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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

Help fixing my sensitivities/relationship problems

94 replies

falaff · 22/10/2018 13:29

Hi everyone. Sorry this is reeeally long but there's so much I need to get off my chest and I really need some advice.

I have read some really good advice on here and I'm trying to get over a recent breakup. I've posted a few times. I am trying to understand what role I played in the breakup and how to move forward.

In a nutshell, my partner was very insecure and became quite jealous of friendships and interests. I posted about this, which he found and read, and we tried to resolve it. It was a relatively short (10mo) but very intense relationship. We were best friends and he became my entire focus outside of work. I am feeling very hurt and upset as I've had to leave the city and give up my social life - I am now totally alone with no friends as I've had to move back with my parents.

He was often quite blunt and sometimes snarky with me and picked me up on little things, like how I behaved in shops, how I talked to people, how much attention I gave him, and how I responded to his behaviour when he upset me. We had big fights centered about me telling him that I was upset, and then him in return saying that I was too sensitive. If I upset him then he didn't want to hear my reasons and I found that really, really hard (it was always unintentional - I never once tried to upset or hurt him).

He did say that he would try harder and he did get better, but occasional things would slip through, for example, making snidy commets about my obsessive interest in music/bands when I was younger, and my current interest in a musician that he doens't like. This latter one really grated because it's a hangup from his jealous behaviour from earlier. He was also really focussed on how he came across to people, for example, if I got upset on our way to a social event, he would be more concerned with people seeing I had cried and thinking that he was a bad partner than how I was feeling, if you see what I mean. I feel like someone shouldn't have to try to be nice to someone, it should come naturally. It comes naturally to me and I tried very hard to be a good partner.

I just couldn't take the mental anxiety. I broke up with him because I tried to imagine how this behaviour would affect me years down the line and when we are no longer spending all of our time having fun but dealing with houses, kids, money, parents dying, etc.

I often felt like he thought I overreacted and needed a thicker skin, and because he had worked on his insecurities, that it was now my time to fix things. I tried to tell him that I couldn't help how I felt if he said something that upset me and that I couldn't just ignore it. I tried to keep it all in but it didn't work, I just got resentful and it led to us breaking up.

I don't think my partner did any of this consciously, he was just expressing his feelings. He was feeling very insecure, had been cheated on in the past. I could see him struggling a lot and working hard on his problems. And I feel like a hypocrite saying that I am allowed to express my feelings but he isn't.

Sorry I am waffling slightly but I would like to understand if I do need to work harder on my own feelings and how I can work on this. I have always been told that I am a very sensitive person, but I don't know how to change. I feel like I've thrown this relationship away because I can't take criticism. I wish I was more resilient and could let things wash over me and I wish I had a thicker skin. I've had counselling, done self help, tried to ignore it, but it never works - I just feel shit. I completely understand that this is very hard to live with and would like to change it.

I am really, really struggling not to go back to my partner because of all of the good times. I still love him, he was great for me in many ways. I feel very alone and want my life back. I don't know what to do.

Thanks for getting this far :/

OP posts:
falaff · 23/10/2018 21:24

@crunchtime that is lovely that your dh accepts you for who you are.

I have just told him that it's over and am sorting out moving things. It was very hard but I need to do this. I can honestly say that I have tried my very best, and it wasn't good enough.

Feeling utterly awful right now, going to go and run a bath and have a good cry.

OP posts:
category12 · 23/10/2018 21:31

FlowersChocolate

falaff · 23/10/2018 21:49

I'm going to eat a whole tub of Crunchie ice cream, fuck it!

OP posts:
PookieDo · 23/10/2018 21:53

I think eating your feelings is totally acceptable right now!
Flowers

JoyfulMystery · 23/10/2018 22:04

OP, no one should leapfrog into being someone’s best friend in ten months. Good on you for ending things, but don’t put all your eggs (friendship, love, total focus outside of work, all free time spent available to him etc etc) in one basket again. And examine your assumption that your personality is terribly flawed and needs ‘work’ in order to fit within a relationship.

falaff · 23/10/2018 22:09

Thanks, I will do.

Just dropped my phone in the bath. Woe is me!

OP posts:
JoyfulMystery · 23/10/2018 22:31

It's probably a (very sensible) message from the universe about not phoning him, OP. Good luck!

category12 · 23/10/2018 23:10

Yes, message from the universe not to call him Smile.

Bag of rice? Hope it dries out OK, and things will look brighter soon, it's just going to be painful for a while. But it will pass.

category12 · 24/10/2018 07:54

Morning op, hope you are doing OK?

Just wanted to say, when I met the present Mrcategory, the fact that he makes me feel "enough" was like balm to my soul. I can bloody bathe in it after a previous shit relationship Grin . He's not a paragon amongst men or unusual: it really isn't the norm that your partner will be your critic. It's not you, it's him.

