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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:
BeWittyRobin · 26/06/2026 07:48

Lilifer · 25/06/2026 20:00

Thanks @BeWittyRobin- that resonates with me. As for the ring, I’ll keep wearing it as long as I like it, I might get it resized to fit the other hand, I don’t care what hand I wear it on as long as it’s comfortable, but I certainly don’t feel compelled to do so.

I suppose for me the oddness is you’ve still got it on your wedding ring finger not the actual ring or who you received it from. I certainly don’t think you wear it for sentimental reasons. I would defo get it resized and wear on the other hand. But stay strong and don’t let him bully you. Sort out your boundaries and stick to them honestly you will feel so much stronger and more in control

Lavenderblue11 · 26/06/2026 10:46

His behaviour and comments towards you are as a direct result of his partner giving him grief. He's probably getting it in the neck off her, she'll be annoyed that you are still wearing the ring he bought you and may be thinking that you want to get back with him. That's what it looks like. Did his partner go with him to your son's leaving event? She probably clocked you wearing the ring and it's wound her up to the point of her telling him to go straight to your house to have it out with you.

1HappyTraveller · 26/06/2026 11:17

Lavenderblue11 · 26/06/2026 10:46

His behaviour and comments towards you are as a direct result of his partner giving him grief. He's probably getting it in the neck off her, she'll be annoyed that you are still wearing the ring he bought you and may be thinking that you want to get back with him. That's what it looks like. Did his partner go with him to your son's leaving event? She probably clocked you wearing the ring and it's wound her up to the point of her telling him to go straight to your house to have it out with you.

So now you have made these massive assumptions you are now excusing this man’s behaviour and blaming another woman for it 🤦‍♀️

For goodness sake. HE is the problem here.

Lilifer · 26/06/2026 11:42

@DimwittedSkaterthat’s exactly how I feel! And even if I was inclined to sell it I would be reluctant as you never get the full value of the ring when you sell it because the jewellers will want to make a profit on it too. We knew the jeweller very well who we bought the ring off and he told us that he was selling it to us at cost, but that the high street value of it would be a 100% mark up, so it’s likely I would only get the cost value and not the full re-sale value.

OP posts:
Lilifer · 26/06/2026 11:43

Lavenderblue11 · 26/06/2026 10:46

His behaviour and comments towards you are as a direct result of his partner giving him grief. He's probably getting it in the neck off her, she'll be annoyed that you are still wearing the ring he bought you and may be thinking that you want to get back with him. That's what it looks like. Did his partner go with him to your son's leaving event? She probably clocked you wearing the ring and it's wound her up to the point of her telling him to go straight to your house to have it out with you.

What a reach, your arm must be aching.

No partner was not at the event.

ExH has insisted this is his issue not hers, he might be lying but knowing his as I do for 30 odd years I can well imagine that it’s his issue alone.

i get along fine with his partner, she seems like a good person and my kids are all very fond of her. I doubt she is kicking off about this.

OP posts:
DuckbilledSplatterPuff · 26/06/2026 15:48

Dear @Lilifer

1) The ring is YOURS... and you have made it even more yours by wearing it on your hand for several decades. They do say that possession is afterall 9 tenths of the law. Would his new partner even want to wear a ring that's been on the hand of her predecessor for several decades. I wouldn't. You are keeping it for your children - in the meantime, wear it on your hand or through your nose or keep it in the freezer next to the frozen peas or send it to Comic Relief - Its yours to do whatever you want with and no body else's business at all.

  1. Funeral. What is the point of complaining about you seating position so long after the event? Nothing can change that. He is just mad that his family are treating you with mutual respect, that they invited and welcomed you to the event. They welcomed your sister too. Because they knew you cared about FIL and wanted to support your children. From his attitude, I don't see much concern for their feelings coming from him.You have nothing to apologise for. He wanted to publicly demonstrate that you were low status in the lives of people you've been involved with for decades and he didn't get that. I'd pity him for being so fixated on that - it speaks volumes about his character.

3) Everybody is gossiping about you. Clearly not his family, not your children, the people who matter. Its only him who is claiming this. Never once lied in an argument? I think not. I think this leads on from my point above, he wants you to cower and feel ashamed and accept your lower status and worry that no one respects you. In fact, from his families attitude towards you and your own posts its clear that you have navigated this with kindness and care and anyone with a grain of sense will respect that. And if they can't well , sucks for them, big So What. You cannot be the only one who has come across his bullying nature.

  1. Walking into your home as he pleases to shout you down and make petty complaints. He's very lucky he can only find these few petty nit picking things to complain about. I really hope you do the whole Mumsnet package of changing the locks, give the DC new keys, get a door chain so if he appears at the door he stays on the step, and don't forget the good old ring doorbell. If he cannot speak to you with respect he cannot speak to you at all.

Well done for standing up to him. Onwards and upwards! Wishing you all the best.

Lilifer · 26/06/2026 17:29

Thank you @DuckbilledSplatterPuffthats really kind of you. Yes I do think he’s still angry at me for leaving him and always will be, that’s understandable but we have to co-exist in this small town so it would be so nice if things could be civil, but it’s not gonna happen. At his fathers funeral me (ex) sisters in law sought me out to walk with me, and every Christmas when they are all home we meet up, and it’s something that I know I am really lucky to have, and am really grateful to them that they didn’t cut me off because I left their brother / brother in law. Not many families do that, so it means a lot. I don’t think I need to tell ExH he’s no longer welcome to call by, I think I made that clear to him on Monday, but yes new locks will be got.

OP posts:
BlueMum16 · 26/06/2026 20:09

Lilifer · 26/06/2026 17:29

Thank you @DuckbilledSplatterPuffthats really kind of you. Yes I do think he’s still angry at me for leaving him and always will be, that’s understandable but we have to co-exist in this small town so it would be so nice if things could be civil, but it’s not gonna happen. At his fathers funeral me (ex) sisters in law sought me out to walk with me, and every Christmas when they are all home we meet up, and it’s something that I know I am really lucky to have, and am really grateful to them that they didn’t cut me off because I left their brother / brother in law. Not many families do that, so it means a lot. I don’t think I need to tell ExH he’s no longer welcome to call by, I think I made that clear to him on Monday, but yes new locks will be got.

If you don't want him in your home unannounced you need to tell him rather than make your DC piggy in the middle.

Just a quick text... I've reflected on you calling the other day and I'd appreciate it if you no longer turn up. Please message in future.

Lilifer · 26/06/2026 23:05

@BlueMum16 I would never use my kids to deliver a message like that to their father, I’m perfectly capable of telling him directly and have already done so.

OP posts:
Jane143 · Yesterday 16:16

Lilifer · 25/06/2026 19:53

Where did I say I curated them? I came across them when sorting old photos and put them in a box, along with any duplicates I found of kids photos. You’re reading a bit much into that. And thanks for giving me a laugh after a long day reading that you think I would step back into the marriage, I pulled the plug on an 18 year old marriage for good reasons, none of which have changed,

I had a really horrible husband but still had the decency to share family photos out between us when we split so I think you’ve done nothing wrong there.

ScribblingPixie · Yesterday 16:24

Btw I misread the photo thing and thought you had made duplicates, so also agree that your actions were totally normal.

ClaudiaNaughton · Yesterday 18:17

You must now keep it where it is - don’t want him letting everyone know he’s spoken to you pretty firmly and sorted it out.

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