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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

to think my husband's shouting has gone too far?

296 replies

justsayyes1 · 18/06/2026 01:37

I'm sitting here in shock and feeling really upset tonight and would appreciate some outside perspective.
Things have been difficult between my husband and me for a long time. We have a child with complex needs and I have ended up carrying the vast majority of the responsibility for managing appointments, school issues, day-to-day care and the emotional fallout, alongside working. For years we didn’t see eye to eye with ASN and the associated adjustments we’ve made (essentially I’ve driven them and he has i think felt pushed aside, though I’d say he’s just not engaged in it all). He also has a history of losing his temper and really shouting about 2-3 times a year with seemingly no trigger, although recently that seemed to have improved. In fact, earlier today I found myself thinking that maybe, somehow, we might actually be okay in the end.
Then tonight happened.
Our son's duvet cover was wet, so I put it in the wash. As my husband sleeps in the spare room (I co-sleep with our daughter), I took his duvet and put it on our son's bed, leaving my husband with a sleeping bag and a smaller duvet for one night until the other one dries. It was a fast practical decision made after a busy day.
Later, while I was trying to settle our daughter to sleep (which was already difficult), my husband stormed into the room shouting about how dare I take his duvet. I explained why I'd done it, but he just carried on shouting.
At that point our son came in. He was home on time and asked if his friend could come in for a while. My husband immediately started shouting at him, swearing and telling him to get rid of his friend. My son questioned why, saying he wasn't due in bed yet and just wanted to hang out. My husband got right up in his face to the point where I genuinely worried it was going to become physical.
My son then said, "What about Mum? Doesn't she get a say?" and my husband shouted, "No, she doesn't."
His friend left, clearly uncomfortable. My son is now crying in his room and won't speak to me. My daughter is frightened and crying too.
The truth is that I'm exhausted. Between caring for our daughter, working, and trying to keep everything afloat, I feel like I'm on my last legs most of the time. People often say "just leave", but the practical and emotional reality of separation feels almost impossible when I'm already barely coping.
I also think I've made a lot of excuses for him over the years. Because so much of my focus has been on the children and their needs, our relationship has often come a distant second. I've told myself he's stressed, that things could be worse, that we're both under pressure. Lately I genuinely felt we had got to a better place, which is why tonight has come as such a shock.
Am I overreacting, or is this as bad as it feels tonight? I feel heartbroken for both children and honestly don't know what to think anymor

OP posts:
DesertIslandDips · 18/06/2026 14:12

@CanterThroughChaos
If there are any instances when we are lacking bedding or pillows my husband will insist on having the least comfortable option, in any situation will give up anything of his if our child or I need it. I am completely knocked sick by so many of these comments. At least the poll shows that most people aren’t insane!!

This

Hankunamatata · 18/06/2026 14:15

I think you need to pause and take a breath op. No snap decisions for a week and mull things over.

Shouting not great. I have an explosive dh myself who does this every so often. Would he consider therapy? You might be better moving this to the sen board.

Your both parenting in unbelievable pressure.

Easilyforgotten · 18/06/2026 14:29

Only you know what is happening in your very difficult world, it sounds incredibly challenging. This is in no way meant as a defence of your husband, but could there be a disconnect between what you and he feel are your children's needs? I'm not sure how to phrase this correctly, and have no wish to cause offence, but could he feel for example that it's unnecessary to sleep with your daughter, but to you it's a non negotiable? Then the duvet situation was more a 'straw that broke the camels back' in terms of a build up of tension rather than the actual cause?
Completely unfair to take it out on your poor son either way. I'm saying this as it may be useful to speak to a counsellor, as PP's have suggested, as there maybe a middle ground, or solutions you both haven't considered, that may sit better with your husband if an outsider suggests them.
You are clearly trying to do your best by everyone, but if there is anything left to salvage in your marriage it might be worth one last shot.
Hugs to you, you must be exhausted.

Sarfldner · 18/06/2026 14:36

RoseField1 · 18/06/2026 13:51

Domestically abusive men aren't good husbands or fathers. Just because some women have normalised a level of abuse within their relationships doesn't mean it should ever be tolerated. It used to be that Mumsnet was a place where that line was largely held. Not any more apparently.

Did you read my post at all ?

NotSpaced · 18/06/2026 14:50

Morepositivemum · 18/06/2026 13:56

NotSpaced
Kids get upset and cry over arguments so I don’t know that it’s automatically a ltb, he’s a bastard!
And have you always had such low standards for relationships?