PookieDo · 24/10/2018 09:12

You know what OP you are taking control of your own life back. You aren’t being cruel to him. Your potential future children will thank you both...

falaff · 24/10/2018 11:17

Hi cat. Feeling awful this morning, just arranged to get my stuff, all very amicable. My previous breakup was like this; everyone being very nice and lots of tears and what-ifs. It's excruciatingly painful. I wish I could just hate him, it would be so much easier. It's going to be so awful getting my stuff. Anyway life goes on doesn't it.

OP posts:
category12 · 24/10/2018 13:38

It'll get better.

Get in touch with friends and arrange something for the weekend, or plan out a treat for yourself. Have some stuff to look forward to.

falaff · 24/10/2018 14:22

Yeah. I'm hoping to go over a bit earlier and see some friends at the same time. I'm struggling at the moment because I have serious work commitments to a deadline that is holding me ransom at my parents' house. But that will be over soon. I'm scared about having a lonely Christmas but hopefully I will be feeling a bit stronger then.

OP posts:
AsleepAllDay · 25/10/2018 00:42

@falaff depending on how much stuff you have to get back, can you send an uber or taxi to have that stuff packed up in there for you? Depends on if you trust your ex - I did that after my last breakup and it just prevented having to be face to face

falaff · 25/10/2018 00:59

Thanks asleep. I do trust him and we've talked about it, and I'm going to go when he's not there. So it will be sad but not gut wrenching. I so desperately want to see him and be with him but it's just a really bad idea so I'm going to stay strong and try and get over it. I've done it before and I didn't die. I am in complete mourning for the relationship but I couldn't carry on and I know I've made the right choice.

Last time I had to move house using a boat as we lived on an island, and my ex was very sweet and helped me do it. It was bloody awful. I really hate 'nice' breakups.

OP posts:
falaff · 18/01/2019 01:05

Just thought I'd update this thread. I've been really struggling with the breakup and I'm still very sad. He said he was going to get counselling. I thought he was going to go away and work on himself and we would reconnect in a few months.

I just ran into him and he told me he met a new girlfriend after 3 weeks of splitting up in late november. So he had no intention of making it work. I'm very hurt by that and some of the other things he said, like 'my new girlfriend will stand by me if there are any issues'. That really hurt because I literally changed who I was to help him with his issues.

I'm very sad he moved on so quickly but trying to use it to help the healing process and really understand what a selfish twat he is. Onwards and upwards.

OP posts:
ClaireElizabethBeauchampFraser · 18/01/2019 03:40

Falafel please do not envy his new girlfriend!

Pity her!

He is now abusing and manipulating her just as he did with you!

He never wanted to change, his choices to abuse you were very conscious! He just said what he had to say to try to trap you into staying! He doesn’t need you anymore, so you are now seeing that there never was a nice guy! The nice guy was all an act to lure and trap you! The real him was always an abusive bastard! He is a narcissistic sociopath and you are so lucky to have escaped!

Please do the freedom program! Read the Lundy Bancroft book - how does he do that- your ex is in it! You have had great advice in this thread and for some reason it seems a lot of it slipped past you. Go back, read it all again!

You were in an ABUSIVE relationship! You now need to work on new boundaries and do the freedom program so that you can avoid abusers like your ex.

Pandamodium · 18/01/2019 04:47

When me and my husband had a child together his parents started treating my daughter (his stepdaughter raised by him no bio dad on the scene and who he has raised from a baby) completely differently.

I've zero respect for them now neither does DH to be fair. DD is 6 so a bit young to understand thankfully.

My uncle has two children one bio, one not they are both my cousins and I treat them exactly the same.

I totally get your wife's point.

Womanreadingletter · 18/01/2019 05:37

Op - I know what you have been through/are going through is really hard - but try and rejoice in the fact that you have had a lucky escape! Or rather not lucky - you quite rightly acted to protect yourself from a lifetime e of misery with this bloke - you took difficult action to protect yourself which should be applauded!

There are some very wise women on here who are good at spotting abusive behaviour from nine paces because (a) they've lived it and know the signs and (b) just like with cheaters, there is almost a "script" that abusers follow.

Out of interest, what was the reaction of your parents and friends to the break up? I bet my holiday fund they were happy and relieved and had been worried for you?

Your description of him summed up an image of a man following you around with a clip board writing down all your faults. He sounds sounded horrible tbh! Next time, don't take much notice of a what a man says to you, but how he ACTS.

You have been really strong! You deserve happiness whether that be on your own for a bit or with a decent man. Bloody well done to you op Star and good luck in the future!

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