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Divorce/separation

Here you'll find divorce help and support from other Mners. For legal advice, you may find Advice Now guides useful.

Living together during divorce while he moves on and I parent alone

183 replies

whatis44 · Yesterday 23:45

Living through a divorce whilst still living in the same house is honestly one of the hardest things I’ve ever experienced. Every day feels emotionally draining and I genuinely don’t know anymore whether I’m expecting too much or whether most people would struggle with this situation too.

I work full time whilst also carrying the majority of the day-to-day parenting, such as every single school drop off and pick up, school admin, appointments, clubs, routines, cooking, emotional load, dog walking and all the invisible jobs that keep family life functioning. I’ve tried incredibly hard to keep things calm, stable and amicable for our two children despite everything happening behind closed doors.

Meanwhile, he seems to be living a completely separate life with very little thought for the impact on me or the children. He exercises every single day, three evenings a week after work and now even two 4am morning sessions as well. All while I’m left carrying the emotional load, the day-to-day responsibilities and trying to keep life stable for our kids.

It feels like he’s been able to prioritise his own freedom, routine and social life without ever really stopping to consider what that means for the rest of us or how much pressure it leaves me under.

The part I’m struggling with most is being told that we need to stay “amicable for the sake of the children” whilst also having to deal with behaviour that feels deeply disrespectful.

After telling me he was unhappy and after we both came to the heartbreaking decision that divorce was the only option, he met up with another woman the very next day to tell her the news.

Since then, there have been multiple meet-ups, Saturday morning runs together, evening exercise classes and now even morning classes too. And whats hurt almost as much as the situation itself is the dishonesty around it. There have been times I’ve asked where he’s been and been lied to and I know I was lied to because I could see his location on Life360, which he didn’t realise I still had access to.

All the while, I’ve constantly been reassured that “she’s just a friend.” Yet I see photos of the two of them running together alone on social media, while I’m at home trying to process the breakdown of our marriage and hold everything together emotionally for the children.

Maybe some people would genuinely feel comfortable with that situation. Maybe some people could separate it emotionally. But honestly, I can’t. To me, it feels deeply disrespectful and incredibly painful.

What’s making me feel completely mentally exhausted is the contradiction of being asked to peacefully live together and keep things friendly whilst trust is being chipped away at constantly. It’s hard enough trying to process a marriage ending without feeling like you’re also expected to quietly tolerate secrecy and dishonesty at the same time.

I know relationships break down and nobody is perfect. I’m genuinely trying to be reasonable and self-aware here, which is why I’m asking would most people accept this as part of separation and I need to become more understanding, or is this actually a really unfair and emotionally difficult situation for someone to be expected to live with day in, day out?

OP posts:
waterrat · Today 08:53

To be honest Op I think you need to stop waiting for him to change and take control of the situation for yourself

Can you and the kids move out? Can you begin divorce proceedings and force him out?

He sounds controlling and unpleasant but are you absolutely certain you can't move on now without waiting for his permission to do so?

Seymour5 · Today 08:53

whatis44 · Today 06:49

@Sosadsad yes I can but he wants top dollar for the house and once again we can’t agree on a figure.

Could you get the new bathroom installed privately rather than waiting on his whim?? Might be worth it to help sell the house more quickly.

FeministThrowingAPrincessParty · Today 08:54

Ok, let’s put school pics up to one side, although as you say, your youngest will probably have to go to after school club when she’s with him.
what about the weekends? Why don’t you do a clean split, you have them one day, he has them the other? Then you know you have a day to yourself.

waterrat · Today 08:55

He benefits from the status quo - you don't

Can you speak to a solicitor and find out exactly how to get out of this situation urgently - force a house sale/ just accept its shit and move out and live somewhere with the kids and let him keep the house and bills

RosieLeaLovesTea · Today 08:56

Definitely get your own legal advice asap. You are able to get advice whenever you want.
he will get a massive shock when he does eventually have them 50/50. Just sit back and smile when thinking of that.
if he is disagreeing on house price and not prioritising finishing the interior then this could drag on for several more years. You need to have your own plan about what to do in that scenario as he is just doing everything to suit him.

Clarabell77 · Today 08:56

Why are you allowing him to make all the decisions and decide what needs to happen. Get to a lawyer and get things moving, he needs to leave or you do for your own sanity.

crazylittlethingcalledlife · Today 08:57

whatis44 · Today 07:04

@SoScarletItWas unfortunately it is driving me mad. But what do I do when he is refusing to help and also refusing anything less than 50/50 custody? He also refuses to move out.

