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Left on my own Christmas Day

152 replies

Lastrolos · 05/01/2026 23:40

My partner of nearly 20 years (not married) share a DD who is 5. He works full time and I have been the sole carer of her until she started school in September. We both adore her, he is a devoted father. However, since she was born he hasn’t been a great partner. He is openly hostile towards me, is no longer at all loving, doesn’t attend any family engagements on my side of the family, however he expects me to play the part of his partner without having to make any effort for me at all.

This December I have done everything for Christmas, bought and wrapped every single present for DD, his family and mine, decorated the house (he doesn’t even help get the boxes down) attended all the children’s parties, organised everything. This is quite typical. The last two years my parents have come for a quick breakfast before they go visit my siblings houses (they stay about 1.5-2 hours) and then we’ve gone to his sisters, and the following year we went to his parents which is for many more hours obviously (both with all his siblings and their children). I have a good relationship with them as we see them so much. This year however, nobody had made any plans, and I was glad as I felt I’d been fair spending most of Christmas with his family the two years previous so we ordered our turkey and planned for a quiet Christmas at home. I was actually quite poorly most of December and was really struggling but I absolutely still put in all the effort. I made a lovely dinner Christmas Eve and we had a nice family time. I put all the presents etc out once DD was asleep, he didn’t help at all. In the morning after present opening my parents came as normal, I did a little breakfast, and then I cooked the Christmas lunch. I finished washing up and was looking forward to settling down and playing with DD when he announces everybody is going to his parents and I could get ready and come too or he was going to take DD anyway. He complained breakfast was rubbish and so was dinner, and that i was boring and just left without me (in hindsight feel he was trying to start an argument in order to try and say it was my fault he left). Usually I probably would have got ready to go so I wouldn’t miss out on time with DD but I just felt so hurt and it was obvious I had been crying so I stayed at home on my own. DD said she didn’t want to go but he basically persuaded her explaining she’d have more presents at nanny’s (really the message of Christmas hey). I felt totally heartbroken to have basically been treated like a maid and then cast aside once the hard work was done. I’ve had to really just get on with Christmas since then as I didn’t want to spoil the rest of it for DD, she had been so tired with first term of school and really needed a rest. I spent lots of time with her and made up for it but I still can’t get past the fact that he did that to me and didn’t even apologise after I basically worked and planned all of Christmas and then didn’t get to enjoy it. I am still really angry and sad, it’s obvious he doesn’t love me anymore and I feel quite heartbroken. I make every effort for him and just feel I really didn’t deserve to spend Christmas afternoon and evening on my own without my DD.

OP posts:
Howwilliknow122 · 06/01/2026 09:42

IndigoIsMyFavouriteColour · 06/01/2026 00:27

What does this man bring to your life?

He doesn't. Op has acknowledged this already.

YorksMa · 06/01/2026 09:44

As others have said, those are not the actions of a good father. He's disrespecting and emotionally abusing you in front of her. He's using her a pawn to get at you. He's disrupting her Christmas Day out of cruelty and selfishness and goodness knows what he's saying to her about you. Not. A. Good. Father. I grew up in a home like that and the scars are permanent. That's all without even a word about what a cruel and useless partner he is. Accept the inevitable and call a solicitor.

RabbitsEatPancakes · 06/01/2026 09:46

He sounds like a horrible man and you should definitely leave but equally you're a SAHM to 1 school aged child, I'd expect you to do the donkey work around Christmas and at home. You have 6hrs a day to put towards it.

Lastrolos · 06/01/2026 09:47

Enrichetta · 06/01/2026 09:19

So he is financing the project - but what is YOUR actual stake in it? What would/will happen to this and all other assets if/when you split? Have you had competent legal advice - what legal safeguards are in place?

We personally own the land, there’s no mortgage on it and it’s 50:50, not held in a ltd or anything. I would need to get some legal advice about what would happen when we sell it, but he would likely want to buy me out as it’s something we have worked very hard for.

