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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

26 weeks pregnant and ex has sent me a letter, I am broken

494 replies

Brokennn · 15/05/2026 11:00

I am 26 weeks pregnant. I was living with ex for a year before I was pregnant, both in late 30s. The pregnancy was not planned though we had planned to ttc in 2027.

Luckily I had not got round to renting out my own home and so when he reacted badly to the pregnancy, I did have somewhere to go. He said he was excited for the baby but also worried. He would never clarify what these worries were and I spent literally night after night while he barely spoke to me, stared into space. It was awful. When I was around 4 months pregnant I said I would spend some time at my home as I was struggling to cope with how he was treating me and it was causing huge rows that were making me worried for the baby as I was under so much stress. I think his main worry was that he might need to move for work and whether I would come with him, obviously his treatment of me during the first few weeks made me reluctant to agree to that (otherwise I would absolutely have done) which only made things worse between us.

When I returned to the house after a couple of days away, he had changed the locks and refused to speak to me. I begged him to talk and said we had a baby to think about, please just talk etc but he wouldn’t. I left and went to my home and have been off sick from work as I just can’t cope. I had been texting and emailing him most days, asking him to just tell me if he’s ok and if we can talk, asking what he wants to do about our baby and if he wants to be in the baby’s life.

He continued to ignore me. The last few weeks have been absolute hell, wondering if I will be a lone parent, wondering how I will afford all the things the baby will need, wondering how I will birth alone and how I will cope with recovery. My messages had been nothing but nice, polite, just asking for some sort of closure and understanding.

This morning I have been contacted by a firm of solicitors saying he does not want me to contact him because it is harassment and if it continues he will report me. It also asked for a dna test. I genuinely have never felt so confused and broken and hopeless in my life. I can’t understand any of it. I won’t contact him directly again now but how do I cope? I feel so alone. Please be gentle, I am usually a strong person but I honestly do not know how to navigate this.

OP posts:
NameChangeMay2026 · 15/05/2026 17:30

Tigerbalmshark · 15/05/2026 13:40

I would too - don’t tell him when your baby is born, don’t put him on the birth certificate, don’t do a DNA test unless he gets a court order, don’t file for CMS because he won’t pay it anyway, just move on without this absolute deadweight abusive twat.

Your child is better off with no dad than with one who threw a pregnant woman out of her home, changed the locks and sent solicitors letters trying to scare you off. The very last thing you want is this twat getting parental responsibility and spending the next 18 year with him messing you around with contact, refusing to let you pick schools/move house/go on holiday because he enjoys fucking with you more than he cares about his child’s welfare, all the other shit you see malevolent dads on here getting up to. Just walk away and have a decent life by yourself.

Keep the solicitor’s letter, for when your child is older, so he can’t claim you kept him from them.

About not paying it anyway, can't OP just have it taken out of his wages automatically?

Allisnotlost1 · 15/05/2026 17:32

NameChangeMay2026 · 15/05/2026 17:25

Seriously?? In this day and age of paternity tests?? This law needs to be updated.

He can be added later if he agrees or if there is a court order.

GreenCandleWax · 15/05/2026 17:32

BridgetJonesV2 · 15/05/2026 12:48

In all seriousness, you need to stop contacting him now. You could end up in a lot of trouble, and he simply isn't worth your energy. I would delete his numbers/emails and start to focus on getting through this pregnancy and being the best Mum you can be when your little one arrives.

He doesn't want to be a father, so you're going to be doing this alone. Don't sit hoping for a miracle when baby arrives, because it won't. Have a talk to your midwife and ask for some support. And try to mend bridges with your Mum - you and your baby are going to need her Flowers

Hi OP. This is awful for you, and really one can despair of so called "men" who act so irresponsibly and cruelly. But you really are well shot of this pathetic specimen. All the advice is to be strong and do this on your own - it will be so much better, but you need support. Get it wherever you can - midwife, GP, friends, but not his family. I came on here to say don't destroy communications you have already had, you may need them. Get advice about whether better not to put him on birth certificate so that you can stay completely separate from this wastrel, and be independent with your child. If he wants a DNA test let him whistle for it, don't offer. When baby is born, don't contact him or his family. If any of them want to be involved it is up to them to make contact, not your job. As your child grows up you can give them the father's name if they want it, but don't expect him to be a father. Good luck OP. You are stronger than you know, and will make a great and happy life with your DC. Flowers Flowers

NameChangeMay2026 · 15/05/2026 17:33

Butterme · 15/05/2026 13:05

I think his main worry was that he might need to move for work and whether I would come with him, obviously his treatment of me during the first few weeks made me reluctant to agree to that (otherwise I would absolutely have done) which only made things worse between us.