I honestly wish I could sell the house but he won’t agree to anyone else doing the work. He’s a builder!

I was in a similar situation to you where he instigated the divorce and then dragged heels for almost 2 years. My solicitor gave me great advice and I see some of it here as well, she told me that I needed to make it uncomfortable for him or nothing would change. I was doing everything and letting him just let his best life.

When I started putting some ground rules in place and he realised that he would have to step up, he then put more effort into resolving things. You need to agree what week is yours and what week is his and then start sticking to it this even while living together (and we are also still living together by the way) try to set things up to mirror What it will be like when ye move out. You also need to make yourself scarce when it’s his turn, or else you’ll just be left carrying the can.

CharlotteCollinsneeLucas · Today 09:00

The biggest mindset shift for you is: you don't divorce together. It's not a joint project. You do have to agree, but as he's not listening to you, do all your discussing through a third party. Any suggestion he has in the meantime, reply: "that's something to bring up in meditation, then."

Periperi2025 · Today 09:03

CharlotteCollinsneeLucas · Today 09:00

The biggest mindset shift for you is: you don't divorce together. It's not a joint project. You do have to agree, but as he's not listening to you, do all your discussing through a third party. Any suggestion he has in the meantime, reply: "that's something to bring up in meditation, then."

Yep.
There's a reason for the statistics that 80% of divorces are initiated by women. Because men are lazy and see that even divorce admin, even when they are the one wanting the divorce is women's work!

PlumPlumb · Today 09:06

If he's a builder I'm surprised he's claiming poverty? How sure are you of his finances?

80smonster · Today 09:08

Erm, if you earn more, is there a reason you don’t fancy pounding him with a solictor? I think no fault divorces are based on a 50/50 split of assets. If you know the value of the house and offer assets, maybe you could work out a settlement and offer that?

Gloriia · Today 09:09

waterrat · Today 08:53

To be honest Op I think you need to stop waiting for him to change and take control of the situation for yourself

Can you and the kids move out? Can you begin divorce proceedings and force him out?

He sounds controlling and unpleasant but are you absolutely certain you can't move on now without waiting for his permission to do so?

Agree. This is so awful to read, he is absolutely taking the piss.

He should've keep the ow secret not posted pics of her!

I understand it is easy for is to say but take control. Instigate divorce proceedings. Sell the house as it is with work needed, plenty do.

You need to free yourself of this awful, emotionally abusive man. Good luck Flowers

Gloriia · Today 09:11

PlumPlumb · Today 09:06

If he's a builder I'm surprised he's claiming poverty? How sure are you of his finances?

It'll be all all dividends and hidden payments. Self employed often seem to drive round in smart cars whilst claiming poverty.

Weeelokthen · Today 09:16

Sorry if i have I missed something. Why are you still there, living in the same house? You need to start looking at places to rent/buy. This ongoing situation is not sustainable by any stretch of the imagination.

Doubledenim305 · Today 09:18

One word. Lawyer!
Take back control.
He is absolutely calling the shots here and you feel you have no way of fighting your corner. Don't ask his permission. Book the lawyers appointment and stop trying to negotiate with him. He thinks he can walk all over you and he is🤬

ThreeLocusts · Today 09:18

OP I agree with pps that this situation is in fact abusive, not just unfair. He's exploiting you to the hilt while showing utter contempt, trying to get off lightly in terms of both money and childcare.

I think a good mediator should be able to see this. But don't wait for them, try to move on practically. You do have some leewayif he's so keen to avoid family court. Get legal advice.

Gloriia · Today 09:18

Weeelokthen · Today 09:16

Sorry if i have I missed something. Why are you still there, living in the same house? You need to start looking at places to rent/buy. This ongoing situation is not sustainable by any stretch of the imagination.

The awful stbexh seems to be calling all the shots.

None of this is sustainable or even acceptable op, I'm not surprised you are drained. He's got his dc cared for, a nice roof over his head. A floozie on the side. He's laughing at you, sorry.

Crazybigtoe · Today 09:20

If you earn significantly more than him, you may end up having to pay maintenance to him.

Lemonthyme · Today 09:20

I divorced by ex years ago, when my DS was 2. Or at least we started separating then. We had about a year of giving it a go and fixing the house then a year of trying to sell the house then we moved apart.

We didn't use solicitors and divorced in the end a couple of years later.

Some advice. It is entirely possible to be amicable and solicitors will just drain what money you have. But for your sanity, you need to be making steps towards living apart. His life now and who he's seeing is none of your business. You wouldn't even know if you lived apart. But living together makes it harder. I met someone in the 2 years we still lived together and that was hard for my ex. He tried to insist I moved out. I refused. But I don't underestimate how hard that was for him. Also I was doing much as you are. Doing all the drop offs and pick ups. I was even washing his pants right up to the end!

