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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:
Shelleyblueeyes · 18/06/2026 06:42

Arent we all missing the point. The sleeping bag was just the straw that broke the camels back.
The real issue is that caring for a disabled child puts such enormous pressure on a family
(including siblings) and from time to time you reach breaking point and you blow.

I think that's what happened for your DH last night. Maybe it wasn't the duvet at all it was the stresses of your situation. You admit that just leaving is impossible so it's likely he feels the same too.

Like you say your relationship has taken a back seat. Co sleeping will have a massive impact on your marriage

What support are you getting? Do you get respite?

Have you got family close by who can help.

I talk from experience - it's so hard.

Hoping things get better for you.
X

SaySomethingMan · 18/06/2026 06:43

Eenameenadeeka · 18/06/2026 02:17

It does sound like an overreaction, being that mad over the duvet. Don't quite understand why you gave your husband the sleeping bag over the son though?
While he of course shouldn't yell or swear at your son, especially making it so awkward with his friend, your son was rude to argue back about bedtime and what about what Mum says- that would be undermining him if you then went and said yes after his Dad had said no.

I agree with everything here. Word for word.

RoseField1 · 18/06/2026 06:43

pilates · 18/06/2026 06:11

I think there is a lot to unpick here. It probably wasn’t just taking his duvet. It’s never just that but a whole list of other things. I am a firm believer of husband and wife sharing a bed and children sleeping in their own beds. Your son deliberately stirred the pot with what he said. Your situation sounds intolerable with resentment bubbling away on both sides. Marriage guidance or you separate?

Did you miss that the DD is disabled? She may need a parent with her. This thread is exhausting in how it's making excuses for an abusive man and vilifying a woman who is caring for a disabled child.

Piglinginblanket · 18/06/2026 06:44

Agix · 18/06/2026 06:25

I wonder how many "on the spot" decisions you make that have absolutely no thought or consideration for your husband taken into account.

Is it possible he's shouty because you often behave this way and he's fed up of it? You blame him for his escalating reactions to your actions? No, shouting isn't the way adults should handle things, but when you treat someone poorly enough and wind them up enough, reactive abuse is a thing.

Reactive abuse? Good grief. I thought the people excusing this man’s dreadful behaviour were bad but you have gone one step beyond.

You do understand that the reactive abuse refers to someone being abused and defending themselves? It’s not what you describe as a lack or thought and consideration from their partner? Do you genuinely believe that can be interpreted as abuse on OPs part? I don’t think that. I think her husband’s lack of accountability, care and consideration of his family is selfish and negligent. His anger and aggression on top of that is entirely unequivocally unacceptable.

ThatAquaRobin · 18/06/2026 06:44

ShitScared1234 · 18/06/2026 06:37

I genuinely think there’s something wrong with this site now/that we are being targeted specifically.
So many threads the first posts are brutal/men’s rights/denying abuse and then it feels like the actual users (read women) turn up.

This!!!
Some.of these replies are clearly from either men or bots, especially the early ones.
All in all a very strange thread.
The man described here is clearly abusive

Bridesmaidorexfriend · 18/06/2026 06:44

user1492757084 · 18/06/2026 03:06

Your husband is always last in your priority list.

That is really too much for him to continue living nicely with. His rage was not at all in order.
See the outburst as a call from a drowning person. Like you, the burden of the handicapped DD is not sustainable.

Change things.
Claim back a bedroom retreat for parents.
Look into hiring a carer so to have time to invest in adult outings.
Book your DD into foster care for a weekend every month, if you can etc.

Edited

Honestly, she’s clear in her post that he doesn’t help with his children, she does everything, he shouts at her quite often and he’s been a barrier to getting their child support, but your advice is that the poor lamb isn’t getting enough attention so if she wants him to stop shouting at her she needs to improve her behaviour?

category12 · 18/06/2026 06:45

ShitScared1234 · 18/06/2026 06:37

I genuinely think there’s something wrong with this site now/that we are being targeted specifically.
So many threads the first posts are brutal/men’s rights/denying abuse and then it feels like the actual users (read women) turn up.

I think so too.

Lovingapeacefulgarden · 18/06/2026 06:46

OP as a mum of a child who is disabeld and has massive meltdowns and could easily soak a bed in meltdown i understand your situation. Your husbands reaction isnt acceptable. However that being said i dont think you should have taken his duvet and given it to your son..it does sound like he is the bottom of your list of priorities which is okay at times but not all the time. You have said you disagree on things around your ASN child. Does he feel your to soft? Is he stricter?

FudgeFudy · 18/06/2026 06:49

Sunandsunshine · 18/06/2026 04:40

Some absolutely crazy responses on here OP. Why on earth pp are getting on your back for giving your son the duvet is beyond me.
Your H's behaviour was absolutely awful.
There is never any excuse for shouting the way he did.

Your situation sounds so difficult. No wonder you are exhausted. I think @Eideann suggestion of trying to get respite care is a good one.

