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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

Boyfriend trapped with parents - what should I do?

435 replies

SarahPickles · 08/05/2019 12:43

Three years ago a colleague and I fell in love. He is the most decent, caring, loyal, honest, kind man. The man I waited all my life to meet. He is 56 and I am 60, we are single, and we want to spend the rest of our lives together.

I own a house with ample space for him. But he lives with his parents because they are frail and elderly. He works as a clerk close to the house (in case they need him). All the rest of his time he is their (unpaid) carer, cook, cleaner, nurse, chauffeur, housekeeper, gardener and handyman.

We've spent a lot of time together at work, during breaks, plus about 6 hours during the weekend. He is always "on call" on his mobile. That means no trips away, no holidays and he can never stay at mine because we live 20 miles apart and he can't leave them alone all night.

I have nagged him to demand they give him more time off. They stubbornly refuse every suggestion. Won't hire anyone ("can't afford it/don't want strangers in the house") or apply for carer's allowance ("We'd never sponge off the State"), or allow any outside agency to get involved. They vow never to go into a home.

Their answer to everything is "We've got you. We don't need anyone else. You'll have your freedom when we're dead".

You could say they are holding him prisoner, partly emotional blackmail and partly dangling their £500k house equity as his eventual "payment" for years of unpaid labour. So he is trapped until they both die. That could be another 10 or 20 years.

I asked him to move in with me, (and marry me, so he inherits my house and savings) and force them to get carers' allowance to pay him and others to visit and look after them. But the State won't pay enough to cover 24 hour care, plus there is the neverending DIY he currently does. Plus he'd feel awful for abanoning them. So that is a "no".

I have retired and no longer see him daily at the office. So we are reduced to meeting for about 6 hrs a week. I have to drive 20 miles and sit in cafes, or pay for a hotel room (£80). Or he visits me for a couple of hours, and sits with one eye on his mobile in case they ring.

I feel fed up, aggrieved, lonely and hopeless about our future. He promises we WILL be together but I cannot pursue the question "when?" because that means speculating on when his parents will die, which is deeply distasteful. He admits that his mother could outlive him. I asked, "Where does that leave us?" His reply: "I'm trapped. I can't walk away, can I? I am sure it will sort itself out in the end."

I've thought hard about selling my gorgeous, unique home in a lovely area of a lovely town and moving to his (grotty) town and having to start all over again. My best friend said NO absolutely do NOT uproot yourself and lose your home and friends etc for a man who doesn't even have the balls to stand up to his parents. Even if I did, he still would not be able to move in with me. It would only remove the 40 mile round trip to meet up. I'd be paying a huge price for that.

Should I settle for a handful of hours a week with him, because he's my "ideal man", even if this isn't an "ideal situation"?

Or should I nag him to stand up to them and insist things change? Is it unethical to make demands, when they genuinely need him and I am self sufficient?

What do others do in this situation?

OP posts:
octonoughtcake3 · 08/05/2019 12:46

He is not going to change anything.

Are you sure he is not living with another women? Have you met his parents?

HairycakeLinehan · 08/05/2019 12:47

Ah OP! Cut him loose!!

I really have no more to say than that.
I trust you’re absolutely certain it is actually frail parents rather than a secret family?

Either way, life is far too short! Vamoose!

Justmuddlingalong · 08/05/2019 12:48

I would honestly walk away.

DramaRamaLlama · 08/05/2019 12:49

Your friend is right.

Apart from anything how can you bear to feel so much for someone who is happy to see you for a measly 6 hours per week!

ShinyShoe · 08/05/2019 12:50

Are you absolutely certain that the parents exist and that this is the real situation? Could he be avoiding making a commitment to you by using his parents as an excuse?

FleurNancy · 08/05/2019 12:50

Oh bless you. This isn't a healthy relationship for you. I would cut him loose and look for someone who deserve you, your lifestyle and what you can bring to a relationship. A 56 year old man child is not what you need. Flowers

ShinyShoe · 08/05/2019 12:51

Definitely do not sell your house!!

Musti · 08/05/2019 12:51

Life is too short for that. My best friend is trapped like that too.

UCOinanOCG · 08/05/2019 12:51

He is too entrenched in this relationship with his parents and will never change. You either accept what little you have or move on.