In the end over the last 6 months or so, after I told him about my new relationship, we pretty much alternated weekends. So every other weekend I went away to see my (now) partner and he'd look after our DS. As we split custody 60/40 initially (later 50/50), that was fair and also a trial run in a way.

My ex though was similarly crap at doing pick up and drop off while we were still living together but had to make it work when we weren't. Tbh that's the only thing I think will change your ex's behaviour.

Lastly a comment on solicitors, even if you don't go down the solicitor route, you need them at one stage. Between decree nisi and decree absolute, there is a stage where you need to do a financial settlement. Even if you're asking for no money from each other, still do this and get a solicitor to do it for you. It will only cost a couple of hundred quid. What you do is share both of your financial situation and a judge then agrees whatever you've set out is fair. So the kids aren't compromised by it all. (And unless it's grossly unfair, they normally agree.) What it means is that later, say, if one of you won the lottery or one died young, the ex will no longer have a claim. Otherwise, strictly speaking, they still can.

Anyway, a general comment I said to my ex before we got far down the road. "We both love DS. If we keep that front and centre of mind, we won't go far wrong."

Before either of you get adversarial, remember that. You both love your kids. Your ex will annoy you to hell at times, especially at this point. After all you've split up. He will sometimes behave like a dick but you both love your kids and at some point in the future you will want to ask for a favour, like swap a weekend or you'd want both to go to a birthday party. If you still get on, that will make it all a HELL of a lot easier. Let some things go which just aren't worth fighting over.

On the latter actually, my DS's 10th birthday party, both my ex and partner came along. Got along totally fine. Imagine a future where everyone gets on and you can even be friends with someone you used to love? That's entirely possible if you both do a bit of work on it now.

Bobcurlygirl · Today 09:20

You need to take charge. Some good advise but my suggestions:
Investigate a parenting app - one the records how long you spend looking after the children. Record every school drop off, parents eve, dentist, football club etc for a few weeks. You will need this as evidence he won't do 50:50
Keep written records of everything. Screenshot etc. Email and set a deadline for the mediation e.g. 2 weeks then you see a solicitor.
Email and set a date for the bathroom to be done (solicitor may be able to advise if you can claim this back via the house sale from him).
Stop pretending. Your kids know. Speak to them and explain.
Don't do any of his housekeeping. He will soon run out of clean clothes. Start to separate your things... Are the direct debits correctly named?
Find your anger as you are being far too passive. Be calm but firm. Get all paperwork in order.
Good luck

Imdunfer · Today 09:21

whatis44 · Today 07:04

@SoScarletItWas unfortunately it is driving me mad. But what do I do when he is refusing to help and also refusing anything less than 50/50 custody? He also refuses to move out.

I honestly wish I could sell the house but he won’t agree to anyone else doing the work. He’s a builder!

You get a lawyer.

OrangeSlices998 · Today 09:21

OP he sounds utterly dreadful you will have so much freedom and calm when you are well shot of him!

Can you afford to do the bathroom without him? Just pay a plumber and get it done? Or is he a tradie and wants to do it himself? if that’s the case I’d give a deadline and then just hire someone, preferably a local rival just to piss him off!

TBH everything you’ve described I’d skip mediation go to legal advice for yourself. You are being dragged down by the weight of this awful selfish man and any amount of money is worth being shot of him!

Lemonthyme · Today 09:23

Oh and the reason I didn't go straight to a solicitor? I did for a work dispute a few years before. The solicitor completely whipped up my emotions about everything. Then charged me £100s just for that initial meeting. So I switched to using the free legal cover from my house insurance, got a settlement I thought was ok but cost me no legal fees and found a better job.

If you need a solicitor, use one. But don't think it will help you with your relationship with your ex because it really won't. Whatever happens, you're both still parents and always will be. You will never not be part of each other's lives.

Imdunfer · Today 09:24

Weeelokthen · Today 09:16

Sorry if i have I missed something. Why are you still there, living in the same house? You need to start looking at places to rent/buy. This ongoing situation is not sustainable by any stretch of the imagination.

If she earns more and moves out then it could affect the divorce settlement very much in his favour if she proves she doesn't need the house.

My brother's lawyer told him on no terms should he move out until the divorce settlement was agreed.

Lemonthyme · Today 09:24

Oh and sell the house as is if he's refusing to do the work. Builders will never get work done on their own house.

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