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Married to controlling partner who resents my older children, next steps?

246 replies

iamafailure · 14/03/2026 14:56

I am a mother of two children - a son who is 18 and a daughter who is 17. Their father passed away several years ago. Some time after, I entered into a relationship with a man without fully realising the extent of the personal and emotional baggage he carried. He has three ex‑wives and five children. From the beginning, we mutually agreed that we would not have children together, as my priority has always been my own children.

Over the course of the relationship, I found myself constantly trying to please him, often at the expense of my own wellbeing. Many of our conflicts have centred around his past relationships - specifically situations where his ex‑partner would stay overnight with their child. He repeatedly insisted this was normal and necessary in order for him to see his child. I accepted this at the time, but looking back, I realise it was naïve of me to consider it appropriate.
We eventually married, but the issues have not improved. In fact, many of his behaviours have become more apparent and concerning. He is controlling, and he often refers to himself as an “alpha male.” During disagreements, he consistently places blame on me, regardless of the situation. When I attempt to express my feelings, he criticises the way I speak, stand, or behave - claiming I “talk like a man” or “stand like a man.” As a result, I am frequently left feeling emotionally burdened and exhausted.

A significant and ongoing issue is his attitude toward my children. He refuses to take any responsibility for them and frequently finds fault in even the smallest things they do. His behaviour suggests he does not want them in the home and wants my attention solely focused on him. His frustration is evident through actions such as slamming doors or kicking my son’s belongings out of the way. This has created an uncomfortable and unhappy environment for my children.

I am struggling with the emotional and physical load of running the household almost entirely on my own - something we once shared. My children are not happy, and neither am I. I cared for my children on my own before this relationship, and I am capable of doing so again if needed.
I am now at a point where I am unsure what steps to take next.

OP posts:
SergeantWrinkles · 14/03/2026 16:06

Jesus what a miserable existence. Your poor kids. I imagine they hate him. As they should. You sound utterly worn down. Please just leave.

Avader · 14/03/2026 16:11

TwistedWonder · 14/03/2026 15:44

Why on earth have you prioritised marrying a man with more baggage than Gatwick over your children and your own happiness?

Put you and your DC first and leave this shambles of a marriage before you lose your relationship with your kids completely.

Please stop being a MN cliche and prioritising dick over your kids. They deserve better.

How can you even look at a man who resents your children ?

Edited

This.

converseandjeans · 14/03/2026 16:18

pastaandpesto · 14/03/2026 15:53

Am I reading this correctly? You moved your two young teenagers, who had recently lost their father, out of their family home to a new city in order to live with a man who has three failed marriages and no less that FIVE children already?

@pastaandpesto he must be very charming or rich! Surely OP must have wondered why he had 3 ex wives already 🤷🏻‍♀️

converseandjeans · 14/03/2026 16:20

@iamafailure I imagine that the children will just move out as soon as they are able to. They are almost grown up now. If you want any sort of relationship with them then you need to get away from this situation.

pinkdelight · 14/03/2026 16:29

I entered into a relationship with a man without fully realising the extent of the personal and emotional baggage he carried. He has three ex‑wives and five children.

It's hard to square these two things. Hard to imagine a guy with that past not having a ton of issues, but it's done now and the important thing is not to waste another moment of your life on him. With that history and his behaviour you can have no doubt at all that he's the issue and you need to get out of that door now.

ArtAngel · 14/03/2026 16:32

OP - obviously you need to get your poor dc out of this situation as fast as possible.

What is your housing situation? Do you own a shared house? Have you got the capital from your previous house?

If you can afford it, I would rent and take your Dc out of this situation while you divorce and disentangle yourselves financially.

You have been emotionally abused and controlled by this man, he has robbed you of your confidence, and you need to rescue yourself while you still have enough self-esteem to do so and while you can still show your Dc that you care about them.