Daffodil2018 · 08/05/2019 12:51

Have you met them? How did they behave towards you?

cakeandchampagne · 08/05/2019 12:52

Right now, his priority is his parents.
You won’t be getting any more time or attention from him anytime soon.

teddytedted · 08/05/2019 12:52

@SarahPickles are you sure it's his parents he's looking after ? And he's not just got a secret family ? Xx

Unburnished · 08/05/2019 12:54

He doesnt want things to change. Its as simple as that. The deeper question is, why do you put up with it?

Redshoeblueshoe · 08/05/2019 12:54

I don't get why you put up with this.
4 out of the last 5 funerals I went to have been people far younger than him.

Drogosnextwife · 08/05/2019 12:54

Have you ever been to his parents house? If you are retired why can't you go and stay with him for a few nights a week? Surely you don't need to sell your house.

ScreamingValenta · 08/05/2019 12:54

I remember a man who mentioned his 'elderly parents' to me in the early stages of a relationship, and he did so in the manner of someone triumphantly producing a trump card. He might as well have added 'this is going to be my excuse for everything from now on'. I walked away.

Daenerys77 · 08/05/2019 12:58

He could walk away if he wanted to. He chooses not to. You are right not to want to wait until his parents die. Please do not sell your lovely home or uproot your life for a man who will not put you first.

Singlenotsingle · 08/05/2019 13:02

DON'T sell your lovely house. Have you met his parents? Have you visited, introduced yourself, socialised with them at all? What happens at Christmas? Do you spend it on your own?

You're still relatively young OP. I hear that someone in their 60s/70s could well have another 30 years to live. Don't waste it hankering after some man who's too spineless to organize himself and his parents.

Redshoeblueshoe · 08/05/2019 13:04

So he is working but you pay for the hotel room Shock
Why don't you rent your house out for a while and go travelling ?

SarahPickles · 08/05/2019 13:04

Oh gosh I didn't expect anyone to ask if his situation was real. I am 100% certain that his living situation is exactly as he describes. I promise you I am not a fool but a very cynical old woman who is very suspicious of men. Which is why I am still single: I don't take any shit from them. But this man is very kind, very unusual, which is why I love him.

For those who think I am dumb and hoodwinked: they have rung him when we've been together; he gave me their house land line number and I have rung it and they have answered; and we have Skyped and I have seen the house and them in the background. I have the address and a car and could turn up on his doorstep at any time. This has gone on for 3 years and there is no possible way he could openly give me his address and home phone number if he had a wife/family there. At work I was privy to his records and everything he ever told me checks out 100%.

Thanks for the comments so far. It's interesting to see that most women think I should not bother with him any more. I look forward to reading more opinions as it really helps to get a perspective on things.

OP posts:
Justmuddlingalong · 08/05/2019 13:08

You're relationship has no substance or quality.
He is your main focus. His parents are his.
If you won't take on board advice from MN, listen to your friend. She's talking complete sense.

FaithFrank · 08/05/2019 13:09

Your best friend is right. If he wanted to spend more time with you he would. He is not going to change.

'Nagging' is not going to accomplish anything except winding you up. It hasn't worked so far, has it?

Your choices are to either continue the relationship on the current basis or walk away. He is not offering anything else.

Iloveredwoods · 08/05/2019 13:13

He does have a choice here, and he is choosing not to prioritise you.

Have you considered cooling off for a few weeks to see if that would make him value you?

Don't make massive changes to your life unless he is also prepared to make changes too, which doesn't sound very likely.

Daenerys77 · 08/05/2019 13:13

If his parents really exist (have you ever met them?) they could consider equity release, which would free up funds to employ carers and a handyman. That would obviously deplete the eventual inheritance, but is it really worth giving up his freedom and the possibility of a relationship with someone who loves him for a possible chunk of money IF he survives his parents and IF they don't decide to leave it to a cats' home?

SarahPickles · 08/05/2019 13:13

Daffodil2018 and Drogosnextwife to answer your Q. At first there was a plan to meet but they became resentful of me. Partly for taking him away from their beck and call for hours at a time. But also, mainly, for putting "bad ideas" in his head -- he stupidly told them it was ME who had suggested carers allowance and getting some respite for him.

There is not the slightest possibility of me ever sleeping over at their house. I don't feel welcome and would feel profoundly uncomfortable.

OP posts: