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Relationships

Mumsnet has not checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. If you need help urgently or expert advice, please see our domestic violence webguide and/or relationships webguide. Many Mumsnetters experiencing domestic abuse have found this thread helpful: Listen up, everybody

What to do regarding his extreme jealousy in our relationship?

98 replies

blueballoon79 · 25/09/2012 15:35

Hello, I'm hoping some of you ladies can give me some advice.

I have been in a relationship with my boyfriend since June this year.

He's often been jealous and if for example I don't answer the phone straight away or I'm out when he calls me, he'll really question me as to where I've been, who I'm with and what I'm doing.

He tries to pass it off as him only joking but I know he's not and I've asked him to stop and told him it upsets me but he still continues.

These past two weeks he's been worse than normal. Last Sunday he finished work and was supposed to be coming over to my house to spend the evening with me.

My daughter (3 yrs old) was up at 5am that morning and I was exhausted so went for a lie down with her on Sunday afternoon and didn't answer his 5pmish call until I woke up at 6pm and heard the phone ringing again.

When I answered I could tell he'd been drinking and he was questioning me as to whether I was alone, why I hadn't answered the phone and he didn't believe anything I was telling him. I told him I could tell he was drunk and wasn't going to continue the conversation with him accusing me of being a cheat etc and hung up on him.

He then appeared at my door at 9.40pm by this time he was steaming drunk. My daughter had woken up again as she had been ill and was sitting watching TV with me in the living room. He even went and asked her if I'd spent the day with another man!

I put my daughter to bed then told him he had to leave as I was going to bed too and wanted to be alone and that I'd speak to him in the morning.

He left and I went into the living room and went on my PC then heard a knock on the door. It was him again, he'd spied on me through my living room window and seen I was on the PC and was accusing me of chatting to men on the internet. I pushed him out of the door and locked the door behind me and he shouted through my window that I was a liar etc.

The next day he was extremely apologetic, said he'd acted like a tosser and it wouldn't happen again, yet on Saturday we spent the evening together whilst my children were at my parents and I wanted to go to bed as I was feeling really ill with stomach ache. I tucked the duvet under my stomach to try stop it hurting and he said I was clearly only doing that to create distance between us. He said it was obvious I was seeing someone else and that he'd go through my mobile phone and all my e-mails and that he'd find me out.

I couldn't be bothered with him hassling me so said I was going out for a walk and to clear my head. He threw me onto the bed and told meif I attempted to leave the house he'd rip all my clothes up so I'd have nothing to go out in.

It's my birthday on Friday this week and I've organised to have some drinks with friends in a local pub and I've told him I don't want him going as I want to spend time with my friends and I don't want him causing a scene and upsetting me in front of my friends which I strongly believe he will (he's called me a slag and a slut in front of a pub full of people before now for no reason whatsoever!)

He now says I'm being hurtful and is thinking that the reason I don't want him going is because there's going to be another man there or because I have a male stripper booked and all sorts of crazy things. He's told me that if I don't invite him he'll come into the pub and kick off with everybody there and smash the place up. Then later on he's said he won't kick off he was just saying that.

I don't know what to do and am seriously thinking of just cancelling the whole thing. It's just making me feel unbearably anxious and unhappy. When it was his birthday he went out with his mates without me and I just told him to go off and enjoy himself. Why can I not be treated the same way?

Sorry for the tremendously long post and thank you for taking the time to read through it all.

OP posts:
Technoviking · 25/09/2012 16:03

You're making excuses already.

He's making you feel guilty and you're believing him.

He's a scumbag and won't be happy until he's either ground you and your child down totally or he's killed you.

OneMoreChap · 25/09/2012 16:04

Astonishing. He needs binning.

blueballoon79 · 25/09/2012 16:04

Do you really think he sounds dangerous?

I've found myself thinking that over the past few days but was thinking perhaps I'm reading too much into the situation.

I've even found myself googling murders by jealous husbands/partners and worrying myself silly over it.

OP posts:
OrangeClub · 25/09/2012 16:05

Numberlock - I was thinking the same thing. Very, very dangerous.

OP. You probably feel embarrassed about telling people what he is like. This is what these men feed off. Tell someone, anyone and protect yourself.

EdMcDunnough · 25/09/2012 16:05

Oh my God Sad

This is terrible, you have to get out NOW - he won't let you go easily, be prepared for that, he threatened to destroy your possessions, he's out of control.

I'm sorry you are doubting yourself. You've done nOTHING wrong.

Please take steps immediately to get him OUT of your life and your daughter's life - you do not have to engage with him further, don't answer the door to him, ask him to leave if/when he shows up, if he refuses, call 999.

I won't go into how I know what to do. Just please trust me on this. I thought you might be describing the same man I left a while ago.

Please, please end this relationship right now.

EdMcDunnough · 25/09/2012 16:06

Yes absolutely he is dangerous.

greeneyed · 25/09/2012 16:06

Please leave him. He is dangerous, if not for yourself for your little one, don't bring someone like this into their life. Run away fast!

PeppermintPasty · 25/09/2012 16:07

What about you Blue? You sound to me like you think you can fix him, help him? Why (if I'm not being too presumptuous) do you feel like this, do you think?

This doesn't sound anything at all like a healthy relationship. You can't help him. He's showing you now what he is like. It won't get better IME Sad

AttilaTheMeerkat · 25/09/2012 16:07

He does not think you are worthy at all. Infact such men hate women, all of them. He's the one being hurtful and selfish here.

