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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

I left- and life is better

66 replies

YoureBeingASillyBilly · 20/05/2014 14:11

Ive been reading another thread where an OP seems to be at that point of knowing things are bad but not ready or confident enough to leave.

In the hope that it might give those in damaging relationships confidence to make the steps they need to chane things for the better, I thought it might be an idea to have a thread where MNers who have left bad relationships could post to show that it's doable and that it has been the right thing for them.

I'll start with my story and hope others will join me to show support for those amongst us who are having trouble making those necessry changes.

Almost 4 years ago i came down for breakfast and told EXP that once he'd finished his cornflakes i wanted him to leave.

The night before he had gotten drunk and almost set me on fire by squirting lighter fuel at me whilst i was stood beside the BBQ. Our 5 year old was standing watching. The night didnt get any better, he became verbally abusive and made the whole evening about humiliating me infront if our friends. This was the straw that broke the camel's back but our whole relationship had been variations on that theme. Small physical acts that could be justified as 'an accident' or 'just playing', verbal attacks that started as 'jokes' about a flaw in my character or appearance and would escalate to an actual monologue about how disgusting i was to him. And lying, so many lies that i will never know what was true and what wasnt in our entire relationship.

As i said, the BBQ was the final straw but i had been posting about him on MN for a while and been told several times i needed to leave. I knew i did, but i didnt think all those little things were 'enough' to end it. I could imagine him telling people "she kicked me out because i made a joke about her hair" and proving to everyone how 'nuts' i was. MN helped me realise i didnt need 'proof' that he was a bastard to justify leaving, i just needed to know that the relationship i was in was not making me happy and that alone was enough reason to end it. So i did. I didnt even justify it to him when i asked him to leave. And he didnt question me either- he knew. He'd known all along and knew he couldnt get away with it forever.

So he's gone and for almost 4 years now no-one has belittled me in my own home, no-one has manufactured a fight so they could avoid washing dishes or doing bath time. No-one has pushed me on the back of the head just to assert their physical strength over me. No-one whispers in my children's ears to come and tell me my bum got bigger. No-one does any of the things i would no longer find acceptable from someone who purports to love me.

I hope this can give a bit of courage to someone who is contemplating the future of their relationship.

You can leave, you can be alone and you can be happy.

OP posts:
JimmyCorkhill · 20/05/2014 14:15

What an inspiring thread. I'm so pleased you are happy now.

Lottieandmia · 20/05/2014 14:16

Thank you for posting this. It's exactly what I need to read at the moment.

YoureBeingASillyBilly · 20/05/2014 14:21

Thank you jimmy.

lottie ((hugs)) hoping you can find some support from it.

OP posts:
hellsbellsmelons · 20/05/2014 14:59

Great post.
And very pleased that you are out and happy.
All those things sound absolutely awful.
Strength can be found but it can take some time.
Well done!

kingbeat23 · 20/05/2014 15:16

Excellent thread and I'm pretty much in the same place as you.

4 years ago xdp walked out thinking I would call him back. I didn't. I breathed a sigh of relief.

Life is hard but not as hard as it would've been if I'd have let that abusive stay!!!

FlatCapAndAWhippet · 20/05/2014 17:00

Me too.

Five years away from constant derogatory behaviour and I can say, hand on heart, that I am happy and incredibly content with just dd and me. We have a lovely calm and settled life.

He did a lot of damage but he didn't win.

Happy days.

Paddlingduck · 20/05/2014 17:23

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

Missfishandchips · 20/05/2014 18:24

Fantastic thread, this has just spurred me on to keep aiming for my dreams, and reminded me that being a single mother is bloody fantastic Grin

YoureBeingASillyBilly · 20/05/2014 18:42

Glad to hear so many happy stories of single parenthood. It can be a scary thought to suddenly decide to go it alone but there is support in many forms and i cant tell you how i dont miss that lonliness of spending night after night lying in bed next to someone who should have been my go to support system but was in fact the cause of every problem i needed support for.

Keep posting. There will be people reading and gaining confidence from these.

Smile
OP posts:
makeitalargeoneplease · 20/05/2014 18:47

I'm taking support from this, thank you!