  1. Look at any alternative housing - can you buy alone? Can you rent?
  2. Simultaneously see a divorce lawyer and fond out where you stand legally and financially.
  3. Tell your Dc - tell them that you are aware of how awful this is for them , you are sorry and you are taking steps to separate and divorce.
Are either of them off to Uni?

Student loans are done on household income. If they take his income into account your dc will get hardly any maintenance loan - and you know that he won't pay. So that's another reason to act fast.

Catcatcatcatcat · 14/03/2026 16:34

Reclaim your life! Divorce this Wankbadger ASAP

Letterfrack · 14/03/2026 16:56

You have taken the very first step by posting here. Well done.

Take a little step each week - there is list of tasks - do which ever one you feel able to at that day - over time you will gain momentum and confidence - inching along the diving board - one day you will dive into back into your life of love and freedom.

Don’t beat yourself up - you were a vulnerable widow and he is a lovebombing, grooming, abusive narc - many strong, intelligent, successful women have been manipulated by such characters - look at Nigella.

youarenotafailure

Get yourself some strong professional emotional support and a shit hot lawyer. Talk to your friends and children. Ensure you are physically safe and have everything locked down before you tell him you have left.

movinghomeadvice · 14/03/2026 17:04

You are my MIL OP. The woman married the most self-serving, narcissistic asshole after a very messy divorce and abusive marriage. He could smell her coming a mile off.

Im telling you now, it will only get worse. Now that all her children have kids, she never, and I mean never, sees her grandkids. It’s not for lack of trying. We’ve tried everything to make her a part of their lives, but he always managed to engineer the situation so that she’s not available.

It’s the saddest thing I’ve ever seen. That will be you if you don’t end it now.

nochance17 · 14/03/2026 17:41

Three ex-wives is a red flag but you know that now. You gave up a lot for this man but maybe you were lovebombed in the beginning. He sounds like a narcissist and they are very good at reeling you in and then gradually devaluing you once you are stuck with them. Don’t be too hard on yourself, just take back control of your life and get rid of him, and the happiness you once had will eventually return.

Miloarmadillo2 · 14/03/2026 17:53

How can THREE ex-wives not be a massive red flag. Surely it crossed your mind the common denominator was he was a terrible husband? Become the fourth ASAP.

Missj25 · 14/03/2026 22:37

Fuck him away off out of your life , your kids come first not this disrespectful prick .
You’ll end up alienating your kids if you stay with him .
What do you seriously want him around you or your children for ??
I’ll tell you one thing for sure & certain , if he kicked one of my children’s belongings out of his way , he wouldn’t get a chance to do it again & I mean that.
He’s a bully .
Once he’s gone you will have a happy , content home again & your Children will thank you for it .
I’m sure you love them a lot more than you ever will him .
So leave him .

Mum8686 · 14/03/2026 23:16

I’d leave and get my life and peace back. Whatever the financial cost. Your dc are still very young. They need you. And if it were me, I’d want a good relationship with them going forward.

Fi16 · 14/03/2026 23:27

Wow you are not a failure, you probably chose the wrong person at a vulnerable time. I chose my husband as I thought he would take care of me and love my children. He cannot take care of me to be honest , if I’m having a bad day I’m a nuisance to him and he is one of these alpha males who doesn’t show much emotion. He loves the kids (our kids) but he is constantly critical of them and I’m always rolling my eyes at him and telling them to take no notice or sticking up for them. He does do stuff with them though and he isn’t a monster but I dislike his general personality. It is incredibly damaging to me and I stay because he has shown improvement but it has taken years of banging my head against a brick wall to see any change in him. This man sounds like he has no motivation to change at all. I feel so sorry for you as a widow and for those children with that man in their life after what you have all been through. It can be frustrating being a step parent but given his history it seems he is flawed , surely he would want to go out of his way to try and fit in and get on with everyone given their loss m. Protect you and protect your children . X

DaffodilTuesday · 14/03/2026 23:28

Well, I think first of all, you stop thinking you are a failure. You placed love and trust in this man and believed the best of him and now that has turned out not to be the case. You are not the first and you won’t be the last to make that mistake. It’s why divorce is legal now.
i think you realise now this is not a good man, and he is not treating you or your DC well. The best thing to do is consult a solicitor and work out next steps once you have proper legal advice.

