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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to object after my ex criticised my ring and writing?

587 replies

Lilifer · 22/06/2026 23:01

My ex husband turned up unannounced at my house tonight. No warning, just my 20year old DS appearing at the top of the stairs saying “Dad’s downstairs, he wants a word.” I had just got home from our youngest son’s school Leavers ceremony which had been pretty emotional for me, and I was in the middle of getting changed into my slouchy gear and thinking about dinner and relaxing with a quiet evening.

i went down to see him, a bit puzzled as had only seen him minutes before around at the school where we had talked a bit, what I got was being told that I am an embarrassment, that people are talking about me, and that I need to change my ways. Specifically:
The ring. I still wear my engagement ring on my ring finger. Not my wedding ring, just the engagement ring. I wear it because it’s valuable, I don’t want to leave it in a jewelry box where it could be stolen, it only fits that finger, and I don’t want to lose it. Ex husband has decided that this is a problem and that other people, friends, mutual friends, possibly family members, he was quite vague about his sources, are apparently commenting on it and finding it strange and something to be criticised for.

When I pointed out that I don’t know anyone who goes around looking at other people’s hands, he said “you’d be surprised.” He suggested I put it in a safety deposit box. In his shop. I declined.

Writing on Medium. I write on Medium, about my life, (nothing about him) current affairs, personal essays. Ex husband has decided this is also A Problem because I am apparently “putting my whole life out there.” He cited people who had apparently told him not to read my piece about his father’s funeral because it would upset him. He has not read it. He does not know what is in it. The piece was a tribute to a man I loved and had known for over twenty five years. I referred to him as my father-in-law because that is what he was to me for most of my adult life. Apparently this was overstepping.

The funeral. This is not the first time this has come up. His father died a couple of years ago. I loved his father and his father loved me. I am the mother of his grandchildren. I made sure my kids were all turned out well in good suits and outfits at short notice, I made sure they did their grandfather proud, and I sat approximately a third of the way down the church. Not the front row. Not beside my ex and our children. A third of the way down. Apparently I should have been at the back.

We have been over this before and he doubled down tonight.
For additional context:

  • I had a frightening health episode just days ago that he was aware of. He did not ask how I was. Not once.
  • I spent weeks putting together a box of duplicate family photographs for him, his travels before we met, photos of the children growing up, carefully sorted and labelled. He never acknowledged it. Not a text, not a word.
  • He has a partner.
  • I live in his hometown, surrounded by his people, his business, his family, his influence. He is a big personality in the town. I have built my own life here but it is not easy.
  • We are three months away from our financial agreement ending completely.

So. AIBU to keep wearing the ring? And also AIBU to think that turning up unannounced to deliver all of this on the evening of your son’s Leavers Mass is not okay?
Asking for a friend. That friend is me. 😅

OP posts:
liamharha · 23/06/2026 14:52

Lilifer · 23/06/2026 14:35

He told me i could go to the funeral but had to sit at the back. I did not abide by that becasue he has no right to tell me where to sit in the church. I was no where near the front, nor anywhere near the prayers over the grave outside after, there were hundreds milling about and I was one of those hundreds. I agree that I should not have mentioned his father’s funeral in my article, that has been removed now. But aside from all of that, whoever is in his ear it is not his brothers or sister as they are aware of his views around this and just roll their eyes and tell me to ignore it.

So it's tit for tat then and about proving a point to each other . Your divorced these petty things shouldnt matter .

SeaLettuces · 23/06/2026 14:52

liamharha · 23/06/2026 14:46

I can't comment on that ,op has said her ex who was deceased man's son and he has asked questions about her presence unlike your cousins ex 🤷

God, you Brits are weird about funerals. In the rest of the world, if you're the child of the deceased, it doesn't give you veto over who attends or where they sit. The OP had her own longterm and evidently loving relationship with the dead man for a quarter of a century, and, if there needed to be more encouragement to attend his funeral, was specifically asked to come by the widow and his other children, and, obviously was supporting her own children, who'd lost their grandfather. The ex might be the 'big man' in town, but him being the child of the deceased and on uncomfortable terms with his ex doesn't grant him any special privileges at a funeral.