OP I’m a little confused.

You had moved out of his home.
You had made it clear that if he had to move for work, that you would not be going with him.
It sounds like you weren’t even in a relationship.

I’m not surprised he changed the locks when you don’t live there and apparently would try and get in.

In the gentlest way possible, I wonder if you’re a bit confused about the relationship status and therefore you have been a bit more intense than you realise.
You say you have been texting and emailing most days - obviously you want answers but he may have seen this as harassment.

I’m sorry you’re going through this 💐

You are a single parent OP and the quicker you accept that, the easier things will be for you.
To be honest, every one of us could have told you you were going to be a single parent if you had told us the situation from day 1.

Of course being a single parent isn’t the easiest thing in the world but it’s a lot easier than being in a relationship with a man where you don’t know whether you’re coming or going.

Just take things 1 day at a time.
Focus on being excited about the baby and don’t let him spoil this for you.

She said that she absolutely WOULD have gone with him, before he treated her so badly. And she only moved out after he was awful to her during the first few weeks of her pregnancy.

Obviously they were living together if she is glad that she hadn't got around to renting her flat out. Everything in her post indicates that they were living together in a committed relationship and had agreed to try for a baby next year.

She's not confused about her relationship status at all, and his home was also her home at the time he locked her out. Not surprised he changed the locks if she would "try to get in"? Are you for real?

Notasbigasithink · 15/05/2026 17:35

Brokennn · 15/05/2026 11:00

I am 26 weeks pregnant. I was living with ex for a year before I was pregnant, both in late 30s. The pregnancy was not planned though we had planned to ttc in 2027.

Luckily I had not got round to renting out my own home and so when he reacted badly to the pregnancy, I did have somewhere to go. He said he was excited for the baby but also worried. He would never clarify what these worries were and I spent literally night after night while he barely spoke to me, stared into space. It was awful. When I was around 4 months pregnant I said I would spend some time at my home as I was struggling to cope with how he was treating me and it was causing huge rows that were making me worried for the baby as I was under so much stress. I think his main worry was that he might need to move for work and whether I would come with him, obviously his treatment of me during the first few weeks made me reluctant to agree to that (otherwise I would absolutely have done) which only made things worse between us.

When I returned to the house after a couple of days away, he had changed the locks and refused to speak to me. I begged him to talk and said we had a baby to think about, please just talk etc but he wouldn’t. I left and went to my home and have been off sick from work as I just can’t cope. I had been texting and emailing him most days, asking him to just tell me if he’s ok and if we can talk, asking what he wants to do about our baby and if he wants to be in the baby’s life.

He continued to ignore me. The last few weeks have been absolute hell, wondering if I will be a lone parent, wondering how I will afford all the things the baby will need, wondering how I will birth alone and how I will cope with recovery. My messages had been nothing but nice, polite, just asking for some sort of closure and understanding.

This morning I have been contacted by a firm of solicitors saying he does not want me to contact him because it is harassment and if it continues he will report me. It also asked for a dna test. I genuinely have never felt so confused and broken and hopeless in my life. I can’t understand any of it. I won’t contact him directly again now but how do I cope? I feel so alone. Please be gentle, I am usually a strong person but I honestly do not know how to navigate this.

I'm so sorry OP you're going through this.
What a horrible horrible man.
You do realise though, no matter how scary receiving a solicitors letter is, it is just a letter, not the law! Solicitors have absolutely no power to enforce anything so you cam literally rip it up, throw it in the bin and ignore it. Unless you get a formal court order, you do absolutely nothing. Je can report you to the police for harassment but on order to be classed as such (and action taken against you) you need to be contacting him something ridiculous such as 15x plus a day or following him about etc.
Block him and when the baby is born, apply direct to the CMS for support. They will do everything for you so you don't need to contact him at all. At this point he may deny paternity so you can order a dna test to prove he owes CMS and request it is back dated.
It is his loss and unfortunately your baby's too but to be perfectly honest, you're both better off without this utter pathetic excuse of a man anyway xx

Sharptonguedwoman · 15/05/2026 17:36

NameChangeMay2026 · 15/05/2026 17:25

Seriously?? In this day and age of paternity tests?? This law needs to be updated.

