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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:
Member984815 · 24/06/2026 09:43

Lilifer · 24/06/2026 09:20

I don’t think they will have kids, she’s 50 and he mid fifties - he said something like he didn’t want two women running around the town wearing his engagement rings 😣

Once he gave you that ring it became yours, so it's not his engagement ring to be giving orders on ,

BiteSizedLife · 24/06/2026 09:48

Personally I would have traded the ring in for a nice bracelet or earrings

YANBU about everything else

oliviaAustin · 24/06/2026 09:52

Sorry but while he has no right to make you change aim any way he’s correct that wearing the ring is weird and writing tributes to his father on the internet is overstepping.

Lilifer · 24/06/2026 10:24

NeelyOHara · 24/06/2026 09:42

Do you still have the same surname? If you still have his surname, his engagement ring and are at family occasions, it does sound a bit insane.
Have any other members of the family mentioned the funeral article? Do they know about it?

Same surname yes. I think that’s pretty normal though when you have kids. Some of his family mentioned the article and liked it. It was written over a year ago now, I had forgotten about it really but it’s gone now. I don’t think he’s that impressed I’m writing at all.

OP posts:
blacksax · 24/06/2026 10:54

Two words should suffice when dealing with insufferable exes:

Fuck off.

Whyarentmysquashesthriving · 24/06/2026 11:13

"We're divorced, David. You don't get to have any say in how I live my life."

"I'm a single woman, David. I can wear what I want. I can write what I want."

"I think we should just stick to focusing on the children. There's nothing else to discuss."

And don't be available to him. If he wants a quick word? No, sorry, if it's not an emergency just say you're busy.

It sounds like he's still trying to control you and you're still a bit enmeshed.

Lilifer · 24/06/2026 11:28

I wish dearly I could just tell him to fuck off. However, becasue we live in same town, 5 mins from each other, and socialise in the same pubs, for the sake of my kids I would rather maintain civility and it’s hard to do that if you’re telling your ex to fuck off. I would try and work with him on this, and maybe eventually I will if I can sort the insurance etc but the way he approaches it is so iincecessarly nasty, patronising entitled and antagonistic, it makes me dig in

OP posts:
Whyarentmysquashesthriving · 24/06/2026 11:42

You can be coldly polite though and not enter into a debate with him, whilst still being civil. You need to have clearer boundaries.

"I think it would be better if we just keep our conversations focused on the children."

"I'm not prepared to have a discussion about this." Repeat.

BudgetBuster · 24/06/2026 11:48

Lilifer · 24/06/2026 11:28

I wish dearly I could just tell him to fuck off. However, becasue we live in same town, 5 mins from each other, and socialise in the same pubs, for the sake of my kids I would rather maintain civility and it’s hard to do that if you’re telling your ex to fuck off. I would try and work with him on this, and maybe eventually I will if I can sort the insurance etc but the way he approaches it is so iincecessarly nasty, patronising entitled and antagonistic, it makes me dig in

You can still be civil and tell him to fuck off...

Lilifer · 24/06/2026 12:08

@BudgetBusteri may have to!

OP posts:
liamharha · 24/06/2026 14:43

Lilifer · 24/06/2026 09:20

I don’t think they will have kids, she’s 50 and he mid fifties - he said something like he didn’t want two women running around the town wearing his engagement rings 😣

He should be so lucky 👀🤣

liamharha · 24/06/2026 14:46

The whole ring thing baffles me op cos tbh I wouldn't want to wear it ,I cant understand why you would and I suppose it is making me thing are you wearing it to annoy him or send a message to his new partner that your still here lingering 🤷. I'd sell it and buy myself a piece of jewellery of my choice a divorce gift to myself ?

GiveMeCoffee637281 · 24/06/2026 15:00

YABU.

Wearing the engagement ring on the wedding ring finger is a statement. If jewellery was just for fashion without any meaning, there wouldn't be engagement and wedding rings. At least get it resized and wear it on the other hand.

And you may have been close with your FIL but he was NOT your father. The depth of the relationship isn't there. If an ex wrote about my own parent's funeral, I'd be fuming.