Indeed, a classic case of 'The OP Is Always Wrong'. Husband screaming and shouting like a lunatic at you and your kids over a sleeping bag? Well you shouldn't have given him a sleeping bag then, silly OP. Perhaps cook him his favourite meal tonight and buy him a nice treat to say sorry, the poor lamb.

FoldItIn · 18/06/2026 06:50

I think that's what happened for your DH last night. Maybe it wasn't the duvet at all it was the stresses of your situation

Why do you think her DH is stressed? The OP does the care for the child with complex needs alongside working. How about he steps up more, takes more on and gives the OP a break?

Bridesmaidorexfriend · 18/06/2026 06:50

Mumtobabyhavoc · 18/06/2026 06:17

Lack of communication by OP caused husband to yell in a manner that OP thought he might use physical violence. OP should have used her words so as not to upset husband.

Their child should not have asked his dad a question which then caused him to become more upset. He should know better. He needs to be careful and manage dad's emotions.

OP is too focused on parenting and not focused enough on her husband's needs.

Is that about right?

This site is infuriating. ‘My husbands abusive’ - mumsnet: have you considered being less annoying?

Marmalade71 · 18/06/2026 06:50

Fucking hell the answers on this thread 🙄

Abuse facilitators. I really hope you’re all teenagers on the wind up and not actual adults with actual children

JonasBogeys · 18/06/2026 06:52

Jesus these replies!!! MN is so weird, there can be a man who asks if he can pop out to watch the football who’ll get blasted yet here where there is clear abuse and unhinged behaviour, everyone is on his side?!!
OP, you know this is wrong. It’s going to be hard for you to get out, but I’d call a domestic abuse support line, speak honestly, find out your options.

hattie43 · 18/06/2026 06:52

I think your husband sounds thoroughly miserable , he’s not happy . Not excusing his behaviour but it sounds like he’s an afterthought and he’s at breaking point . I think you need to start sleeping as two adult parents in the same bed and the children are children in their own beds . None of this spare room arrangement and co sleeping nonsense. It sounds like your husband is a lodger in his own home .

IslandAdventure · 18/06/2026 06:52

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

He absolutely should not be shouting and losing his temper line that. It’s simply not acceptable. It creates fear and anxiety and is abusive. Especially adult to child. Large human to small human.

You need to tell him as such and give him the option of change or go. It sounds like you do it all anyway so what does he bring?

May be you could have given your son the sleeping bag. May be your son was rude (although it sounds normal to me). But the normal and regulated and non abusive way to deal with that is to find a time to say ‘hey, I was a bit hurt that I ended up with the sleeping bag, I felt a bit unimportant and like you don’t love me. Can we work on things to build more connection?’.

losing your temper very rarely and it’s over quickly and repaired - ok. Losing it regularly, not working on it, causing distress - abuse.

IslandAdventure · 18/06/2026 06:53

hattie43 · 18/06/2026 06:52

I think your husband sounds thoroughly miserable , he’s not happy . Not excusing his behaviour but it sounds like he’s an afterthought and he’s at breaking point . I think you need to start sleeping as two adult parents in the same bed and the children are children in their own beds . None of this spare room arrangement and co sleeping nonsense. It sounds like your husband is a lodger in his own home .

Who is the afterthought?

She is holding the mental and emotional load of parenting by the sounds of it. And working.

Who is an afterthought?

SylvanMoon · 18/06/2026 06:53

While your situation with your DD is difficult and I'm sure you're doing a fantastic job with her, I sympathise with your DH, who for a whole range of reasons (justified and possibly unjustified) likely feels quite sidelined in the family. I think you need to find a way to make him feel he matters to you. What you've written here lends me to feel that he's very low down on your list of priorities.

QldGCandproud · 18/06/2026 06:54

Brideofclover · 18/06/2026 03:23

I’m not criticizing the op - I’m trying to point out that maybe that’s what’s going on here.
it doesn’t excuse his behavior at all and yes, we do ultimately put our kids first, but there’s more to this than simply that.
A child with special needs, everything has to be regimented and the op sleeps with the daughter, maybe he’s not coping with the changes they’ve had to make, maybe the op has got so used to looking after their special needs child and making all the decisions that she’s forgotten they’re meant to be a partnership - it sounds to me as though they both have and that’s where all this could be stemming from.
And it’s quite normal for that to happen between parents of children with special needs, their relationship gets pushed aside.
As I said, I’m not apportioning blame on the op, just looking at it from both sides x

I disagree. Parents should be a team. He sounds like someone who feels like he's not getting the amount of attention due to him as "head of the household" when his partner is run into the ground trying to keep all the plates spinning. There is no excuse for that kind of yelling in a relationship and if my DH did that I'd be upset and confused and wondering if I wanted to live like that as well. It's hard carrying a sick child when your partner doesn't seem to notice or care much.

Zingyweaver · 18/06/2026 06:55

I disagree with previous posters saying 'both parents have lost their way here'.

It very much sounds like it is the OP who is shouldering the vast majority of parenting. This is exhausting. And anyone querying how the OP is treating her partner, and using that as an excuse for his lack of control and inability to communicate like an adult - why are you questioning his treatment towards the OP?