Well, as of 32 years ago, you couldn't. No DNA tests back then.

NerrSnerr · 15/05/2026 17:44

StrictlyCoffee · 15/05/2026 11:29

He is a fucker but you do sound quite needy OP. You’ll be OK but you need to try and become a bit more resilient.

It’s probably ok to be needy when you’re 26 weeks pregnant, newly single and the father of the child is refusing to discuss his own baby.

He is a massive arsehole, but PP are right, leave him be and then go through CMS when the baby is born. Let him sort out DNA through CMS, the courts etc.

it’s ok not to be coping as well as you’d like to when life is hard, and I hope you have the support around you to get you through.

Brokennn · 15/05/2026 17:44

TightlyLacedCorset · 15/05/2026 13:56

💐 And hugs OP

Of course you feel sad and are in shock as well from the callous treatment you're receiving from the father of your child!! That's ok. That's natural. Your heart is broken, shattered with an extra dose of humiliation, fear about the future, and no ability to even contact the man to whom you should feel closest to in this moment. It is extremely upsetting, as well as stress inducing. Your mind will be going over and over events, the letter, his behaviour, why he's being like this, and you will be feeling abandonment, which is one of the most triggering emotions, it's part of our most primal drives to be loved, so abandonment hurts us terribly, especially in a situation like this, where you have a whole life shift and you wanted a child with a father.

Take a few days or a week or so and cry it out. Grieve, because that's what it is. You are experiencing grief, grief at what this man really is, grief that things have gone so wrong and he does not want to be there.

Then you need to get up. I am speaking from experience. You need to start recalibrating your mind. You may not realise it, but you have within you a very sacred and deep strength that comes with motherhood. You need to find it and step into it. It is there, it might seem dormant for now, but I promise when you give birth and hold your child you will understand that you would tear down mountains to protect that child.

I say this as mum who had terrible PND, could barely function and felt emotionally numb and yet I tell you, I would have killed anyone who tried to hurt my daughter. I was in a similar situation, but without the legal aspect. Spent the entire pregnancy regretful for what could have been. Sad and crying. Ex left footprints over my emotions like sand on a beach. When my daughter was born, I switched into full Gaia mode and you will to. Shortly after I told him to either fix up and communicate and work out a solution or get to fuck. I fully meant it. I wasn't having that negativity around my child. Not one bit.

He stepped up to the plate. Years later he told me I had a certain look when I said it that frightened him. Yep. Damn right.

The next few months will not be easy. Take each day as it comes and do excellent self care. Go out for walks, eat well,relax, play soothing music whilst thinking about your baby. Maybe get some sort of counselling support. Speak to your mid-wife they can maybe suggest something.

What we're NOT going to do:

Contact your ex or his family ( leave that latter part for now, maybe you can in the future. I do think extended family is important for DCs but for now, leave it)

Panic and start obsessing over what's going to happen next, how you're going to cope

Ringing, texting, and leaning on people who are emotionally unavailable or make us feel bad, like reluctant family members. Choose your people wisely. This is crucial to avoid more unnecessary disappointment and pain.

Stop eating, taking care of ourselves.

Tell ourselves false narratives about how we're worthless because we've been rejected by someone who wasn't ever what we thought they were and do not deserve us in the first place.

Keep hoping he turns up for the birth

Hoping you'll get back together and he'll change.

Things we ARE going to do:

Proiritise our wellbeing.

Rest and meditate as much as possible.
Eat well
Exercise and socialise
Talk to mid-wife, get help from GP if we're struggling
Attend any prebirth courses
Phone a service like Samaritans if we need someone to talk to and feel overwhelmed

Start making practical plans. (If costs of baby things is a fear, start asking round for things people have second hand, go on sites like MN local for practical things. You would be surprised what you can get. Lots of mums are happy to give things away even for free)

Think about work, how much your maternity leave will be and any benefits youll be able to claim. Look into child care. It will be tough, but doable I promise you.

Of course there are other options you might want to consider, that's up to you and none of them would make you less of a mother.

