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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:
SirVixofVixHall · 08/05/2019 19:15

Op, i wonder if you should now meet his parents ? They are demonising you, you are demonising them. You, quite reasonably want a normal life with the man you love, they want things to stay the same. Perhaps meeting and getting to know each other might make everything a bit easier ?

Puzzledandpissedoff · 08/05/2019 19:21

Come to think of it, if it's so hard for him to leave them alone, how do they manage when he's at work? I know you said the office is close by "in case they need him", but he obviously can't skip off from a job for any little thing ...

SusieOwl4 · 08/05/2019 19:21

if he is the love of your life then there must be a compromise . Could you rent your house out and rent closer to him ? Then he has to put his foot down and tell his parents he is not willing to sacrifice his whole life for the threat of losing his inheritance . So he needs to reduce care in some way . Attendance allowance would help with that . If he is not willing to do that then I am afraid you do need to walk away .

RosaWaiting · 08/05/2019 19:22

my guess is that the parents are respectful of his work because of the money it brings in.

I really hope he's actually seen the will...and they don't change it....!

Rain0ntheW1nd0w · 08/05/2019 19:22

I know older people than his parents that live alone, with some outside help eg cleaner, DIY person
It would be interesting to see what would happen if one of his parents went into hospital or passed away, to see if anything changed. Because, it is during that opportune time, that some changes can be put in place.
Instead of being at work, why can't he take a half day or a whole day to spend time with you ? (So long as he is back at his normal work time)
I don't think he wants anything to change
You on the other hand, want more !

Roussette · 08/05/2019 19:25

Good idea. He needs to book holiday and not tell his parents. Then use it to spend time with you

Puzzledandpissedoff · 08/05/2019 19:30

He needs to book holiday and not tell his parents. Then use it to spend time with you

Yes, that's definitely something it could be worth OP suggesting

I imagine the response might be instructive ...

IrishGal21 · 08/05/2019 19:32

Ex-carer here...old people's home and in their homes...the por guy will reach burn out or have his own health conditions soon which YOU might be taking care of soon! He should speak to the local adult mental health/care team and find out his options. There is plenty of home help out there to allieve his burden. Seriously, he should do this. he can speak to them in private, the folks don't even have to know.

You both deserve some quality time together and hell yeah you should be living the high life at your age!!!!

A neighbour got a carer in a few days a week for her hubby who has dementia and it is life-changing. She was not coping at all by herself and it made her ill she was at breaking point and had some blood pressure/ heart problems and nearly fainted. GP helped arrange carer and voila life-changing. she can go out a few times a week and have a break no one is superhuman not even your man :)

QueenOfTheCroneAge · 08/05/2019 19:33

@Roussette this is what teens would do - not people in their 50s and 60s! the whole situation is ridiculous and only HE can change it - but it seems he doesn't value OP enough to do so.

IrishGal21 · 08/05/2019 19:34

Tell him to book a few days off work...surely after 40yrs non stop he is due some holiday.......take a day off together and enjoy. his parents dont have to know they can think he is at work sneaky and acting like teenagers haha yes do it! HE NEEDS A BREAK!

Then book that round the work cruise....

woolduvet · 08/05/2019 19:34

300 odd posts. Most offering some form of advice but none so far would work apparently.
So I can't see a future other than that exactly how it is now.

RosaWaiting · 08/05/2019 19:34

Irish "Seriously, he should do this. he can speak to them in private, the folks don't even have to know."

did you read the whole thread?

NoCauseRebel · 08/05/2019 19:35

But OP, you spent 40 hours a week together because work made that possible, not because he wanted to spend 40 hours a week with you. As soon as you retired that time dropped to just six hours a week to the extent that you have never ever spent a night together because he claims he has to put his parents to bed and make their dinner.

If they are that incapable, how do they manage when he’s at work? Also, how did it come about that he was in an actual relationship before he moved in with his parents?

IrishGal21 · 08/05/2019 19:35

And get him to review the will to make sure...what if he does another 20 yrs and they leave it al lto the local RSPCA!

IrishGal21 · 08/05/2019 19:39

@Rosa yes I have AND? He can phone and get them to assess his circumstances and get care advice. The parents do not need to know. At least he can inform himself of the options.

QueenOfTheCroneAge · 08/05/2019 19:42

OP can have all the advice MN can offer - but she can't change her BF's mindset. Put up and shut up or move on I guess.

Petalflowers · 08/05/2019 19:44

So he’s a mummy’s boy. He’s not going to change now (and maybe it’s a little unfair on his parents to ask him to after so much time).

There’s a reason he has never married. Ie. His parents. You have to accept whether you are happy to be his companion, and be second fiddle to his parents, or whether to walk away.

Puzzledandpissedoff · 08/05/2019 19:45

really hope he's actually seen the will...and they don't change it....!

With parents like this, I'd expect "a change in the will" to be the first thing that's threatened, should he ever do anything which didn't quite suit

And nobody was suggesting he should bunk off work "like a teenager", only that he could take some actual holiday to spend with OP. For that matter he doesn't even have to do it ... as said, just his response to the idea might be interesting

RosaWaiting · 08/05/2019 19:45

Irish Just checking - I am under the impression he knows he has options but doesn't want to use them, partly because he's worried about being disinherited.

Puzzledandpissedoff · 08/05/2019 19:48

you spent 40 hours a week together because work made that possible, not because he wanted to spend 40 hours a week with you

Ouch Sad

In all honesty I'd love to argue against that - but it's really not possible is it?

QueenOfTheCroneAge · 08/05/2019 19:57

@Puzzledandpissedoff I think we can imagine his response......

Bluntness100 · 08/05/2019 20:00

I cannot go into it but through misfortune and a relationship breakup he ended up at 50 with almost no capital, a poorly paid job, and no home and so no equity

And her earlier you told us he moved in with them for their benefit?

Op. I've just read your thread cold. You are indeed in love. You are adamant this mans parents are monsters. But as you paint this image of them, you absolve your partner of any form of personal responsibility for his life or choices that have put him where he is.

You know as well as I do and everyone else reading this, he could tell them he is in a relarionship. He could introduce you. Not demonise them to uou. Take responsibility and still care for them.

But he's refusing to do any of that.

Unless there is something wrong with him, then this man is doing exactly as he pleases. Exactly.

Whether you wish to accept that or not, because of its implications on uou, is a different subject entirely.

Hellywelly10 · 08/05/2019 20:00

Ive really got a bee in my bonnett about op not going inside the house ever . OP i think you need to spell out what you need if he cant give it to you then you have your answer.

Petalflowers · 08/05/2019 20:00

Don’t uproot yourself for him either. After three years, if he isn’t going to make any compromises now, he’s not going to in the future.

Incidently, what would happen if you asked him to leave the phone at home, or in another room? Are they that frail that they need 24 careers, or have they just got used to it? After all this time, he’s not going to escape.

Oliversmumsarmy · 08/05/2019 20:01

*you are the one paying for a hotel room and doing the running around because he can’t afford to"

None of that is true. Are you being deliberately antagonistic or what?

I don't do any running around. I've never paid for a hotel room to see him*

From your op

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

I can only go on what you write.

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