If this had been generally known, it's not the OP who would emerge looking bad.

BeardySchnauzer · 23/06/2026 14:56

I think the fact it was OP that instigated the divorce is relevant although she’s not said why.

I can’t imagine being so enmeshed in an ex husbands life tbh. The small environment and constant family gatherings seems suffocating

Lilifer · 23/06/2026 14:57

@watchingthishtread Thanks but I’m not actually looking for support , just opinions on whether I’m being unreasonable, which is what AIBU is for. You may be right about the funeral, that’s a fair point and it was a hard day for everyone. But on the ring I genuinely disagree. It stopped being a symbol the moment we divorced. It’s a piece of jewellery that belongs to me and fits that finger. Whether I wear it or not is my choice. Telling me what I can and can’t wear on my own body is controlling, regardless of the circumstances.

OP posts:
purplecorkheart · 23/06/2026 14:58

Lilifer · 23/06/2026 14:37

Hi did say I should be there, for our kids, just not anywhere apart from back of church. It’s not as if I crashed the service fgs

I wonder was that for the sake of the other people attending. I attended a funeral once where the ex wife attended her ex father in law funeral attended and sat midway up the church on an aisle seat. Loads of people seem to not know whether they should offer her their sympathies and some stopped to shake her hand and chat causing a backlog in the aisle and the wife of the gentleman who passed was quite upset by it all.

I am not saying your ex isn't horrible but sometimes all is not as it seems. I do think you should have sat at the back if that was requested. His father's funeral was not a time to make a point.

BeardySchnauzer · 23/06/2026 14:58

I know someone who had his three ex wives and the current one at the funeral and his Nan was completely confused ‘I can’t keep up with who the current one is!’

Lilifer · 23/06/2026 14:58

Constant? Not really, about once or twice a year max @BeardySchnauzer

OP posts:
BeardySchnauzer · 23/06/2026 14:59

Lilifer · 23/06/2026 14:58

Constant? Not really, about once or twice a year max @BeardySchnauzer

Ok - it seemed more than that from what you said!

how long have you been divorced?

liamharha · 23/06/2026 14:59

Tbh op I wouldnt want him thinking I wanted anything to do with him beyond the nessarcary contact we need to have for our kids . Stop stroking his ego by wearing the ring and staying emeshed with his family ,gift the ring to your children or sell it and apart from polite chit chat when you bump into his relatives be busy whenever they extend a invitation.

SamphiretheTervosaur · 23/06/2026 15:00

Sod him and rhe horse he rode in on

Your living your normal life is missing him off. That's his problem. For him to resolve.

Practice some firm responses and use them freely
It's a ring, it's on a finger
It's a blog, nobody has to read it
This is my house, feel free to leave
The kids dont care why would you?

He is showing you, repeatedly, why he is your ex. Again, that's his cross to bear. You can smile and close the door on him

HelenaWaiting · 23/06/2026 15:01

ChickenBananaBanana · 22/06/2026 23:06

I mean wearing the engagement ring on your wedding finger is a bit odd. Can you not wear it on your right hand?

No it isn't. It's her ring; she can do what she likes with it.

liamharha · 23/06/2026 15:02

SeaLettuces · 23/06/2026 14:52

God, you Brits are weird about funerals. In the rest of the world, if you're the child of the deceased, it doesn't give you veto over who attends or where they sit. The OP had her own longterm and evidently loving relationship with the dead man for a quarter of a century, and, if there needed to be more encouragement to attend his funeral, was specifically asked to come by the widow and his other children, and, obviously was supporting her own children, who'd lost their grandfather. The ex might be the 'big man' in town, but him being the child of the deceased and on uncomfortable terms with his ex doesn't grant him any special privileges at a funeral.

If this had been generally known, it's not the OP who would emerge looking bad.