If he or the entire situation is getting you down, maybe thing about the possibility of moving away, giving yourself a fresh start. Does your job allow for flexibility on working locations? A friend of a friend was in a similarish situation and because she worked in healthcare she actually was able to go emigrate to Canada with her child after a few years. She's very happy there with now 3 children and a long term partner (mind you this was 25 years ago when she went).

You have a line of women stretching back centuries behind you who have walked your path successfully. You can too. You have it in you. The very fact you posted this looking for support shows that.

Wishing you all the best xx

Edited

@TightlyLacedCorset thank you so much for this post, he screen shot it so I can look at it when I need to focus my mind! Thank you for taking the time.

OP posts:
Brokennn · 15/05/2026 17:45

Sorry I haven’t replied to all the posts, I am reading them all. I am struggling a lot today, keep going to through waves of anger towards him and feeling strong, then feeling like it all must be my fault and I’ve ruined my baby’s life

OP posts:
Liberancho · 15/05/2026 17:47

Notmeagain12 · 15/05/2026 16:18

While I agree that she shouldn’t give the baby his surname, if she did she would not be stopped leaving the country.

the child’s name is irrelevant when travelling. Being married to or with the father is also irrelevant.

What matters is that permission from all those with PR. So if he’s on the birth certificate she will need a letter stating she has permission to leave the country.

If he is not on the birth certificate he does not have PR had she does not need his permission, regardless of whose name the child has.

just wanted to point this out as I regularly see the myth that different name to child means you can’t travel. That is incorrect and you need permission documents in any case.

But why on earth would she assign this terrible man's name to her child?

OP, block him and accept he isn't in the picture. You are stronger than you think. Do not put his name on the BC. If you can manage without CM, then do so.

This type of man will make your life hell should he have the chance to do so.

Volpini · 15/05/2026 17:50

ThisHeartyQuoter · 15/05/2026 13:33

My mum and dad who were married split when I was around three and he had to be forced to pay my mum the absolute minimum in child support then he cut me out of his life permanently. Just because someone has rights doesn't mean they'll care

Edited

This is also my mum’s situation. My father left my mother when she was pregnant with me and told everyone I was not his. (He was the one having an affair not her - DARVO.) They were married and he spent most of the time he had PR trying to get out of paying the very minimal amount expected of him in the 70s and 80s.

Brokennn · 15/05/2026 18:02

whatareyouwaitingforr · 15/05/2026 17:18

Seeing as OP hasn’t responded about her repeatedly calling her mum, I’m willing to bet there’s more to the story. The level of calls etc would have to be huge for the solicitor to agree it constitutes harassment.

@whatareyouwaitingforr I am just replying to ones where I can, what is your question? I was sending around 3 texts on average a day and then calling maybe twice a week, more originally but after a month it lessened. I also emailed perhaps every few days. I don’t know whether that constitutes harassment but I was never unkind or cruel I was just asking about the future for the baby not even about the relationship

OP posts:
GoldMoon · 15/05/2026 18:06

Brokennn · 15/05/2026 17:45

Sorry I haven’t replied to all the posts, I am reading them all. I am struggling a lot today, keep going to through waves of anger towards him and feeling strong, then feeling like it all must be my fault and I’ve ruined my baby’s life

You haven't ruined your babies life . In fact it is enhanced by not having this waste of space in their life .
It's often rolled out on here , but I say it anyway , When someone shows you who they really are , believe them .
He is not worthy of you nor " your " child.

StressedLP1 · 15/05/2026 18:07

JFC what a self centred cunt if a man child.

My first thought is to get the DNA test done and extract every last penny your child is entitled to.

Other replies have made me reflect on whether it’s in your child’s best interests to have this cunt in their life.

Being a father is much more than a sperm donation. He sounds like he’d be a truly awful one and would only bring emotional harm to your child’s life.

ScrollingLeaves · 15/05/2026 18:10

Brokennn · 15/05/2026 11:08

I just can’t comprehend why he would do something so cruel. I can’t get my head round it.

I told my parents first thing and called them back after the first conversation we had, mum didn’t answer so I called again and again as I was so distraught and she said I was harassing her now so she can see how he felt. Mum usually is supportive but can be cruel. I feel extremely sensitive and sad.

I cannot comprehend your mother either.

If she said you were harrassing her then she is as abusive as the man. Please ask the GP for support with domestic abuse because you have been going g through domestic abuse with this man.

