Help end medical misogyny. Sign our petition.

Help end medical misogyny.
Sign our petition.

Sign the petition

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

to feel he should have told me about this health condition before we married

341 replies

RachelWardd · 15/06/2026 15:50

We met when I was 23 and he was 30.

I was swept off my feet at first meet, he was tall dark handsome romantic funny kind gentle brave .....etc.

We dated for two years and married when I was 25, my parents were strict catholic and I never lived with him back then (we're talking 20+ years ago now) before we married, just dated , never went away together really either.....stayed over at his at the time, he lived very close to his parents, but said it was cos he loved that part of the city /country growing up and all his friends were there etc so that made sense at the time. I moved in with him after we married.

Long story short. In the first two three years, I knew I had married someone with a very very low fuse (as I called at in my twenties) - prone to anger, somewhat selfish, very focused on his needs, very quick flight or fight responses to any changes in plan

Turns out one of the many reasons he was popping in every evening at his parents' for at least 10 minutes on way home was - they were (well in to his 30s) still monitoring and administering sodium valporate pills to him. I opened the packet once when his dad left it out accidentally and I had popped over.

Slowly it came out in the open that he had been diagnosed with a benign reflex form of epilepsy ( he got partial focal type seizures when taking a hot shower or hot bath and almost always or always only then) from when he was less than 10 years old. But 'DH' still said it was fully under control with medication and he had been 'episode free' since 2001 and we met in 2002 and married in 2004.

Eventually he got off the meds completely in 2008 and as far as I know has not had any more episodes just by being careful I think while in the shower or bath
I still think he should have told me - he grew up going to epilepsy clinics, top neuro consultants, thinking life would not be normal as he was still having seizures, falling in the shower leading to head injuries (multiple) , trips to hospital in the ambulance as a teen.

A big part of his life for the first 30 years - and defined his relations with his parents and siblings - and his outlook on life. At the very least he should have told me as he knows this is sometimes genetic and there is a 30pc chance yet that our teen DC could still go on to develop this and have to go through the same to find the right meds and then to learn how to self limit it.

with all the knowledge we have now online, I do think all his flight or fight dysregulation, responses to stress, conflict, self focus are linked. At least armed with this information, I could have approached our marriage with more empathy and compassion if nothing else.

AIBU for me to still feel angry now and then when I remember this lie by omission and his excuses that it wasnt relevant information to tell me.....I am 48 now, he is 55

OP posts:
RachelWardd · 22/06/2026 14:44

Reading lots of books on bipolar , matches perfectly and even reading is helping me tremendously to understand

OP posts:
Swiftie1878 · 22/06/2026 15:04

RachelWardd · 22/06/2026 14:44

Reading lots of books on bipolar , matches perfectly and even reading is helping me tremendously to understand

It doesn’t matter what his diagnosis is. He is no longer being treated for it, and he’s an abusive spouse. Get out.

FourSevenThree · 22/06/2026 16:02

RachelWardd · 22/06/2026 14:44

Reading lots of books on bipolar , matches perfectly and even reading is helping me tremendously to understand

It's good that things make more sense now.

However, it means he didn't just lie about epilepsy, he lied about something which is known to influence everyday life.

He lied, took your agenda away from you. He is abusive and doesn't mind - if he did, he would be open about it and looking for medical help to minimise the impact.

While some of the individual aspects can be explained by the condition, he is responsible for his choices around this (not telling you and medication).

Unfortunately, bipolar is typically not getting better on it's own, the opposite.

kirinm · 22/06/2026 16:51

FourSevenThree · 22/06/2026 16:02

It's good that things make more sense now.

However, it means he didn't just lie about epilepsy, he lied about something which is known to influence everyday life.

He lied, took your agenda away from you. He is abusive and doesn't mind - if he did, he would be open about it and looking for medical help to minimise the impact.

While some of the individual aspects can be explained by the condition, he is responsible for his choices around this (not telling you and medication).

Unfortunately, bipolar is typically not getting better on it's own, the opposite.

The OP isn’t a doctor. She’s been massively influenced by unqualified people on this thread.

FourSevenThree · 22/06/2026 18:39

kirinm · 22/06/2026 16:51

The OP isn’t a doctor. She’s been massively influenced by unqualified people on this thread.

She isn't a doctor. But she knows for sure that he was lying to her about his health (both by omission and directly - see "vitamins") and hit her when she questioned it.

Now she is once again in a position that "his diagnosis might explain and excuse his behaviour". No matter whether we talk about 1% epilepsy side effect or bipolar, he absolutely responsiblefor lying, hitting and not taking steps to mitigate the effect he has on the family.

kirinm · 23/06/2026 12:29

FourSevenThree · 22/06/2026 18:39

She isn't a doctor. But she knows for sure that he was lying to her about his health (both by omission and directly - see "vitamins") and hit her when she questioned it.

Now she is once again in a position that "his diagnosis might explain and excuse his behaviour". No matter whether we talk about 1% epilepsy side effect or bipolar, he absolutely responsiblefor lying, hitting and not taking steps to mitigate the effect he has on the family.

No one has suggested he is anything but responsible for abusing his wife. Constantly trying to diagnose him with something that he is not medicated for and hasn’t been for twenty years + is pointless and done without any actual medical training.

its dangerous and its been encouraged by ill informed posters on this thread.

RachelWardd · 23/06/2026 13:39

FourSevenThree · 22/06/2026 16:02

It's good that things make more sense now.

However, it means he didn't just lie about epilepsy, he lied about something which is known to influence everyday life.