OP posts:
Lavender14 · 06/01/2026 09:47

Op, this is a form of domestic abuse. He's emotionally abusive, but more than that op he's weaponising your child against you. He's quietly interrupting your relationship with your child (removing her from your care on special holidays, taking her to walk ahead away from you on days out, leaving you do to all the other housework/admin reducing your free time with her etc) and then gaslights you by blaming you for his unacceptable behaviour (it's because you're boring, a bad cook, etc).

He's not a good dad if he's using his care for his dd to weaponise his child against their other parent. I think you need to get support from womens aid and I think you need to start thinking a bit more cynically about the relationship he has with your dd - you are the one shoring up that relationship by doing all the grunt work and then he swans in and gets the glory for being a 'good' dad. I think he would absolutely use that against you in future so you need to be prepared for that. Stop describing him as a good dad - he isn't a good dad if he's doing the minimum- the easy fun bits and then using those to sneakily alienate her from you.

NettleTea · 06/01/2026 09:47

you need to make sure that you claim the child benefit, bercause if you leave and you need to claim UC, even if you work, you need to have her on your claim for the extra child element, even if you share 50-50. Given his work that is unlikely to be the case, and you absolutely need to ensure that he doesnt get to have all the weekends and fun times leaving you to do the grunt work of school weeks..

Your only financial leverage is for you having her most of the time, because if he goes 50-50 he wont need to pay any child maintanance, even though he is likely to fob her off on his mum during the week.

You wont have a court order as there is no divorce, so start logging now everything that you do for her, and how much actual parenting he does, while he is unaware, because if he did start to challenge and decuide to make a court order for more time with her, then they do like to maintain the status quo.

Get some advice regarding the plot - Is it equal in your names? Would he be able to buy you out? would that be enough to buy something small or, if you are working, a big enough deposit on something small for you to get a mortgage,

Now your daughter is at school it would naturally be a good time to consider working anyway, so I would be looking into that anyway, especially as you are not married so wont be able to claim anything beyond child maintanance and half of the asset. Time will see how hands on and devoted a dad he is when its not all served up on a plate for him and he has to actually do some parenting

Cucumbermunch · 06/01/2026 09:48

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99bottlesofkombucha · 06/01/2026 09:50

Other things you can change as you reinvent your life op - find study, a job, a hobby that takes you out of the home before dinner, and he cooks dinner for the family that night. If he loves his dd like you say he will cook her dinner. Start making him be a dad in all ways. Don’t let him cut you off from his family during this period, if they like you. That will make it harder for him to spread lies about you.

Midgetgemsplease · 06/01/2026 09:53

Fends · 05/01/2026 23:47

He’s not a devoted father. He’s a fucking prick. Leave him, he’s bringing nothing to your life.

This

Lastrolos · 06/01/2026 09:53

RabbitsEatPancakes · 06/01/2026 09:46

He sounds like a horrible man and you should definitely leave but equally you're a SAHM to 1 school aged child, I'd expect you to do the donkey work around Christmas and at home. You have 6hrs a day to put towards it.

I was a SAHM, I do work now and I also work on our project onsite so I don’t have 6 hours a day to put towards it but yes, I except he works longer hours and is the main breadwinner so I have and do most of the work (but shouldn’t be all) there is no step up at the weekends and he actually had a 3 week break in his contract with work so he wasn’t working at Christmas, he had just as much time as me to pull things together.

OP posts:
Lastrolos · 06/01/2026 09:56

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We don’t war in front of her.

OP posts:
Cucumbermunch · 06/01/2026 09:57

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Lastrolos · 06/01/2026 09:58

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I do have a job now, I was a SAHM before she started school.

OP posts:
Cucumbermunch · 06/01/2026 09:58

Do you have friends?
can you confide in your family?

EveningSherry · 06/01/2026 09:59

Sounds like an awful situation OP and I agree with everyone saying to leave. However, I wouldn’t let him get away with painting a rosy picture with his family. I would talk to them and say you’re struggling and worried he has checked out of the relationship etc. Not because you’re trying to make it work, but just so they know exactly who has broken the family up and so you can hopefully maintain relationships for your DDs sake when you do finally split.

flowerpowers25 · 06/01/2026 10:01

How old are you OP? Regardless you have your whole life ahead of you, time to find someone who loves you, or to live peacefully by yourself and co-parent DD.