Edited

It's just called basic respect for the close grieving relatives for us 'brits'

Lilifer · 23/06/2026 15:02

@liamharhathanks but I’m not trying to be close friends with him. I’m just trying to navigate living in the same small town and co-parenting adult children with someone who can be difficult. I’ll forge on with my life regardless, don’t worry. 😊

OP posts:
BudgetBuster · 23/06/2026 15:04

liamharha · 23/06/2026 15:02

It's just called basic respect for the close grieving relatives for us 'brits'

The close grieving relatives who all specifically asked her to attend...

liamharha · 23/06/2026 15:04

liamharha · 23/06/2026 15:02

It's just called basic respect for the close grieving relatives for us 'brits'

And it is the OP Irish ex husband is the one who voiced his issue with it ,,unless he's a 'brit' op ?

Ladybyrd · 23/06/2026 15:04

You need to tell him not to come to the house again.

Ladybyrd · 23/06/2026 15:06

And don’t give him the ring. He’ll sell it 100%. None of his business - feck off.

liamharha · 23/06/2026 15:06

BudgetBuster · 23/06/2026 15:04

The close grieving relatives who all specifically asked her to attend...

The grieving son asked her to sit at the back . Personally it wouldn't bother me is he being pedantic ,yes ,but in that situation I'd of rolled by eyes say at the back paid my respects and gone home cos it's what the deceased son asked for to make burying his dad easier . Tbh if of not gone at all but apparently that's not the done thing in Ireland .

Lilifer · 23/06/2026 15:06

@BeardySchnauzer about 3 years divorced now. Cousins come home at Xmas and come to ours for drinks and cards/games etc and then a summer arts event which has about 150 people at it, organised by the ex’s brother. Occasionally I happen to go out for a drink after work on a Friday and he’ll be in the pub, hard to avoid that, only 2 or 3 pubs in the town we can go to.

OP posts:
liamharha · 23/06/2026 15:07

Ladybyrd · 23/06/2026 15:04

You need to tell him not to come to the house again.

I think he'd be quite agreeable to them both staying out of each others personal spaces and having strict boundaries

Elsvieta · 23/06/2026 15:07

The kids are adults and you're no longer financially linked - maybe it's time to have a clean break and not speak to him again? If you find yourself in the same pub or whatever, say hi and sit somewhere else; don't go to anything where you know he'll be there. Tell the kids not to let him in the house and you're sorted - you won't have to listen to his views on any aspect of how you live, ever again.

liamharha · 23/06/2026 15:08

Elsvieta · 23/06/2026 15:07

The kids are adults and you're no longer financially linked - maybe it's time to have a clean break and not speak to him again? If you find yourself in the same pub or whatever, say hi and sit somewhere else; don't go to anything where you know he'll be there. Tell the kids not to let him in the house and you're sorted - you won't have to listen to his views on any aspect of how you live, ever again.

This op polite where and when nesacary for the kids .

BeardySchnauzer · 23/06/2026 15:10

Are you intending to stay there? I k ow you’ve said you’ve built a life there but your sons are going to leave eventually (do adult kids still need parenting 😱 - will I never escape)

you mentioned your sister though so are you originally from nearby? I guess I’m trying to figure out how small town and incestuous the place is!!

99bottlesofkombucha · 23/06/2026 15:11

liamharha · 23/06/2026 15:02

It's just called basic respect for the close grieving relatives for us 'brits'

They wanted her there. The dickhead ex was doing the classic abusive man thing -was too grief struck to think about getting his own dc there dressed nicely thats the ex wife’s job and also not grieving so much he couldn’t think of very specific seating goals. Grieving family focus on each other and don’t give a shit who’s seated in the middle vs the back as long as they aren’t sitting in their lap.

Notonthestairs · 23/06/2026 15:12

Elsvieta · 23/06/2026 15:07

The kids are adults and you're no longer financially linked - maybe it's time to have a clean break and not speak to him again? If you find yourself in the same pub or whatever, say hi and sit somewhere else; don't go to anything where you know he'll be there. Tell the kids not to let him in the house and you're sorted - you won't have to listen to his views on any aspect of how you live, ever again.

Why wouldn’t he move?
Why should she have to start over. She’s not the one complaining.

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