He may be a controlling knob but I have to say, especially if you live in a smaller village where everyone knows each other, it reads as if you are REALLY trying very hard to get his attention and shitstirring.

Lilifer · 24/06/2026 15:28

GiveMeCoffee637281 · 24/06/2026 15:00

YABU.

Wearing the engagement ring on the wedding ring finger is a statement. If jewellery was just for fashion without any meaning, there wouldn't be engagement and wedding rings. At least get it resized and wear it on the other hand.

And you may have been close with your FIL but he was NOT your father. The depth of the relationship isn't there. If an ex wrote about my own parent's funeral, I'd be fuming.

He may be a controlling knob but I have to say, especially if you live in a smaller village where everyone knows each other, it reads as if you are REALLY trying very hard to get his attention and shitstirring.

I’d push back on you assuming that because you can’t imagine doing something, there must be a hidden motive behind it. Not everything is a statement. I’m wearing it because it fits that finger and I don’t want to lose it.

And I knew my father-in-law for twenty-five years and am the mother of his grandchildren. The suggestion that the depth of that relationship ‘isn’t there’ is presumptuous from someone who knows nothing about it.

OP posts:
Peterdottir · 24/06/2026 15:56

OP i've been catching up with your posts and noticed you said all of your children are at least 18. That being the case you don't actually need to have any contact with each other (apart from major life events) so there is absolutely no need for him to come to your house apart from droppping off children.

I've seen my ex-husband once since our son turned 18 which was at his graduation. If our son gets married then i will see him then but otherwise don't expect to. Our son is almost 26.

We don't live in the same place and you've said where you live is small so you can't help bumping into each other. However there is no need now for you to interact regularly regarding your children as they can make their own plans to see their Dad?

liamharha · 24/06/2026 16:26

blacksax · 24/06/2026 10:54

Two words should suffice when dealing with insufferable exes:

Fuck off.

I hinjnthis exactly what her umhusband is trying to say to her in a round about way . Mad the way this thread the ex husband can have no views or boundaries at all about things that affect his private family life yet it's perfectly fine for op to wear his engagement ring (that's a statement )on her ring finger and turn up at HIS family gatherings (he needs to address that invitation situation with his family ) . Disrespect the request he made of her at HIS father's funeral . Alot of you would be calling him creepy as fuck as fuck and sighting red flag behaviour if this was the other way round .

NeverDropYourMooncup · 24/06/2026 16:54

Lilifer · 24/06/2026 09:20

I don’t think they will have kids, she’s 50 and he mid fifties - he said something like he didn’t want two women running around the town wearing his engagement rings 😣

So he does want to give it to her, then?

Cheap way of shutting her up, I guess.

DimwittedSkater · 24/06/2026 17:30

Lilifer · 24/06/2026 09:20

I don’t think they will have kids, she’s 50 and he mid fifties - he said something like he didn’t want two women running around the town wearing his engagement rings 😣

But your ring is not "his" engagement ring. It's yours, and it's no longer an engagement ring.

It's clear that he seems himself as the centre of everything. And you let this prince go??

Seriously, who gives a rat's furry arse what he thinks.

Auntiebenita · 24/06/2026 18:21

Lilifer · 24/06/2026 15:28

I’d push back on you assuming that because you can’t imagine doing something, there must be a hidden motive behind it. Not everything is a statement. I’m wearing it because it fits that finger and I don’t want to lose it.

And I knew my father-in-law for twenty-five years and am the mother of his grandchildren. The suggestion that the depth of that relationship ‘isn’t there’ is presumptuous from someone who knows nothing about it.

I believe you when you say you had a wonderful, deep relationship with your FIL. But surely you can appreciate that it won’t have been on the same level as the relationship someone has with their parent. Great to go to the funeral but I think you were wrong not to respect ex's wishes for where you should sit. He may have been being unreasonable but it was his father's funeral and his wishes should have trumped yours. As far as I can see you had no reason not to do what he wanted other than that you wanted to demonstrate that he can’t control you. But that was not the right occasion on which to make a stand.