Could you move in with family for a bit while you get sorted? I would leave ASAP. Every year you stay will be detrimental to you and ultimately to DD too.

Laura95167 · 06/01/2026 10:04

Lastrolos · 06/01/2026 09:39

Thank you. He isn’t openly nasty in front of DD and no he didn’t put in a lot of effort for Christmas, granted, but he knew I would take care of it so in this instance I think it’s more to do with his feelings for me than her. He does care for her. He reads to her / with her every single night, he drops her to school every morning and he is there for her. He calls us after pick up every day and checks how her day has been. He goes to all her concerts and he is invested in all her hobbies and school life, he buys books and goes to the library if she shoes an interest in certain topics and they have a lovely relationship. Yes I am doing all the background work but it would be unfair of me to say he isn’t a devoted father, he loves her very much. He might not be modelling a loving relationship for her which I accept is terrible but he tries his best for her in most other things. I have tried having many conversations about how he’s treating me and how he’s making me feel, but nothing ever improves. I’ve also probably excused a lot of his behaviour because of stress and I’ve stayed because I didn’t want to disrupt DD life and I hoped things would improve. I’ve spent 20 years with him and I did love him very much and I wanted us to have a future together. But I realise now I need to get my act together and start building my own life with DD. She needs to see me happy and not putting up with whatever this has become.

Im not saying hes a terrible dad, but hes only devoted to the fun stuff. Hes relying on you for all the background work, the shadow stuff she doesnt see.

And if you tried talking to him and its getting no where, then either try and arrange marriage counselling so you can get help explaining this to him or planning a life without him

Tessasanderson · 06/01/2026 10:05

This is so horrible. He is weaponizing your DD which neither parent should ever do.

Put your plans in place and start strengthening your own family ties as you will need them. Organise visits to your own family and friends with your DD, invite your DH but if he refuses let him see what its like to be lonely.

At the end of the day, you could leave him today if you wanted. It would be the start of a new life for you and your DD. It would hurt for a while, you and him both. But surely he must realise the way you are living isnt good for anyone in your family.

Lastrolos · 06/01/2026 10:06

flowerpowers25 · 06/01/2026 10:01

How old are you OP? Regardless you have your whole life ahead of you, time to find someone who loves you, or to live peacefully by yourself and co-parent DD.

Could you move in with family for a bit while you get sorted? I would leave ASAP. Every year you stay will be detrimental to you and ultimately to DD too.

I’m 39, he’ll soon to be 46.

Thank you, staying with my parents isn’t really an option but I agree I do need to remove myself from this ASAP. Thank you for your advice.

OP posts:
Cucumbermunch · 06/01/2026 10:10

Lastrolos · 06/01/2026 09:58

I do have a job now, I was a SAHM before she started school.

Full time? Decently paid? Or is there scope there for you to get more independent income?

PinkyFlamingo · 06/01/2026 10:11

Lastrolos · 06/01/2026 09:56

We don’t war in front of her.

It's not all about rows, children aren't daft and they pick up on atmospheres. I feel sorry for her

grrrlatrix · 06/01/2026 10:12

I’ve read a lot of terrible posts on MN, but that’s actually made me feel sick. What an absolutely disgraceful person he is. I’m so sorry.

Thistleton · 06/01/2026 10:12

However much he does for your DD, by failing to love, respect and care for you - her mother - he is proving himself a poor father.

I’m sorry OP, I very rarely post on threads like this but his behaviour is appalling and I think you must walk away with your head held high. I wish you all the best.

JingsMahBucket · 06/01/2026 10:20

Cucumbermunch · 06/01/2026 10:10

Full time? Decently paid? Or is there scope there for you to get more independent income?

WTF? You keep asking questions the OP already answered in her first post or subsequent posts. Instead of firing interrogation at her, sit and read properly then comprehend it instead of harassing the poor woman.

Cucumbermunch · 06/01/2026 10:21

JingsMahBucket · 06/01/2026 10:20

WTF? You keep asking questions the OP already answered in her first post or subsequent posts. Instead of firing interrogation at her, sit and read properly then comprehend it instead of harassing the poor woman.

Where does the op say whether decently paid?