table.

It’s not uncommon post-divorce for a man to be stuck in a poky flat if the wife gets the house. I’ve seen that happen to wealthy men. In this situation, though, there was no family home which doesn’t indicate sound finances on either of their parts - ie him and ex.

SlayBelle · 07/04/2026 08:39

Wow he saw you coming didn’t he? No man falls in love faster than a man with three kids and no house of his own.

And he’s not even paying rent??!!!!

PithyBeaker · 07/04/2026 08:39

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

Oh this again? I already said I don’t judge my partners on financial situation (but perhaps should have). But also he did put up a good front, in terms of treatment and kindness and shared interests and cooking together and all the good stuff you want in a partner.

OP posts:
Crikeyalmightey · 07/04/2026 08:40

I'm sorry you are in this situation, but why do you still want a relationship with him anyway? He has manipulated and financially abused you. For five years. If he tells you to fuck off and the relationship is over, that will be a result for you. It is a sign of your disordered thinking and low self esteem that you would be upset at that. Sorry, but it's true. 💐

YourJoyousDenimExpert · 07/04/2026 08:41

You deserve to be happier than you seem OP. You sound very kind and are prioritising everybody in the situation above yourself. Who is putting you at the top of the list? Or at least higher than themselves…..
Your DP has finessed a great situation where his kids spend half their time in a house he could not afford himself. I don’t understand why he pays maintenance and has them 50:50 - I know you have given his reasoning but it makes no sense.
DP needs to take on board that something needs to change positively for you now - not in 10 years time.
You need to be clear you are not happy and that this is not sustainable - and so what is he going to do about it……
Does your child go to their Dad’s at all? Wondering if you get any time just the two of you??
We only get one life OP - he needs to step up and invest in your relationship- you’re only five years in and he’s too comfortable and complacent.

PithyBeaker · 07/04/2026 08:41

Aluna · 07/04/2026 08:37

I meant in terms of love-bombing and presenting as a caring man in a difficult situation. He seduced her with an attentive version of himself, and a sob story about his divorce and bad luck, which vanished once he got his feet under the table.

It’s not uncommon post-divorce for a man to be stuck in a poky flat if the wife gets the house. I’ve seen that happen to wealthy men. In this situation, though, there was no family home which doesn’t indicate sound finances on either of their parts - ie him and ex.

Right, they were apparently on the verge of purchasing family home when they split - which she torpedoed and he blamed her for (as in blamed her that he had to buy a flat w his half of their money instead of owning half of a house).

OP posts:
Holdinguphalfthesky · 07/04/2026 08:41

@PithyBeaker i just caught up with your posts this morning and I wanted to send a hug. I was in a coercive relationship and I stayed for at least two years longer than I should have (to my continuing detriment, really) because he never wanted me to leave and would make all the promises of change… but then never change. I too had an emotionally abusive parent and was a terrible people pleaser, still working on that to be honest! But will send you strength to deal with this situation.

When you said he resents you for not buying with him, I thought oh ok, he sees this house as something he is entitled to live in, but because you turned down his ownership then he is going to make you pay for it in all the ways. I bet that’s it.

The fact that nothing is his fault and everything is either your fault or his ex’s fault is also a red flag. ADHD is not the cause of this- my partner has ADHD and he is loving and supportive, and he has ways to deal with his traits. A friend has ADHD and he takes appropriate meds for it, which are game-changing for him. There’s no excuse for this man, he just can’t be arsed because he knows you will take the pain for him.

Good luck and I hope he goes without too much stress- but don’t count on that, and don’t be afraid to call in support if you need it- the police, if he won’t go. He’s abusing you and it will ramp up when he sees you asserting your own needs. Past You was very clever to make this house purchase without him, good on her, and good on you for doing the right thing now by your child.

Aluna · 07/04/2026 08:42

PithyBeaker · 07/04/2026 08:36

I’m glad you’re ok. Thank you for posting. I keep thinking I don’t want to waste my time. If I had 12 months to live, this isn’t how I would spend them. Thanks again for posting 🙏 it was particularly compelling.

Yes, that was a good post. Good luck OP. I think you will be much happier once you get your life back.

PithyBeaker · 07/04/2026 08:47

My DC goes to his dads sometimes but not on a regular schedule and not often enough. DP complains about this but this was the situation when we got together. I told him I basically have my DC all the time.

OP posts:
PithyBeaker · 07/04/2026 08:51

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

You seem a particularly aggrieved and aggressive commenter. Not sure why this feels personal for you - it is my life, after all, and no skin off your arse whatsoever if I fuck it up. Thank you for making clear what you think I should do. I assure you (not that I need to) that I am going to change things but insulting me won’t make me do it any quicker or better.

OP posts:
Please create an account

To comment on this thread you need to create a Mumsnet account.

This thread is not accepting new messages.