If you do not bin him now you (and by turn your DD) will be dragged down with him. He is certainly not doing your own self esteem and worth any good at all.

There are an awful lot of red flags surrounding this bloke; I assume as well you were picked well more like targeted by him because he finds you easy to control and manipulate.

What do you get out of this relationship now?. I cannot see anything at all good about this whatsoever. If this is what he is like now, just imagine another year of the same - and worse. Such abusive treatment does escalate; you need to bail out now before you are further harmed by him. Do not hesitate to get the police involved if he continues to harrass you.

My counsel to you as well is to read "Why does he do that?" written by Lundy Bancroft.

EdMcDunnough · 25/09/2012 16:08

please read this

tzella · 25/09/2012 16:08

...also the 'I love you' stuff so early in a relationship comes up again and again and again in the list of red flags.

Hold on, I'll find the link.

blueballoon79 · 25/09/2012 16:09

Yes OrangeClub I am really embarrassed to tell people what he's like. I sometimes think they wouldn't believe me as it all sounds too ridiculous to be true.

I even felt stupid writing about it on here but I really needed some advice and someone to tell me I'm not going crazy.

Whenever I get upset about the way he's treating me he starts asking if I've taken my pills (i'm on anti depressants) as though him being awful to me isn't a valid excuse for me being upset and that I must just be going crazy and be needing my pills.

OP posts:
OrangeClub · 25/09/2012 16:10

And by the way these type of men always have a 'reason' for being like this. Wife cheated on them, mum cheating on dad etc.

It's all crap. He is jealous, angry and controlling because he is abusive. End of.

If you are googling articles about men killing their wives or girlfriends then surely, in the back of your mind, you must think he is capable of this.

To be honest I would phone the police now and get something on record so they respond quickly if anything else happens.

AttilaTheMeerkat · 25/09/2012 16:10

Blue,

re your comments:-

"Do you really think he sounds dangerous?
I've found myself thinking that over the past few days but was thinking perhaps I'm reading too much into the situation".

No, you are not reading too much into this at all.

This man is very damaged. What do you actually know about him in terms of background, relationship history etc. You cannot rescue and or save someone like this nor should you try. He is not your project to rescue and or save!!.

Such men do not let go of their victims easily either so you need to protect yourself from harm.

PeppermintPasty · 25/09/2012 16:12

Oh my god, he gets worse. Seriously, please please finish with him. Get your friends around you for moral support, and do tell them what he is like. It's just not worth it.

God listen to me telling a stranger to please finish with someone. Don't think I've ever done that so explicitly on here.

Numberlock · 25/09/2012 16:12

Yes I do still have contact with my daughters father

That was the reason I asked, blue, because of the danger you are putting your daughter in.

Sorry to be blunt, but if I heard my ex was introducing people like this into my kids lives (and vice versa), I would be doing everything I could to remove them from his care until I was 100% satisfied the new 'partner' was off the scene.

Don't forget your daughter is witnessing this behaviour - the bit where he turned up pissed and started questioning her, for example. I imagine that would be quite frightening for a 3-year-old. And no doubt there are other examples you've not told us about.

If you can't dump him for yourself, do it for her.

EdMcDunnough · 25/09/2012 16:12

I'm sure that his background has something to do with how he behaves. The crucial thing is though, he's using it as an excuse - ie he's making out that this makes it OKAY when in fact any normal, decent person with this amount of baggage would be seeking help to sort it out, not using it to justify abusing and threatening behaviour.

Thereasons don't matter, it's what he's doing about it and what he's doing currently is using you as a victim.

The longer you stay with him the harder it will get to back out. Do it NOW

Badvoc · 25/09/2012 16:13

Run
Fast
And don't look back

Narked · 25/09/2012 16:13

Dump him.

Three months and he's acting like this? Insulting you in public, accusing you of cheating, hiding outside your window FFS! Making you doubt your own reactions and making you consider cancelling your birthday do because of his jealousy.

You deserve a hell of a lot better. He sounds unstable and unpleasant.

blueballoon79 · 25/09/2012 16:14

Peppermint Pasty I don't think I can help him-no. I suppose I'm just overly sensitive towards other peoples feelings.

I've always been this way and I always end up feeling guilty and like I was in the wrong even if I really wasn't.

OP posts:
Badvoc · 25/09/2012 16:16

You are putting you and your daughter in danger by continuing this "relationship"
You are right.
You can't help him.
But you can help yourself.
Dump him.
Change phone number, e mail address too.
Very very big alarm bells ringing for me op :(

Technoviking · 25/09/2012 16:16

He doesn't have any feelings, aside from a desire to own you in every way.
There is NOTHING you can do about it, whatever you try he will twist.

The only thing you can do is get away from him and stay away. Otherwise your child will be his next target, once he's done the job on you.

Narked · 25/09/2012 16:17

You're not responsible for other people's feelings.

If you find it difficult, think of your DD. Three years old, ill, watching tv at night when a man comes in 'steaming drunk' accusing her mother of slleping with other men.

OrangeClub · 25/09/2012 16:18

Blue.

This is scary for you. I have been there. I am not telling you any of this to scare you but I ended up with a panic alarm in my house (put there by the police) and a remote alarm for my car because the man I had finished with threatened to put a bullet in my head. He was jealous. It started as a slap across the face and ended with death threats. I had a small child too.

The last thing you should be doing is questioning your gut reaction to him. Please don't try and find reasonable excuses for his behaviour. You know what needs to happen.

Narked · 25/09/2012 16:19

Tell your friends how he's behaved.