He lied, took your agenda away from you. He is abusive and doesn't mind - if he did, he would be open about it and looking for medical help to minimise the impact.

While some of the individual aspects can be explained by the condition, he is responsible for his choices around this (not telling you and medication).

Unfortunately, bipolar is typically not getting better on it's own, the opposite.

Yes, it is the selfishness that hurts, but then again life does not give fair chances to people who get childhood illnesses....should they be expected to give fair chances to others , when they were denied a fair chance themselves....Very hard moral question .....would forgiveness be Grace, here.....for the forgiver I mean....

Also as @kirinm said , I did potentially worse with the emotional affair .....no excuses for that and two wrongs do not cancel each other out....He gave me Grace there (if you can call yelling about it for years Grace, ie :-))

OP posts:
RachelWardd · 23/06/2026 13:45

kirinm · 23/06/2026 12:29

No one has suggested he is anything but responsible for abusing his wife. Constantly trying to diagnose him with something that he is not medicated for and hasn’t been for twenty years + is pointless and done without any actual medical training.

its dangerous and its been encouraged by ill informed posters on this thread.

But apparently people with Bipolar stop taking their meds when they should not?

Can we be sure the HWS isnt a cover up for Bipolar , when found taking valporate

It matches so perfectly the mood swings - the books on Bipolar are helping so much, first line 'Dont take it personally, its not him, its the disease talking' has helped already in the past 3 days a lot. I smile gently instead of getting upset as it might just be Bipolar not abusive ass, and he reacts differently then and softens.

I am reading loving someone with Bipolar by two docs now, and going to try everything suggested there, for six months as they suggest - what do I have to lose, esp if I am waiting around for a year more anyway, to give it this one try treating it purely as BiPo.....

I do think an MRI would be useful using modern tech and maybe helpful to him if the new MRIs did reveal need for some Bi Po meds - he has had so many head injuries , or so he says, from the HWE in childhood - that his scalp is flat and soggy in many places like depressions here and there and the stitches or what they are, are more visible now with less hair, previously not noted....

OP posts:
Swiftie1878 · 23/06/2026 14:37

RachelWardd · 23/06/2026 13:45

But apparently people with Bipolar stop taking their meds when they should not?

Can we be sure the HWS isnt a cover up for Bipolar , when found taking valporate

It matches so perfectly the mood swings - the books on Bipolar are helping so much, first line 'Dont take it personally, its not him, its the disease talking' has helped already in the past 3 days a lot. I smile gently instead of getting upset as it might just be Bipolar not abusive ass, and he reacts differently then and softens.

I am reading loving someone with Bipolar by two docs now, and going to try everything suggested there, for six months as they suggest - what do I have to lose, esp if I am waiting around for a year more anyway, to give it this one try treating it purely as BiPo.....

I do think an MRI would be useful using modern tech and maybe helpful to him if the new MRIs did reveal need for some Bi Po meds - he has had so many head injuries , or so he says, from the HWE in childhood - that his scalp is flat and soggy in many places like depressions here and there and the stitches or what they are, are more visible now with less hair, previously not noted....

MRI scans can NOT diagnose bi-polar disorder.

Sorry - I’m giving up on you. You won’t see what needs to be seen.
I do, however, wish you the very best.

RachelWardd · 23/06/2026 20:54

I understand @Swiftie1878 ....I would be suggesting any friend in such a situation to leave too, better now than never, because it is all founded on a lie ....

Anyway, back to angry again this evening, after one of the books I was reading on Bipolar that was helping - led me to the NHS website on Sodium Val tabs and I saw the NHS advice that men taking it during their partner conceiving , could cause learning and behavioural issues in the child - another bitter resentment spiral.

OP posts:
RachelWardd · 24/06/2026 21:31

Back to reading Julie A Fast's Loving someone with Bipolar disorder and it is helpful, would recommend this for anyone on a similar journey

The other one I wonder about is Borderline personality disorder ....for the mood swings as they are less paced apart than seems to be the norm (weeks at a time) for BiPo

OP posts:
bumblebee3122 · 24/06/2026 22:25

I have both Bipolar and BPD. SV is less likely to be given for BPD. My husband has bipolar and takes SV. Has been on it for years. It does the trick for him. I take mood stabilisers which helps massively - I'm a much more rational person on them.

I'm sorry your DH has lied to you all these years. You had a right to know

HelenHywater · 25/06/2026 06:49

I don't know why you're focusing on trying to fix him.

RachelWardd · 27/06/2026 14:56

Well today I am really struggling. We get one life and we none of us know how much more time we have left - I think a part of me wants to find new love even if I am approaching 50 - I might still be secretly wanting to even in my dotage

Also another part of me wants no new love but just wants to leave him anyway

And then there's the third part that sometimes , some days, says lets fix him....

OP posts:
RachelWardd · 27/06/2026 14:56

A love that was not built on lies

OP posts:
FourSevenThree · 27/06/2026 16:37

RachelWardd · 27/06/2026 14:56

Well today I am really struggling. We get one life and we none of us know how much more time we have left - I think a part of me wants to find new love even if I am approaching 50 - I might still be secretly wanting to even in my dotage

Also another part of me wants no new love but just wants to leave him anyway

And then there's the third part that sometimes , some days, says lets fix him....

3)you can't fix him. If he doesn't see himself as broken and doesn't want to fix himself, you can't do it

1/2) If you decide to leave him, you might need some time to heal yourself first. Get to know who are you today when you are yourself. If loves come as well, great, but finding new love shouldn't be your main mission now.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page