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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:
CaesarAugusta · 25/06/2026 08:42

liamharha · 24/06/2026 16:26

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 .

It's not just his family life, though, is it? OP's FIL remains her FIL and grandfather to her children, she was perfectly entitled to maintain her good relationship with him and to mourn him when he died. Funerals are public events to which invitations are not required. I suspect the only effect OP's choice of seating had on him was anger that she hadn't meekly submitted to his unreasonable demands, and that is no-one's problem but his.

Chickadee001 · 25/06/2026 08:43

He's your EX for a reason!

CaesarAugusta · 25/06/2026 08:47

Aluna · 24/06/2026 22:03

Or some people have never been to small town Ireland.

If her ex was continuing to wear his wedding band despite divorce and the fact she’d prefer him not to, that would be labelled a control behaviour of itself.

OP isn't wearing her wedding ring.

CaesarAugusta · 25/06/2026 08:48

Aluna · 24/06/2026 22:45

In this case people have noticed and gossiped.

Only according to OP's ex. I'd take that one with a very large pinch of salt.

CaesarAugusta · 25/06/2026 08:55

NeelyOHara · 25/06/2026 05:55

It was your intention to annoy him and prove a point at his own dad’s funeral though. You skip over that.

Where do you get that from? So far as I can see OP went to the funeral with the intention of mourning her FIL and supporting her children.. If she didn't want to sit at the back, there was no reason whatsoever why she should do so.

Ladygodalmighty · 25/06/2026 09:22

JLou08 · 22/06/2026 23:15

It sounds like his partner is jealous and getting on at him.
It is a bit odd to wear the ring. I sold my old engagement ring after separation. Wearing it does give off a signal that you're still clinging to the relationship.

Absolutely not! I divorced my horrible husband over 20 years ago and still wear my beautiful engagement which I chose and receive lots of compliments on. I change hands, in the heat it fits better on my right and in the cold my left. It doesn't stop men chatting me up, so do they even notice?

Aluna · 25/06/2026 09:30

Lilifer · 24/06/2026 23:51

@CamillaMcCauleyyou said it perfectly. I’d genuinely love @Aluna to explain the mechanism by which a ring on my finger controls another adult human being. He has a new partner and his own life. How exactly am I controlling him? Annoying him possibly, though that’s not my intention, but control requires actual power over someone. I have none over him, nor do I want any.

I have never said that you were doing it to be controlling. I don’t think you are. I’m not sure you’re being completely honest with yourself about your motivation but I don’t think you’re trying to control him.

The discussion arose as a pp argued that wearing a ring could never be an act of control, I merely pointed it could be depending on the context. I can see a controlling man doing it intentionally for example.

CamillaMcCauley · 25/06/2026 09:56

Aluna · 25/06/2026 09:30

I have never said that you were doing it to be controlling. I don’t think you are. I’m not sure you’re being completely honest with yourself about your motivation but I don’t think you’re trying to control him.

The discussion arose as a pp argued that wearing a ring could never be an act of control, I merely pointed it could be depending on the context. I can see a controlling man doing it intentionally for example.

lol what rubbish, you were clearly suggesting she was being controlling.

Also it’s still not controlling regardless of motivation and gender.

Lilifer · 25/06/2026 10:54

Aluna · 25/06/2026 09:30

I have never said that you were doing it to be controlling. I don’t think you are. I’m not sure you’re being completely honest with yourself about your motivation but I don’t think you’re trying to control him.

The discussion arose as a pp argued that wearing a ring could never be an act of control, I merely pointed it could be depending on the context. I can see a controlling man doing it intentionally for example.

There is an important distinction between behaviour that is annoying or even spiteful, and behaviour that is actually controlling. Controlling behaviour involves exercising power over another person, their movements, their choices, their access to resources, their safety. A ring on a finger does none of those things. Conflating the two doesn’t just miss the point, it trivialises the experience of women who are actually in controlling relationships.

And as for my motivation, you do realise that you don’t know me? You’ve read my posts on the internet. The assumption that I’m ‘not being completely honest with myself’ is quite a leap from that 😊

OP posts:
Lilifer · 25/06/2026 10:58

CaesarAugusta · 25/06/2026 08:42

It's not just his family life, though, is it? OP's FIL remains her FIL and grandfather to her children, she was perfectly entitled to maintain her good relationship with him and to mourn him when he died. Funerals are public events to which invitations are not required. I suspect the only effect OP's choice of seating had on him was anger that she hadn't meekly submitted to his unreasonable demands, and that is no-one's problem but his.

Everyone else in his family wanted me there, invited me to join them both before and after the funeral, and have many times since told me that they think exH is being ridiculous and they don’t agree with them. Maybe that’s unsupportive of them, but they are quite happy to see me occasionally both in my house and theirs, so while I understand that might be galling to exH I’m not going to cut them off just to keep him happy.

OP posts:
Lilifer · 25/06/2026 10:58

CaesarAugusta · 25/06/2026 08:55

Where do you get that from? So far as I can see OP went to the funeral with the intention of mourning her FIL and supporting her children.. If she didn't want to sit at the back, there was no reason whatsoever why she should do so.

Thank you 🙏

OP posts:
Member984815 · 25/06/2026 11:23

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.

I can attest to this as someone from a small irish town.

