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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

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My sons girlfriend is a problem!!!!!

620 replies

worriedgran57 · 28/11/2015 22:46

This is my first time on mumsnet so I hope I am doing it properly!! Hope you don't mind a gran asking for advice!

My son is with a girlfriend who is 17. She fell pregnant right before she was 16!! They had only been together 6 months. My son was just finishing his A levels and it was a very worrying time. He is a very smart boy, his IQ is very high and we were hoping he would go to Oxford or Cambridge.

He didn't do well in his exams. Studying went to pot, because he was of course so worried about his girlfriend!

Now I know she is still young, but she is very manipulative. She told my son she had problems with her period, so he thought she couldn't get pregnant...clearly that wasn't the case!

Since the baby (a little boy) came along, my son has had to resit some exams. He has been so stressed at the behaviour of this girl. She seems to want him to get a job, but in the long run going to university would be a better option. I told him that he needn't think he will be playing happy families with his girldfriend and the baby because he has his education to think of....he is only a boy. They are both too young to set up home together!

I also have a 14 year old daughter and I don't think this girl is a good influence....she used to go out with her friends a lot before the baby was born,sometimes not coming home until 11pm at night....she invited my daughter out a few times but I didn't allow her...it's not so much the girl herself, it's her friends I am worried about!

This girl has been allowed to do whatever she wants...taking the train to the city for the day. staying out, going on holiday with people her parents barely know....

She isn't a bad mother but she is careless...last month she took the baby out a 2 mile walk in the pram with only a coat and a thin blanket on. She takes him miles away on the bus, he sleeps in her bed....I know they are just little things but he has no routine or stability in my opinion

She is rude about our house...we have 6 cats and 3 dogs and she told my son she didn't want to let the baby sleep in his cot in the living room because she felt he was unsafe near the animals! My animals would never hurt anyone, they are rescues and very gentle and timid....she thinks our house is dirty. OK it might smell a bit catty but it is not dirty! She also refused to sit in the living room with the baby when my husband was watching TV, she said the show was too violent...

I don't feel comfortable in my own home when she visits with the baby, I have got into the habit of taking my daughter out and going to do the weekly shop when she comes round on a Saturday.

I try to be involved with my grandson but she makes it awkward. First she doesn't let him sleep in our living room, but then she suggests going for a coffee with my son, and wants me to babysit??? I told my son that we aren't there to babysit just so they can have fun.That is not what being a parent is about!

I just don't know what to do...I wish my son wasn't in this position. He is still very immature for his age. I think it's all too much for him to cope with. When his girlfriend was pregnant, I asked the school to let all his teachers know the situation, so they would be aware of the stress he was under when he was doing his exams/...but they said they couldnt because the girl was at the same school and she was their priority....I feel like my son has been overlooked from day one, but he needed just as much help!

Where do we go next?

OP posts:
Gowgirl · 28/11/2015 23:01

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Ughnotagain · 28/11/2015 23:01

Jesus Christ tell me this isn't real.

OP, you sound like you're being incredibly unreasonable towards this girl.

If your son didn't want to risk his girlfriend getting pregnant he should have worn a condom. Like pp said, this baby is as much his responsibility as hers.

Do you remember being 16? Can you even think how much turmoil you'd be in if you'd got pregnant at that point?

Your post very much sounds like you see her life and future as being very inferior to your son's. So your son has had to put off going to university. What about her life? Her goals?

You're a grown up. A proper one. Fucking act like it.

Oh, and I wouldn't let my baby sleep in a room with that many animals present either. Can't knock her thereS

LucyBabs · 28/11/2015 23:01

So how old was the boy when his girlfriend became pregnant?

Posters are saying a man making a girl pregnant. I'm thinking he was 17 and the girl 16?
I agree he is as much responsible as the girl for their child. Obviously! Confused

PacificDogwod · 28/11/2015 23:02

You actually sound deeply threatened by this girl Hmm

SugarMiceInTheRain · 28/11/2015 23:02

My first thought was that this must be a reverse too.