OP's partner doesn't sound like he has the ability to recognise his emotions when they arise, nor process them in a reasonable way. Shouting and flying off the handle is not okay or justifiable, and will leave lasting damage on their children. It is the partner who needs to reevaluate how this situation escalated.

OP you made your best efforts to sort out normal family issues that crop up in life, and I think you did very well. I would probably make the same choices as you, and I would do so in the confidence my partner wouldn't react how yours did. You sound like you need a real break and I hope you're okay.

StressedANmum · 18/06/2026 06:55

SylvanMoon · 18/06/2026 06:53

While your situation with your DD is difficult and I'm sure you're doing a fantastic job with her, I sympathise with your DH, who for a whole range of reasons (justified and possibly unjustified) likely feels quite sidelined in the family. I think you need to find a way to make him feel he matters to you. What you've written here lends me to feel that he's very low down on your list of priorities.

And do you think OP feels like she matters to him or that she's high on his list of priorities when he's leaving her to do all the caring for their disabled child???

QldGCandproud · 18/06/2026 06:56

Piglinginblanket · 18/06/2026 05:38

I really feel for you and I hope you are ok. I am amazed at the lack of empathy for you and your children in the first few posts. His behaviour is utterly appalling, and you say it happens several times a year.

So what if he feels slighted about a duvet cover? So what if his emotional needs aren’t being met? It sounds to me like you are doing the lions share of keeping your household together, taking are of everyone’s needs including those of a child with complex needs. What if you can’t cope? What if your emotional needs aren’t being met? What if the final straw breaks your back?

Why is it acceptable to be aggressive to your children or make them feel unsafe in their home? To be clear the answer is that it’s not and never will be. The people concerned about an adult being “disrespected” have no care for a child living with an unpredictable man and humiliated because of he is angry. Your son did nothing wrong, especially if bringing a friend home is a normal routine for him and expecting him to have the emotional intelligence to defuse a tense situation, but not having that expectation of an adult man is simply ridiculous.

Your husband is being self centred and making everyone’s lives worse. I’ve got very little sympathy that his life might not as he would want.

If he wants things to change he can learn to have a conversation calmly like an adult. He needs to step up, accept the cards that your family has been dealt and as the other adult find a way that lets you all thrive (not just pitying himself as his wife no longer making him your top priority - that’s impossible for anyone with children).

I do understand that separation is hard, but he sounds selfish and abusive. If he doesn’t recognise the (terrible) role he is playing in making things worse for you and your family, then I really worry that his anger and unreasonableness will wear you all down to nothing.

I’m so sorry OP. Big hug.

This 100%

Pearshapedpear · 18/06/2026 06:58

Eenameenadeeka · 18/06/2026 02:17

It does sound like an overreaction, being that mad over the duvet. Don't quite understand why you gave your husband the sleeping bag over the son though?
While he of course shouldn't yell or swear at your son, especially making it so awkward with his friend, your son was rude to argue back about bedtime and what about what Mum says- that would be undermining him if you then went and said yes after his Dad had said no.

‘Rude to argue back’ please tell
me you’re not being serious.
Good for the boy standing up to his bullying Father.
Please don’t make excuses for this man OP.
Hope you can get the support you need.

Weekmindedfool · 18/06/2026 06:59

Shelleyblueeyes · 18/06/2026 06:42

Arent we all missing the point. The sleeping bag was just the straw that broke the camels back.
The real issue is that caring for a disabled child puts such enormous pressure on a family
(including siblings) and from time to time you reach breaking point and you blow.

I think that's what happened for your DH last night. Maybe it wasn't the duvet at all it was the stresses of your situation. You admit that just leaving is impossible so it's likely he feels the same too.

Like you say your relationship has taken a back seat. Co sleeping will have a massive impact on your marriage

What support are you getting? Do you get respite?

Have you got family close by who can help.

I talk from experience - it's so hard.

Hoping things get better for you.
X

This

Bridesmaidorexfriend · 18/06/2026 07:02

Lovingapeacefulgarden · 18/06/2026 06:46

OP as a mum of a child who is disabeld and has massive meltdowns and could easily soak a bed in meltdown i understand your situation. Your husbands reaction isnt acceptable. However that being said i dont think you should have taken his duvet and given it to your son..it does sound like he is the bottom of your list of priorities which is okay at times but not all the time. You have said you disagree on things around your ASN child. Does he feel your to soft? Is he stricter?

If he’d have come in and punched her in the face for moving his quilt would you still be trying to see ‘his side?’ He shouldn’t have hit you OP, but to be fair you did inconvenience him slightly 🤷‍♀️

No, so her decision around the quilts is irrelevant the minute he starts shouting at her and then getting in his sons face, it’s abusive and intimidating

SylvanMoon · 18/06/2026 07:02

StressedANmum · 18/06/2026 06:55

And do you think OP feels like she matters to him or that she's high on his list of priorities when he's leaving her to do all the caring for their disabled child???

We don't know the dynamics of their relationship. Is he just "leaving her to do all the caring" or is she driving the process and not involving him?

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