RollerCola · 20/05/2014 18:48

That's a wonderful story, I'm so glad you're feeling so much happier. It was these kind of threads that gave me strength last year, so I'll give an update on how things have changed for me.

My relationship with my exh was never physically abusive, but it was emotionally draining and it crept up on my over many years so I didn't know what was happening. He was constantly moaning about something, nothing was ever right and it was never his fault. He snapped at the kids, he moped about looking like the world owed him a living.

He never ever wanted to do anything, either as a family or just with me. He just sat at home in front of the tv, night after night. No conversation, no kind words, no hugs or kisses. He made it clear that he didn't particularly want to be with me, and he drank until he fell asleep many nights.

I used to drive home from work with dread in my stomach. I ended up on antidepressants twice, thinking I couldn't cope with life. Truth was it was him wearing me down into the ground.

It's been nearly a year since we decided to separate and my life is unrecognisable. I laugh with my children ever single day. We have fun together, I don't worry about what he'll think any more, the feeling of dread has gone.

We watch what we like on tv and sometimes just hop in the car and go out to wherever we fancy, without all the moaning and huffing and puffing that he used to do. Life is better, much much better. The kids still see their dad every week, he still seems the same but he is at last enjoying a better relationship with his children.

This time last year I was terrified about the future. Now I'm in it, it's wonderful and I'm so glad I made the plunge.

YoureBeingASillyBilly · 20/05/2014 18:58

Thanks for you makeit and handholding if you need it.

Great to hear that things have improved so much rollercola. Its so true what you say about just being able to jump in the car and treat the DCs without having to guage someone else's mood, present it to them in a way you hope will be appealing, plan it around their lie-in, xbox gaming and disappearing to see mates in the car just as you are about to leave.

OP posts:
ILoveCoreyHaim · 20/05/2014 19:02

Split up after 17 years, not really abusive or anything but ended up like brother and sister just getting on each others nerves and arguing so I told him to leave

5 years later he lives in the next street and we share looking after the kids.

Everyone is happier all around.

Nogreyhairs · 20/05/2014 19:18

I left - and my life is a million times better!

Was with my ex p for ten years - in that time I put up with him getting first verbally, then physically abusive. He managed to drag me down with him and I ended up with MH issues and agoraphobia so bad that I couldn't leave the house sometimes. I lost contact with my friends and family - I had no one.

Then I found out I was pregnant. The moment my dc was born, I knew I could never allow my beautiful baby to be subjected to the kind of life facing him if I stayed with my partner. So on the one hand I was so happy to have a gorgeous healthy baby, on the other I was terrified that I was going to have to face leaving him - and everything that would entail. But I saw it through and left him when my dc was only a few weeks old. Yes, it was hard, but there was lots of support out there for me once I took the step of asking for it - including that of my friends and family.

This is nearly twenty years ago now, and those last twenty years have been wonderful. I am married to a lovely, kind and gorgeous man, who is a wonderful father to my first born and also to the children we have had together since. I have the kind of life now that I would never have thought possible all those years ago.

To anyone living in an abusive relationship - there is a better life waiting for you.

shellistar · 20/05/2014 19:23

Left 2 and a half years ago. It was hard at first, I won't deny it. The cut off point for me was the phone call three months after our split where he told me I was fat, disgusting and no one would ever want me. Just over two years later I'm extremely happy with my personal Mr Perfect who doesn't belittle me, call me names, cause arguments, gaslight me, ignore me, threaten me or treat me like shit. My OH treats me like a princess!

My Ex used to do all those horrible things and more. He once threw a glass at me so hard it was lucky I ducked because the shards were embedded in the wall! If we disagreed about anything he'd start the usual "this is my house (ours) and you and your scummy council estate family won't get any of it, you're nothing"

I am happy, confident and able to do as I please without all the fear of having to deal with a man child!

mammadiggingdeep · 20/05/2014 19:39

Brilliant thread. Flowers for you all.

I read your old thread rollercola...glad you're happy.

I also agree with the jumping in the car and not worry about 'selling' the idea to a man child who drags his heels with a miserable look on his face.

coffeeandcream · 20/05/2014 19:41

A little different from some of your stories but here goes...