Your son needs to face the consequences and support his girlfriend and child. That might mean working and doing an OU or part-time degree but whatever he decides to do, he needs to put his child first. Obviously it's not what you (or he) had envisaged for him, but you need to face reality and deal appropriately with the situation at hand. For the life of me I can't understand why you seem to be laying all the blame at his girlfriend's feet. He is equally responsible for the situation he finds himself in, and as such, he's going to have to make some compromises. Please just support them both in this, rather than making life more difficult by encouraging him to carry on as if the child didn't exist.

StubbleTurnips · 28/11/2015 23:02

Dammit Gow I bet your right.

PacificDogwod · 28/11/2015 23:02

Have you considered if an off-age man got your DD pregnant in a years time - how would you feel then?!

I am not sure either why I am on here - over and out.

OddlyLogical · 28/11/2015 23:02

How could he possibly think that she wasn't able to get pregnant?
Your son has behaved disgracefully and needs to take responsibility for his actions.
You need to stop blaming her.

And I wouldn't let my baby sleep in your living room either.

Hatethis22 · 28/11/2015 23:02

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worriedgran57 · 28/11/2015 23:03

I know he should have used protection, I have told him how stupid he was!

She is a nice girl in many ways,she makes lovely cake for a start!

She is just very different from what I am used to and I don't know how to handle her! I wasn't expecting this kind of situation when my children hit their teens!

I know my son was stupid but it is hard to see him throw his life away when he had so much potential

OP posts:
IfNotNowThenWhenever · 28/11/2015 23:03

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Samcro · 28/11/2015 23:04

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StubbleTurnips · 28/11/2015 23:04

Having children = throwing your life away.

Nice.

worriedgran57 · 28/11/2015 23:05

He was 17 when she got pregnant so not a man. He was 18 when the baby was born!

I can't help my feelings as a mother... I always thought it would be lovely to see my grandkids and to see my children marry and settle down, but not when they were doing their a levels. But i want to make the best of a bad situation

OP posts:
Gowgirl · 28/11/2015 23:05

Going back to the glittery facebook thread now good luck allGrin

MotherofFlagons · 28/11/2015 23:05

I find it hard to bond with her, she is very independant and seemed to mature very early! None of my children are like that, they have always been happy to stay at home and potter around! She isn't a bad girl just not what I am used to*

This speaks volumes to me. You're used to having your kids do what you tell them and because the GF apparently doesn't do that, you've surmised that she has 'ruined' your DS's life.

As several others have said, if your DS didn't want a child, he should have bagged it up.

x2boys · 28/11/2015 23:05

now just a minute ops son is now 17 girlfriend got pregnant just before sixteenth birthday the pregnancy takes nine months so girlfriend must be nearly seventeen too i dont agree with what the op is saying but i dont think theres a lot of age differance between the teen parents so he hasent commited any kind of crime!

NerrSnerr · 28/11/2015 23:05

He hasn't thrown his life away but his life is now different and he has to act differently. He needs to support his child. They need to think about how they will pay for their child before they think about university (both of them). Your son is now an adult so he needs to step up.

Ledkr · 28/11/2015 23:06

Op my son and his girkfriend had their baby at 18. They had to give up uni and I was very sad.
But I was supportive and helpful and I now have a fab little grandson of 6 and a lovely DIL who I consider a true friend and lovely admission to our family.
Open your mind and your heart, it may surprise you.

worriedgran57 · 28/11/2015 23:06

sorry Samcro, it's not bollocks, it is my life at the minute. I hope you never find yourself in this sort of situation, i don't know anybody else who has been in it and I was hoping I could find some help here!

OP posts:
Finallyonboard · 28/11/2015 23:07

She was below the age of consent OP, your son was not!

janethegirl2 · 28/11/2015 23:07

I feel very sorry for the girl having you as a potential mil.

You seem to be very self centred and completely unaware of how you've failed your ds by not having discussed the need for contraception if you made love to any girl.

His education can be further fulfilled in the future, but the babe is here now and that should be his most important consideration.

worriedgran57 · 28/11/2015 23:08

Ledkr it's good to hear from someone who has been in the same boat!

Did you struggle with the situation at first? How did you feel better about it?

OP posts:
SleepIsForTheWeakAnyway · 28/11/2015 23:08

I think you should send her to Mumsnet.

She sounds like she may need some mil advice now in the future

Ledkr · 28/11/2015 23:08

Addition obvs