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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

Opinions on his behaviour towards DD, is this right?

15 replies

babygoose48 · 17/09/2018 11:34

Bit of background, I have a DD a previous relationship. me and my partner have been together 4 years, he doesn't have really much to say with the childcare or parenting etc, and I have shared care with my childs father.

I've started to pick up on some behaviours that don't sit quite well between my partner and my daughter. He treats her like she's almost a burden to him and has no rights to do things that I wouldn't ever dream of scorning her for.

Some examples.

  1. Partner was watching football the other night, so we sat and watched it with him. At one point I left the room and my partner shot out of his seat and angrily screamed 'penalty!' at the tv screen (like they do lol). I heard my daughter jump up after him and scream penalty also like she was wanting to join in on the action! I just entered back in the room and caught him going 'don't do that.'

She said 'why?'

he said 'just don't do that.'

Then I joined in and asked what was up with him, and he said really defensive and quite stern to me 'I don't like it when she does that.' His tone of voice was that tone that's meant to put someone in their place, so I didn't push it any further.

A few minutes later he did the same thing and not thinking, she jumped up again. Because I was in the room watching them, he just turned to me and laughed like it was the funniest thing ever, as if he wasn't bothered.

  1. We was at a christening yesterday and all having a conversation (in a group) but I was turned slightly in my chair speaking to his step dad. My partner said something and my daughter asked to repeat what he'd said. He said nothing, so she said 'no go on what did you say?' I turned around to see what was going on and he held her hand up to indicate to stop her speaking and went 'I said that I said nothing'. She looked at me cautiously as if she thought shed done something wrong, and you could tell it bothered her.

Its like he wants to put her in her place and dismiss her all the time, (usually when I am out of the room so he has more freedom to) but whenever I pull him up about it he pretends that he was never bothered by her behaviour (and when I say 'behaviour', I truly believe her behaviour is just that of a normal child and she hasn't done anything wrong).

It all seems so trivial and petty but this happens almost everytime hes with her and I think shes started to notice and its beginning to really bother her.

Were having a few problems in our relationship at the moment (other threads) which is another issue entirely, so whenever I talk to him about things that are bothering me he either passes it up or denies that he did it in the first place

OP posts:
Enko · 17/09/2018 11:37

the 1st one I wouldn't like and I would talk to him about why.

2nd one. is it possible he said something then realised it was not really appropriate for a child and wanted to just move on?

However overall if you feel uncomfortable then trust your instinct and start communicating.

hipposarerad · 17/09/2018 11:38

Trust your instinct on this one. He doesn't seem to like her very much and I don't think he views the two of you as a package, but you plus your 'baggage'

Mookatron · 17/09/2018 11:40

How does she feel about him?

TwistedStitch · 17/09/2018 11:44

Well going by your other threads he is lazy, crap with money, emotionally abusive and treats your child with at best indifference. With this thread it goes beyond indifference and into unkindness. I cannot think of a single redeeming feature that would outweigh all the negatives, or why you would want him around any longer.

babygoose48 · 17/09/2018 11:50

I’m just trying to find my bearings for when I confront him about leaving him. My head is so mashed at the moment and he justifies everything so it’s difficult to think otherwise.

The second point, from past experience I believe he was trying to put her in her place in a ‘I’m the adult and your the child, don’t be nosey’ kind of way.

OP posts:
Merryoldgoat · 17/09/2018 11:54

If you want to leave him, you don’t need loads of reasons - not wanting to be with him is enough.

Do you depend on him financially?

tillytop · 17/09/2018 12:01

How old is DD and has he been like this towards her for the whole of the 4 years? It's not trivial or petty OP, you're following your gut instinct which is why we have it.

ArtemisWeatherwax · 17/09/2018 12:11

This is the lazy arse wipe, yes? If he can't pick his nasty pants off the floor then he's hardly going to be nice to your daughter.

Elephant14 · 17/09/2018 12:44

babygoose you have posted so many times, this is an awful man, you have tried being together it didn't work - please send him back to his Mum's before things get any worse for your poor DD. You are lucky to be in the position where you can end it now.

Iooselipssinkships · 17/09/2018 13:10

Sounds like my Stepdad who just simply didn't like me and made it obvious when others weren't around. It got worse as I got older and then even worse when he had a child with DM.
If I dared speak up I was lying or a drama queen. This went on for 15 years and I'm still not over it. As soon as I was old enough I told him to fuck off and I haven't had anything to do with him since.
I wish DM had left him, I wish I'd been enough for her to go.

babygoose48 · 17/09/2018 13:22

DD is 7 next month.

Looselips - thank you for this. This realisation really helps.

OP posts:
Elephant14 · 17/09/2018 15:23

I wish I'd been enough for her to go

There's your answer OP Sad

Thingsdogetbetter · 17/09/2018 18:26

You don't confront some one when leaving them. You just leave them!

You don't get into a debate about why and who did what. You don't listen to his justifications. Because they DO NOT MATTER. You have decided they are unacceptable in a relationship. You don't care what he thinks or judges to be acceptable.

You get your ducks in a row and leave. It doesn't need to be discussed and dissected. It just needs to happen.

ichifanny · 17/09/2018 18:56

Do you really need to ask about staying with a man who treats your daughter like shit ? This could be very harmful to your daughter and cause her lifelong issues it’s your job to make her feel secure in her home , he sounds awful .

subspace · 17/09/2018 20:11

He treats you like a maid and your daughter like a dog. Flamin hell.

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