My Dmum left my F after 25 years of a shitty marriage full of emotional and financial abuse. He was a narcissistic alcoholic who ground her down into the dirt, drove away all her friends and remaining family, and made us relocate to the other side of the country isolating us all.

He was forever gas lighting her, told her she was common and he only married her to improve her, like he was doing her a favour.

She left him and was terrified of the consequences, but she got herself a little flat, listened to her favourite pop music all day, watched her favourite tv programmes, had her own car. She began to laugh again and found friendships.

Her health had been bad for years and limited her quality if life, but she managed as best she could. She died three months after their divorce was finalised.

But, she broke free of the bastard and lived her final months more the way she wanted, effectivly sticking two fingers up at him.

I was so proud of her that she managed it.

mammadiggingdeep · 20/05/2014 19:44

Coffee and cream Flowers how sad she didn't get away sooner but yes, you're so right to be proud of her, it must have taken great strength to break free after 25 years.

StrawberryTartYum · 20/05/2014 19:50

Thank you for this thread!

3mum · 20/05/2014 19:55

Oh God yes to the car thing! I used to spend so much time working round his moods, his elaborate sabotage of any deadlines (such as the start of a film) and his belittling of me in "jokey" comments. I spent thirty years with a man who never once complimented me.

I had forgotten all of that until this thread reminded me.

Handywoman · 20/05/2014 20:00

Rollercola your marriage sounds so similar to mine. Got out eleven months ago. Feeling low atm Sad which is strange because in many ways life is immeasurably better. I'm fine but still trying to process 14 yrs of crap.

KouignAmann · 20/05/2014 20:14

Another success story here. I left my EA H after 27 years when I stopped recognising myself and my behaviour. I was a numb and grumpy mother feeling resentful and uncared for. I had an affair which shocked me to the core. But it woke me out of a trance and I went for counselling. Four years ago I left my H to live alone (my DC are grown).
A year later I met a wonderful man. We have just got engaged and are buying a house. I am whole again, warm and happy and connected to life! It was hard and frightening to dismantle my life but I knew it had to be done if I was to find myself again.
If I can do it so can anyone.

CurtWild · 20/05/2014 21:02

Over the course of our marriage I'd been verbally and mentally abused, cheated on, had suffered aggressive and destructive behaviour, been told I was crazy, paranoid, insecure, insane, that I would never dare leave. He belittled my achievements. The lies and gaslighting were horrendous to the point I began to doubt my own eyes and ears. My confidence and self esteem eroded daily. I had met him as a strong, independent, breezy, funny, confident womam and six years later I got to a point where I barely recognised myself.

Then he started giving me the odd push during an argument. Tried to drag my wedding ring from my finger because I 'didn't deserve to be his wife'. Smashed things up. Screamed in my face.

Then it started happening in front of our 3 small children. And I found a house, packed them up, and left. I didn't have a penny as I was a sahm and financially reliant on him. But my brother was happy to lend me a few quid if it meant us escaping.

Three months later we have a lovely, peaceful, happy little home. DD1 is 3.5 yo and the twins are 18 mo. They're happy and settled and sleep better without being woken by a thoughtless father screaming at their mummy and intentionally slamming doors so I'd have to settle them again. I'm not exhausted any more. I look my age rather than this tired, haggard, miserable shell.

He is still abusive. His texts and calls are full of venom. Because I escaped and he can't control me any more. Because I'm happy. He barely sees our DC. Life for him is about socialising, all nighters, new flames.

For me it's about fixing what he broke. And I reckon I'm doing a good job. Absolutely no regrets.

mammadiggingdeep · 20/05/2014 21:03

3mum...yes, yes to the sabotaging of deadlines!!!!!!!! Made us 2 hours late for going to my parents one Xmas day. Late for weddings. Purposefully. Going in a go slow because he knew how much it meant to me to be on time. Wanker.

Very few compliments either, had some but very few and far between. Flowers for you.

mammadiggingdeep · 20/05/2014 21:05

Curtwild. You absolutely rock. Brilliant. Well done to you...you sound amazing
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