Wildefish · 25/06/2026 12:05

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. 😅

He’s a prick and still trying to control you. When I divorced I no longer wore my rings but kept his name as it was the children’s name and I didn’t want to embarrass them in school. My ex didn’t mind. I also loved his parents (they were like parents to me for 20 years). I went to the funeral and was told by my ex SIL to sit with the family. Ask him what his problem is with you. Maybe it’s coming from the new partner. I would get the ring sized for the other hand.

honeyrider · 25/06/2026 12:37

You don't need an invitation to attend a funeral and if OP hadn't gone to the funeral it would have been the talk of the place for some time.

EllysMom · 25/06/2026 12:42

It’s nobody else’s business whether you do or do not wear that ring. It may have been an engagement ring once upon a time, but is now just your ring, and you can wear it on whichever finger you like without having to justify that to anyone else.
Why the hell should you not go to the funeral of a man who you loved and knew for so many years. Your relationship with him was between the two of you, and you shouldn’t be expected to forget all about him and your long, loving relationship just because you and his son split up. He was not just his son’s father, he was also many other things to many other people. Your ex needs to get over that. Writing about it online is you writing about your experience and about your relationship with him, again, nothing to do with your ex.
Just because some people on here find some of these things ‘odd’, doesn’t mean you don’t have a legitimate reason to feel how you feel and do the things you do. You carry on. And don’t worry about anyone else.

ColadhSamh · 25/06/2026 14:46

Aluna · 24/06/2026 22:45

In this case people have noticed and gossiped.

And? Just because he said it doesn't mean the controlling asal is being truthful.
You go @Lilifer . He sees you living your best life and he has no say any more.

Tardigrade001 · 25/06/2026 14:58

YABU to still wear the ring, it's symbolic. I'd give it back to him. You need to be able to properly detach.
On everything else, he is massively unreasonable.

UncannyFanny · 25/06/2026 15:16

Re the ring thing, I guess it may have no significance to you but it clearly does for him as it’s not just any ring on any finger. It’s his engagement ring to you on the finger he placed a wedding ring on. It won’t immediately cost you over £1000 to insure it if you pay insurance in premiums. There’s also safes. Easily concealed safes than no burglar is going to have the time searching a whole house from head to toe looking for. Especially when they don’t even know it’s there.

BudgetBuster · 25/06/2026 15:26

Tardigrade001 · 25/06/2026 14:58

YABU to still wear the ring, it's symbolic. I'd give it back to him. You need to be able to properly detach.
On everything else, he is massively unreasonable.

Give it back to him?
What 😂😂😂

Lilifer · 25/06/2026 15:27

Tardigrade001 · 25/06/2026 14:58

YABU to still wear the ring, it's symbolic. I'd give it back to him. You need to be able to properly detach.
On everything else, he is massively unreasonable.

Give it back to him? I think you may be confusing an engagement ring with a company car.

OP posts:
Aluna · 25/06/2026 15:31

CamillaMcCauley · 25/06/2026 09:56

lol what rubbish, you were clearly suggesting she was being controlling.

Also it’s still not controlling regardless of motivation and gender.

Nonsense. If you read my posts more carefully. You simply jumped to that conclusion.

You made a sweeping statement which I pointed out was not true in all circumstances and gave an example. Which was not the OP.

SweatySpider321 · 25/06/2026 15:34

Tardigrade001 · 25/06/2026 14:58

YABU to still wear the ring, it's symbolic. I'd give it back to him. You need to be able to properly detach.
On everything else, he is massively unreasonable.

The ring belongs to her, why would she give it back!?

Lilifer · 25/06/2026 15:40

@UncannyFannyThanks but we’re divorced since 2023. He lost the right to have opinions about what I wear the day we signed the papers. Similarly I can’t dictate to him what he wears. If he wanted to keep wearing his wedding band it would not cost me a thought, why should it, has nothing to do with me.

OP posts:
Aluna · 25/06/2026 15:48

Lilifer · 25/06/2026 10:54

There is an important distinction between behaviour that is annoying or even spiteful, and behaviour that is actually controlling. Controlling behaviour involves exercising power over another person, their movements, their choices, their access to resources, their safety. A ring on a finger does none of those things. Conflating the two doesn’t just miss the point, it trivialises the experience of women who are actually in controlling relationships.

And as for my motivation, you do realise that you don’t know me? You’ve read my posts on the internet. The assumption that I’m ‘not being completely honest with myself’ is quite a leap from that 😊

I haven’t conflated the two, you have.

In this circ you’re not trying to control your DH. You may be trying to annoy him - which is fair enough as he’s a eejit.

My example of a controlling ex DH was a completely different scenario. Far from trivialising anything it’s based on a real person.

Nor did I speculate about your motivation - I’ve no idea what it is. But the reasons given here don’t ring true thus I questioned if you were being fully honest with yourself.

BudgetBuster · 25/06/2026 15:57

Aluna · 25/06/2026 15:48

I haven’t conflated the two, you have.

In this circ you’re not trying to control your DH. You may be trying to annoy him - which is fair enough as he’s a eejit.

My example of a controlling ex DH was a completely different scenario. Far from trivialising anything it’s based on a real person.

Nor did I speculate about your motivation - I’ve no idea what it is. But the reasons given here don’t ring true thus I questioned if you were being fully honest with yourself.

Why does it not ring true?
It's a bloody ring ffs... I've no clue why it's such a big HooHa to some people that she wants to wear it.

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