TheSquareMile · 15/05/2026 18:11

@Brokennn

OP, given the content of the letter, I think that it would be helpful to see a solicitor who can send one in reply.

Could you do that next week?

Sartre · 15/05/2026 18:12

Flyingkitez · 15/05/2026 16:55

I have taken my children abroad without my exs permission I think this applies when there is a court order in place. It would be simpler op if you do not use his surname and if you don’t need his money do not put him on the birth certificate. I wouldn’t give take one day at a time make a plan of what you and the baby need. Little steps.

Yeah, I've taken my DC abroad alone without DH and have never been asked "does the father approve?", I just can't imagine this ever coming up tbh.

That said, obviously give the baby your surname.

Sartre · 15/05/2026 18:16

Brokennn · 15/05/2026 18:02

@whatareyouwaitingforr I am just replying to ones where I can, what is your question? I was sending around 3 texts on average a day and then calling maybe twice a week, more originally but after a month it lessened. I also emailed perhaps every few days. I don’t know whether that constitutes harassment but I was never unkind or cruel I was just asking about the future for the baby not even about the relationship

It would if you weren't pregnant but that added context means it really isn't. If he said he wanted to separate and was transparent about this with you but said you could co-parent when the baby arrived, and offered some support during the pregnancy (e.g joining you at appointments where required, perhaps sending cash etc) then fair enough. It's the fact he just walked out on you and wouldn't interact at all. Absolute cock.

StressedLP1 · 15/05/2026 18:17

Sartre · 15/05/2026 18:12

Yeah, I've taken my DC abroad alone without DH and have never been asked "does the father approve?", I just can't imagine this ever coming up tbh.

That said, obviously give the baby your surname.

Well I HAVE been questioned.

Divorced mother - I have a template I use to get my ex’s consent to my leaving the country with the children for holidays.

Research The Hague convention.

On reflection OP in your circumstance I would not be putting El Cunto on the birth certificate if at all possible.

Whiteconehorse · 15/05/2026 18:19

TheSquareMile · 15/05/2026 18:11

@Brokennn

OP, given the content of the letter, I think that it would be helpful to see a solicitor who can send one in reply.

Could you do that next week?

What does she need to say in reply?

I would not be paying a solicitor to respond at this stage unless essential. Is it?

ScrollingLeaves · 15/05/2026 18:22

Please report to the GP what horrible domestic abuse you have been through. Go to Women’s Aid too.

I do not think you want this monster in your life. I would not put his name on the birth certificate and I’d move to where he does not know where you are, and never post on social media. He could turn up in x many years time and say he wants to be put on the birth certificate and have the poor child live with him 50% of the time, and the law would enforce this. That’s why you should disappear.

If you do do the dna test, when it is found the child is his, then he would have to pay child maintenance if you apply through official channels. How much you get would depend on his income ( or perceived income). This does not mean he would have to be on the birth certificate - the two are unrelated. But he would know where you are and ask to be put on/take you to court to get his name on the birth certificate. Then he would have the identical control over the baby’s life as you do. This could cause havoc in yours and the child’s life.

Dexternight · 15/05/2026 18:23

Hi @Brokennn ,

There will be a time in the future when you will WONDER why you wasted time and tears on this piece of 💩.
The strength you need is to get through this moment in time.
Believe in yourself l.
You have your life and have had a lucky escape.
Hard to see now but you will.
You are going to do great.

ScrollingLeaves · 15/05/2026 18:23

StressedLP1 · 15/05/2026 18:17

Well I HAVE been questioned.

Divorced mother - I have a template I use to get my ex’s consent to my leaving the country with the children for holidays.

Research The Hague convention.

On reflection OP in your circumstance I would not be putting El Cunto on the birth certificate if at all possible.

Absolutely do not.

Girliefriendlikespuppies · 15/05/2026 18:24

What a dick.

It’s his loss op 🤷‍♀️congratulations on your pregnancy, don’t waste time focusing on him, enjoy your pregnancy and the rest of your life.

Do not put him on the birth certificate.

I raised my dd on my own and it’s entirely doable.

Lightswitchy · 15/05/2026 18:25

Golly gosh its like an echo chamber in here
”dont give the baby his last name”
she couldn't if she wanted to without him being present! He doesnt even think the baby is his!