Have your children never cried because you gave out to them/ you, either as a couple or a family had an argument? Then as a parent you sit them down and say ‘that got out of hand, we need to talk’. I’ve shouted before, not proud of it, in fact was riddled with guilt as I’d guess most people are.

And I honestly don’t know what you mean by low standards (not being goady, sorry!!!) standards are hard to evaluate given sometimes on mn people say one argument (without backstory) should be the end of a marriage, that’s why I’m saying only op knows.

he loses his temper and shouts, and when I say shout I really mean shout. It’s scary

Low standards means that you think it’s ok for a man to shout in an extreme way, a few times a year at his kids if he’s stressed. As long as he apologies afterwards. Not in my world. My my kids have now left home and I know that my husband has never shouted at them like this. Not once.

NotSpaced · 18/06/2026 14:52

DesertIslandDips · 18/06/2026 14:12

@CanterThroughChaos
If there are any instances when we are lacking bedding or pillows my husband will insist on having the least comfortable option, in any situation will give up anything of his if our child or I need it. I am completely knocked sick by so many of these comments. At least the poll shows that most people aren’t insane!!

This

Yes, we will both take the least comfortable option for the sake of our kids, and my husband would give me the best bed and sleep on the floor if needed, every single time.

Morepositivemum · 18/06/2026 14:55

NotSpaced

I’VE shouted this way, which is why I’m saying it. Not happy I’ve done it and it wasn’t for anything small, but then I guess I could say my dh could have thought he’d low standards by being with me, but honestly I’m just saying nobody’s perfect and sometimes things get out of hand. The I’m scared is awful but again, I’d say everyone got a shock at me that day too. I’m not defending him but it’s just a sometimes things happen that are a world away from ideal

OtterLovesItsRock · 18/06/2026 15:02

Piglinginblanket · 18/06/2026 13:30

I think this is the most sensible advice on the thread.

Irrespective of how he feels there are no circumstances in which his anger and pattern of behaviour towards you and the children is excusable. If he can accept this and is willing/capable of change then you can move on. If he does not then I hope you are able to prioritise yourself and the children even if their is a financial and emotional shock. I feel so much for you OP. I’m sure it’s a really tough day today.

He could have worked out for himself after a few outbursts that he needed professional help to stop emotionally abusing his family.

He has responsibilities as well as rights and needs.

EmailsaysOOO · 18/06/2026 15:02

justsayyes1 · 18/06/2026 09:42

Thank you for all the feedback. Some of the comments focused on whether my husband's needs are being met, so I wanted to add some context rather than drip-feed information.
Our daughter's needs are complex, and she requires an adult to sleep in the room with her. That responsibility falls to me because my husband does not wake if she needs help during the night. Because of that, sharing a bedroom together is simply not realistic at present.
I can absolutely understand why my husband may have felt frustrated or annoyed about the bedding situation. My concern is not that he was annoyed; it's how he responded. He came into the room while I was trying to settle our daughter, knowing bedtime can be very difficult for her, and raised his voice. That immediately dysregulated her and turned what should have been a straightforward bedtime into a two-and-a-half-hour ordeal.
He then started shouting at our son the moment he walked through the door. Our son was home on time for curfew and had brought a friend home, which is something both of us normally allow. From our son's perspective, the sudden rule change made no sense. He challenged it and asked why I didn't get a say in the decision. The argument escalated, both of them raised their voices, and our daughter became even more distressed hearing it downstairs.
What troubles me is not a single disagreement or someone losing their temper occasionally. It's the pattern. We already live with a great deal of uncertainty because of our daughter's health and care needs. I don't want to also live with the uncertainty of wondering whether an ordinary family situation is going to trigger another outburst.
I don't think shouting at your partner in front of the children, or shouting at a child who has done nothing wrong, is something children should grow up seeing as normal. My son, who is nearly 13 and rarely cries, ended up in tears afterwards.
Several people asked what my husband contributes. The answer is that when things are good, he contributes a lot. He is fun, engaging, and provides significant financial support. That's what makes this so difficult. But two or three times a year there are major outbursts that leave everyone upset, and he tends to minimise their impact. The pattern is usually silence for a few days, followed by an apology and a promise it won't happen again. Unfortunately, it does.

It can't be worth it. I'm sure in the long term you would be better off without him. Sorry OP, he's got issues and if he won't sort himself out, you can't be walking on eggshells around him. Get yourself and your children out of this scary situation. All the best.

Piglinginblanket · 18/06/2026 15:10

OtterLovesItsRock · 18/06/2026 15:02

He could have worked out for himself after a few outbursts that he needed professional help to stop emotionally abusing his family.

He has responsibilities as well as rights and needs.