I'm afraid I agree with the PPs who have said that if it was an ex-husband behaving in the way you are, still coming to a woman's family occasions etc., refusing to sit where she asked him to sit at her parent's funeral, making a point of wearing a meaningful piece of jewellery in a meaningful place (when it could easily be resized to fit elsewhere if you really must wear it), people would be responding very differently.

Your ex sound incredibly irritating, but in my opinion you’re fanning the flames by your actions, and I suspect quite a lot of people in your life see this.

TreadSoftlyOnMyDreams · 24/06/2026 18:27

Auntiebenita · 24/06/2026 18:21

I believe you when you say you had a wonderful, deep relationship with your FIL. But surely you can appreciate that it won’t have been on the same level as the relationship someone has with their parent. Great to go to the funeral but I think you were wrong not to respect ex's wishes for where you should sit. He may have been being unreasonable but it was his father's funeral and his wishes should have trumped yours. As far as I can see you had no reason not to do what he wanted other than that you wanted to demonstrate that he can’t control you. But that was not the right occasion on which to make a stand.

I'm afraid I agree with the PPs who have said that if it was an ex-husband behaving in the way you are, still coming to a woman's family occasions etc., refusing to sit where she asked him to sit at her parent's funeral, making a point of wearing a meaningful piece of jewellery in a meaningful place (when it could easily be resized to fit elsewhere if you really must wear it), people would be responding very differently.

Your ex sound incredibly irritating, but in my opinion you’re fanning the flames by your actions, and I suspect quite a lot of people in your life see this.

I guarantee that if @Lilifer didn't attend the funeral of her FIL or skulked at the back of the church in a small Irish village after a 20+ year marriage to his son her life wouldn't be worth living and he'd have thrown that in her face instead.

He's just a dick, remind yourself of that and don't give it the headspace. Remind your kids that while he is their father, it is not an open door policy and as awkward as it is you don't want him in the house.

NeelyOHara · 24/06/2026 18:33

TreadSoftlyOnMyDreams · 24/06/2026 18:27

I guarantee that if @Lilifer didn't attend the funeral of her FIL or skulked at the back of the church in a small Irish village after a 20+ year marriage to his son her life wouldn't be worth living and he'd have thrown that in her face instead.

He's just a dick, remind yourself of that and don't give it the headspace. Remind your kids that while he is their father, it is not an open door policy and as awkward as it is you don't want him in the house.

Why would he be angry at her sitting at the back? That is why he asked her to do.

BudgetBuster · 24/06/2026 18:34

Lilifer · 24/06/2026 12:08

@BudgetBusteri may have to!

In typical Irish style I'd go with "Era, John... go away and fuck off and stop looking at my hands. I've taken the post down now. Off you trot"

Goatblu · 24/06/2026 18:37

As it's an expensive ring, I'd sell it and buy a lovely new one and wear it wherever I damn well pleased. At least then there would be no attachment to him (apart from children obvs).

WoosMama13 · 24/06/2026 18:45

BudgetBuster · 22/06/2026 23:06

Fuck it... I'd wear my wedding dress next time i had to see him 😂

Sounds like hia new life is fairly crap if he's still so invested in yours.

Yes, this! And re-hang wedding photos, play the wedding video on the TV!!
He wants to be petty, meet him and raise it.

Apologies, peri rage and idiotic people make me petty.
Wear it. It's yours to do as you wish. Nobody can tell you, an adult, what to do, especially your ex husband!
Hope you're feeling okay after your scare too.

FireandBrimstone · 24/06/2026 20:13

Sell the ring when your financial settlement completes. Still to be wearing it IS odd tbf.

The time and care spent on the photos is really thoughtful but does kind of come across like you still have feelings of attachment.

Hands-down, it’s the partner who’s been reading your Medium and has put their foot down on all of this. That’s not to say he has a right to have made the demands on you or done so in the way he did - he doesn’t.

But you need to cut the ties once and for all, for your own future happiness.