Missj25 · 15/03/2026 07:38

iamafailure · 14/03/2026 15:18

I am sitting at my desk at work feeling completely overwhelmed as I think about the next steps I need to take. I wasn’t always like this. I used to be confident, clear about what I wanted, and able to stand up for myself without hesitation. My happiness revolved around my children, and together we lived a life that was free, joyful, and grounded in our own choices. We did what we wanted, when we wanted, and we were genuinely happy.

In committing to this relationship, I made significant sacrifices. I left the home I had built for myself and my children, and I even moved cities for this man. Looking back, these were major decisions made out of love and trust. Now, however, I find myself feeling weakened, unsure, and disconnected from the strong person I once was.

I miss the life I had with my kids - the peace, the independence, and the sense of control over our own home and our own happiness.

I meant to say in my post , I’m sorry you lost your husband & you placed your trust in a man that you thought was good & dependable.
Don’t think about anything to do with him anymore , just concentrate on leaving with your children .
Everything will be ok again.
Best of luck x

twohotwaterbottles · 15/03/2026 07:40

LTB

iamafailure · 15/03/2026 12:53

Thank you for your comments and for the guidance you gave. I appreciate you taking the time to respond and I hold myself accountable for what has happened.

I am trying to stay focused and have written down a few steps that I plan to take moving forward. At the moment, we are renting. My main priority is to find another place for us to live and move out with my kids. I have been looking at houses to rent online and will be calling letting agencies tomorrow to arrange some viewings.

Both of my children attend college, which is about a five-minute walk from where we currently live. I don't want to take them out of college. My daughter has one year left, and my son will be finishing in June before starting work in July this year.

I work from home, but I plan to take some time off so that I can focus on sorting things out for myself and my children during this time.

I also plan to speak with a lawyer tomorrow to get some advice about divorce and to understand what steps I should take next.

OP posts:
Nextweektoo · 15/03/2026 14:07

Leave before you lose your children.

DaffodilTuesday · 15/03/2026 16:21

Okay, but holding yourself accountable should be channeled into the forward steps you want to take now, not beating yourself up that this relationship turned out badly.
You had experienced loss, you were vulnerable and you wanted to believe or thought that things would work out better. Please do not judge your past self with what you know now.
Looking for your own property which will give you and your DC space again is a good step forward, and speaking to a solicitor which help you feel more confident about next steps regards divorce.
I wish you all the best.

Tumbler2121 · 15/03/2026 17:21

What you can do now is make a will in the kids favour so that if anything happens to you it goes to the kids not him.

divorce is not as urgent as moving away from him.

Letterfrack · 15/03/2026 18:05

Well done @iamafailure- that’s huge progress - mentally you have moved out and detached enough in your head to use your agency. Please do not alert him to any changes - please keep yourself physically and mentally safe. Your DCs need you in one piece. Do you have a close friend IRL who you can confide in?

Unexpectedlysinglemum · 15/03/2026 18:32

Definitely leave him but talk to a lawyer first and get your ducks in a row first

Bananalanacake · 16/03/2026 09:13

Well done on seeing you need to leave. Sorry if this is stating the obvious but if you don't have kids together you don't need to live together, say to a dp that you want a relationship without living together, then it is easier to leave when they reveal themselves to be controlling, abusive, a cocklodger.

Lavender14 · 16/03/2026 12:33

Op can you contact womens aid for support? If he's controlling theta a real risk to you and to your children if he finds out you are intending to leave. He is abusive to you and your children and leaving is absolutely the right decision but you need to be careful in how you do it. Womans aid can help with that planning. Speak to a solicitor who specialises in domestic abuse.