Look at my comments throughout this thread. I agree with you.

localnotail · 18/06/2026 15:24

The duvet situation is a bit weird and perhaps annoying but your husband sounds like an unhinged psycho. I bet he doesn't scream like this in Tesco or at work. Tell him he needs to control himself or he will be sleeping outside.

OtterLovesItsRock · 18/06/2026 15:40

Piglinginblanket · 18/06/2026 15:10

Look at my comments throughout this thread. I agree with you.

Not quite. I am saying the therapy horse has bolted. If the man had any self awareness, he would have sought therapy last year or the year before! Instead, he has escalated.

He needed to have raised the idea of family counselling.

It might become just another shit job for OP to try to persuade him that as he hurts his family, maybe he should get help.

It is no longer safe for the children. He can offer to remove himself and also to pursue therapy while the couple thinks through a mutually agreed period of break.

Has he offered anything like this?

OP is in an unfair situation.

xGoGox · 18/06/2026 16:05

Can’t believe some of the responses. He is abusing your children - leave! What else is there to say.

lazyarse123 · 18/06/2026 16:19

MixedFeelingsNoFeelings · 18/06/2026 10:48

Oh sweetheart it sounds like you've both been pushed to breaking point. If you can summon the energy for one last try - all cards on the table - could you tell him exactly what you've said above? That you're both trying as hard as you can but you feel like you've both failed at parenting your child?

(Not that I believe that is the case, quite the opposite. But sadly, in always and understandably putting DD first, your relationship has been sacrificed. And DS is feeling the effects of this too, however hard you've tried to ensure his life is mostly unaffected.)

DH sounds like a decent man trying to hold it together, but his breaking point when it comes is terrifying. You are in the trenches all day, every day. It must feel like every so often, you make one tiny wrong move and a bomb goes off that threatens to blow the family apart. It's no way for either of you to live.

I think you both have to decide whether there's enough left in your relationship to continue together - with MUCH more support - or whether it would ultimately be easier on everyone if you split, even with the emotional and financial cost of that. I assume DH would do the right thing by you and DC financially.

He doesn't sound like a decent man to me. No decent man would go on holiday twice a year and a weekly hobby while his wife never gets any free time from caring for their dd with complex needs and ds.
He doesn't appear to do any caring duties, I don't think it's a case of the op not letting him help, he has shown zero interest in researching what would make his wife and dds lives easier.

Letsgoforaskip · 18/06/2026 17:07

OP your response on this thread has shown a level of dignity that is admirable (and beyond what I have felt on reading them as a remote stranger). I, like many others, have been shocked by the number of people somehow trying to blame you. I completely agree with your reasoning. Of course it’s very stressful sometimes, but these outbursts are just not acceptable.

BEAchDays2 · Yesterday 08:09

The shouting thing is not acceptable.

it’s genuinely bizarre that you took the duvet and gave it to your son though. I would have an issue with that if I was him, although I wouldn’t shout. I would just go and get it back. The son will cope a sleeping bag.

BEAchDays2 · Yesterday 08:11

Your husband was categorically in the wrong for his behaviour though. Not minimising that.

BEAchDays2 · Yesterday 08:14

I’ve just read the drip feed, which would’ve been appreciated in the first post. But here we are. Just leave him, it’s not worth it.

RoseField1 · Yesterday 08:18

BEAchDays2 · Yesterday 08:14

I’ve just read the drip feed, which would’ve been appreciated in the first post. But here we are. Just leave him, it’s not worth it.

It's not a drip feed, and the fact that you've jumped in at the end of a very long thread to add your view without bothering to read the updates is on you, not OP

MixedFeelingsNoFeelings · Yesterday 17:06

Not at all. I read OP's post carefully, and am trying to offer an opinion that doesn't necessarily involve nuking the family, while acknowledging it may have to come to that.

Gettingbysomehow · Yesterday 17:38

Brideofclover · 18/06/2026 02:35

Im sorry I don’t mean to sound harsh but you gave no thought to how your husband would feel - you gave his duvet to your son and he had to make do with a sleeping bag and smaller quilt?
If your son is old enough to be out and come home with a friend then why was his duvet wet? Why didn’t you see the sleeping bag and think that would have to do your son as he’d made his duvet wet?
it does sound as though your husband has been pushed aside from your post - I’m not saying his reaction is right at all, but I suspect there’s more to this than just a husband being an arse for the sake of it.

Edited

Who gives a shit about what this man thinks or feels. He sounds like a nasty abusive piece of work and you and the children would be better off without him.
He'd probably have kicked off if you'd given your DS the sleeping bag.
I wouldnt stand for that behaviour.

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