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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

DH has left again

664 replies

AndHarry · 17/05/2015 08:34

Third time in as many years. He sat me down last night and said he was unhappy and thought we should separate. I asked him what he was unhappy about and what I needed to change. It was difficult to pin him down to anything but then it came out: he wants me to do things for him like sew buttons back onto his shirts and fix his trousers when there's a hole in the pocket or the hem has dropped. That's it. He wants to put me through all this again because of a few buttons. It's so incredibly pathetic I would laugh if I wasn't crying.

What it actually boils down to is that he wants to feel respected as the manly head of the household, even if he hasn't put it like that. As I told him last night, it's difficult to respect him when I feel like his mother: organising everything, picking up after him, reminding him of essential things that need doing for the kids, coming into the kitchen many days to find it full of dirty crockery from the day(s) before (I cook, he washes up), struggle to tidy up because the bins are overflowing (his job) and have to cajole him into coming out with the kids instead of sticking on a DVD and lying on the sofa all weekend. I have tried and tried in as many ways as I could think of to make things easy for him and do things for him but get ground down by the sheer laziness of his response. The more I do, the less he bothers.

I said I would do everything around the house if that would stop the arguments and resentment, just to be stonewalled with 'it won't work'. I asked him to try doing the household chores he had agreed to do, consistently, and got 'it won't work'.

I pointed out that I had supported him in going to the gym every morning before work and going out with his friends several nights a week so that he gets his own time. Apparently 'it's not that'.

I said how hurt I was that he had complained about what I cooked so I only made the things he said he wanted but he still orders pizza for himself. How hurt I am that when I did as he asked and made his lunches he didn't eat them, preferring to get fast food instead. 'Shrug'.

The fact is that he has a pretty cushy life but, as he repeatedly points out, he is the 'breadwinner' while I only work because I want to, so anything wrong around the house is immediately my fault for not being wifely enough.

I ended up screaming into my pillow with sheer frustration. He didn't come to bed and this morning he wasn't in the house and his car has gone.

Another fall to the tax office to sort out tax credits tomorrow. Another time trying to keep myself together for the kids, dealing with their anxieties over their dad being gone, pretending that he's in meetings or at the gym every evening. Dealing with my parents' disappointment again.

I'm sorry this is an essay. I don't want anything, just needed to get it out.

OP posts:
WhoisLucasHood · 27/05/2015 21:34

Well done Harry. You're going through a difficult time with amazing strength Flowers. I hope you are enjoying your hols.

twistletonsmythe · 27/05/2015 21:43

Very well done for getting rid once and for all.

Hope you have a lovely rest of your holiday.

butterfly133 · 27/05/2015 22:32

Well done! This man is a millstone round your neck, you will be much better off without him. And if your parents can help, let them. You'd do the same for your children so why not?

Lweji · 28/05/2015 12:08

That's great. :)

down2earthwithabump · 28/05/2015 23:26

Just read this thread as it is not dissimilar to my situation. Thanks for posting. Stay strong and I hope your trusted 4 can really reboost your confidence and help you get on with life without the unnecessary chaos. All the best.

AndHarry · 30/05/2015 18:01

Sorry to hear that down2earth. It hurts :(

We're back from a brilliant holiday. STBexH took the DC out for the afternoon so I had some time to unpack. I'm afraid I lost my cool with him when he started acting like a martyr over it though. And breathe. I'm trying to remember that all of the crap will no longer be my problem. That helps a bit.

OP posts:
tipsytrifle · 30/05/2015 19:45

Ha! Take no prisoners AndHarry. Glad you had an awesome break!

AndHarry · 30/05/2015 19:56

He stayed at our house while we were away and invited BIL over. They used one of DS' toys as a target for BB gun practice in the garden and broke it! He's promised to replace it but DS is upset :(

OP posts:
Clutterbugsmum · 30/05/2015 20:05

I really have no words to describe about them using DS toys to shot at Shock. How sick is that.

tipsytrifle · 30/05/2015 20:08

He stayed at your house? He destroyed a DC toy? He played manchild games with BIL? They both need banning and locks need changing. In my opinion.

AndHarry · 30/05/2015 20:18

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

AndHarry · 30/05/2015 20:41
Hmm

He asked if he could stay and I agreed so it's not like he broke in. It's also his house too (joint mortgage) so I can't change the locks. I am annoyed though and cross for DS; he's a sweet little boy and didn't understand why his daddy broke his toy.

OP posts:
tipsytrifle · 30/05/2015 20:45

OK i understand .. was just instantly furious. Maybe no agreement in the future to him staying? I don't know. He could legally move back in at any point I guess.

tribpot · 30/05/2015 20:58

Can you find something of his to use as BB gun target practice now you're back? Why would he do something so deliberately cruel to his own child? (And indeed not replace it before the child got back?)

Wanker.

So glad you've had a good holiday - onwards and upwards.

Lioninthesun · 30/05/2015 21:28

Here's a pic he can print out for target practice; the woman he needs in his life according to him Grin

DH has left again
TendonQueen · 30/05/2015 22:15

Good riddance. I'd get whatever thing of his he really values that he's left in the house (preferably something he'd have expected you to sort out if there was a problem with it) and 'accidentally' leave it in a sink full of running water or something. Everyone else and their things are disposable to him. See how he likes it.

Lweji · 30/05/2015 22:29

What Tendon said.

Or just pack that stuff and leave it outside the door, then target practice on him when he picks them up.

Lweji · 30/05/2015 22:29

(joking)

AndHarry · 31/05/2015 16:23

I briefly considered cutting holes in all his trouser pockets but have so far managed to resist temptation. They're all gone now anyway :o I've had to content myself with sorting out the kids' toys, tackling the mounds of paperwork on the breakfast bar, scrubbing the marks off the wall next to the highchair and stripping the table. It's been much more productive!

I've turned into a watering pot since yesterday evening. A mutual friend called last night and I spent 2 hours sobbing down the phone at him while he gave me all sorts of good advice and encouragement Blush
At church today I ended up crying on two different people's shoulders, both lovely old friends but still Blush Blush News seems to slowly be spreading and people are being so nice that it's toppling my self-control.

OP posts:
Penfold007 · 31/05/2015 17:15

AndHarry you are amazing Flowers Wine

AndHarry · 31/05/2015 18:22

I wish I felt amazing!

OP posts:
AndHarry · 01/06/2015 15:49

Right, here's my checklist. Am I missing anything?

  • move salary to single account
  • make application for tax credits (done)
  • engage a solicitor (done)
  • work out budget (done)
  • apply for single occupancy rate council tax (done)
  • move direct debits and change to my name only
OP posts:
mix56 · 01/06/2015 17:00

A new single account in your name, with no codes he knows. any savings move into it.
Change all passwords on phone & devices. dis-install any iCloud, or mutual visibility on MSN, fb or other
Photocopy all paperwork/remove all paperwork & leave it with your Mum/best friend, (not in your house.) bank statements, mortgage payments
Ditto passports, tax return etc.
Appointment re child maintenance & child custody (don't do it in a "friendly" way, it will backfire.
Put a bolt on the inside of your front door, change the back door lock. You do not want him going in when you are out.

You are doing absolutely the right thing. Bravo

Cleo22 · 01/06/2015 17:20

Not sure if it has been mentioned - Do a credit check to see if there is anything else you don't know about. Also do the same on the company.

rumbleinthrjungle · 01/06/2015 17:51

So sorry OP. Not that you feel this way at the moment but you are well rid of this overgrown 14 year old.

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