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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

Aaaarrrgggghhh Husband doesn’t want me to work

204 replies

user1499625336 · 30/07/2018 18:13

Hi All

I am so bloody depressed..I’m 35, married to husband for five years. When we met I was a student nurse. He had had a motorbike accident and I helped nurse him back to health. He still has some issues but leads a more or less normal life. After we’d been married a couple of years he got a compensation payout (we are talking millions) and he put it all in a protected trust for himself. He bought our house in the trusts name and when we have an argument he tells me to get out of ‘his house’. He moans like crazy/sulks if I go out to work (he says I’m worried I will meet someone else and leave him even though I reassure him etc). So I forfeited my nurse training because of his constant pressure to stop at home with him- I also started developing depression. Long story short I’ve wanted a job for a while now but he’s dead against it (in the past he’s sabotaged my efforts of working like altering my alarm clock, telling me that I should be happy staying at home etc). My confidence is at rock bottom but I thought a little part time job might help me. He gives me ‘housekeeping’ money each month but I pay for everything, including holidays so there’s hardly anything left over. Ironically I spent all last week decorating and I suddenly thought ‘I’m spending what little money I have on paint/materials and working to decorate my husbands house. Next I’ve got the garden/cleaning to do..am I a skivvy?’ So I’ve told him I’m going to get myself a part time job. His response? Ok but you need to start paying towards the bills. Problem is, we live in a huge house- the council tax alone is £300 a month so I’m going to be effectively working for nothing. There’s no financial incentive to go out to work and my husband is going to be moody/play mind games. Am I being unreasonable thinking that it’s unfair to make me pay towards the bills? It’s just he tells me it’s his house and he’s got over 7 million....I’m so confused!! Help!

OP posts:
MadeForThis · 31/07/2018 11:43

Leave. Move into your own house.
Don't worry about his suicide threats. It's part of the manipulation.

You are allowed to be happy
You are allowed to work

Whyohsky · 31/07/2018 11:51

OP, I might be wrong but did you post under another name a long time ago about staying with someone who’d been extremely ill/‘changed’ in some way, healthwise? (I only ask as I was also on that thread and things are not good here either.)

SandyY2K · 31/07/2018 12:13

I'm so happy that you have your own house and 10k.

You also own half of the house you live in.

He's scared you'll leave him because he knows he treats you badly and you can do better.

Get a job...let him pay all the bills and get back to your counsellor. It was working.

Hasbirabbi · 31/07/2018 12:24

wow - no-on but no-one has suggested ...TRY COUNSELLING or MEDIATION ... that is such a sad reflection on the crap, selfish times we live in!
Respect to the lady for doing what she did.
Yes - you must be respected and loved in a relationship and this 'my house' business is a bit sad in these circumstances.
Whether you choose to leave or not, I would only counsel you to get mediation from a really good, older, more or less neutral, wiser source - if you choose to stay - it will be easier, and if you choose to leave, it will be a lot easier too. You never know - don't give up just cos a million cyber folks tell you to. Best of luck! R.

Hasbirabbi · 31/07/2018 12:27

Btw - for what it's worth - I am saying that as a man. One who has been there through thick and thin for his other halves - yet they tended to throw in the towel and later burn in regret - one thing that they always missed was getting the mediation or counselling in - and that would have made it civil. Keeping it civil is how you stay sane!
Best X

newdaylight · 31/07/2018 12:34

@Hasbirabbi
Why don't you read the fucking thread like the bit where he banned get from counselling.

Why be civil as an abusive dick.

I say that as a man too (but I'm not sure why that matters)

Hasbirabbi · 31/07/2018 12:52

Here we go... some abusive, self-righteous troll who thinks it is ok to f n blind. Go and learn some manners.
Don't even bother with timewasting like that.

Quartz2208 · 31/07/2018 12:58

Hasbirabbi have you read the thread she is in a deeply abusive relationship and most have said she should leave to HER OWN place with her OWN MONEY and walk away from the cash. You are victim shaming

SandyY2K · 31/07/2018 12:58

@Hasbirabbi

Couples counselling is not advisable when there is abuse. The abuser uses it as manipulation and further abuse.

No decent counsellor worthy of the profession would counsel them as a couple...if they know the reality.

Hasbirabbi · 31/07/2018 13:02

Well - that is your opinion.
I beg to differ. But it comes down to individual choice - which seems to be being bullied by peer pressure nowadays!
I can live with that difference!

Hasbirabbi · 31/07/2018 13:05

Erm -- victim shaming for asking her to use her own mind!!... lol... what are you on?... please do pass me a sniff!
But seriously... I am not victim shaming. You, on the other hand, are being abusive and bullying.
Please desist from harassing me!

hellsbellsmelons · 31/07/2018 13:14

Well - that is your opinion
Nope - that's common knowledge and something that is NEVER recommended by the domestic abuse charities or anyone else.
Any decent counsellor will not continue joint counselling with an abuser.
It's something that everyone should know.
And no-one should do!!!

SandyY2K · 31/07/2018 13:15

Well - that is your opinion.
I beg to differ

If you mean me...It's not my opinion. It's fact.

It's a breach of the BACP ethical framework to counsel under these circumstances. To do so is putting the abused client at further risk of abuse.

I know what I'm talking about from a professional perspective.

ItsNachoCheese · 31/07/2018 13:16

Womens aid will help you also seek legal advice too. Koko op

hellsbellsmelons · 31/07/2018 13:18

And you can't stay civil with an abuser.
Blimey - you don't know much do you?
Quite frightening.
Until you can learn something about domestic abuse, I suggest you remain off of these threads as your advice can, and will be very damaging!
Do some research.
Speak to some domestic abuse 'victims'.
Understand why certain things are not recommended.
Read the Womens Aid website.
Learn about it and then come back and comment.

Hasbirabbi · 31/07/2018 13:29

@hellsbellsmelons

Please do not patronise me. I know a lot more than you ever will, because I have seen both sides, and since childhood too, plus through the prism of law and agencies.
If you believe that one person's view is the be all and end all that is rather dull.
All I am saying is that it is her choice and she must not be brow-bullied and beaten into being forced and coerced into leaving NOR staying. For God's sake...

kalinkafoxtrot45 · 31/07/2018 13:48

I spy a mansplainer talking shit.

Lweji · 31/07/2018 13:49

There is only one way to deal with an abuser and that's to leave them.

hellsbellsmelons · 31/07/2018 13:50

Well from your last post you clearly really really really have no idea.

Hasbirabbi · 31/07/2018 14:30

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

SandyY2K · 31/07/2018 14:44

Well from your last post you clearly really really really have no idea.

Agreed.

This is a case of economic abuse. Why would anybody advocate staying with an abuser? Unless they are cut from the same cloth.

www.thehotline.org/2014/08/01/why-we-dont-recommend-couples-counseling-for-abusive-relationships/

StoatofDisarray · 31/07/2018 14:46

Divorce him.

hellsbellsmelons · 31/07/2018 14:51

Absolutely Sandy
The only amount of acceptable abuse in ANY relationship is NONE!!!

IJustHadToNameChange · 31/07/2018 15:01

Financial abuse - check.

Emotional abuse - check

You've been cowed into acquiesing to his demands and whims and into believing that it's all normal.

As per PP - seek legal advice, seek Women's Aid and ignore Hasbirabbi.

He seems to be mansplaining from some sort of religious viewpoint and has no idea.

hellsbellsmelons · 31/07/2018 15:01

And I believe our new 'MAN' that has come to save us all may be a certain thing he is calling others.
So let's not feed it!