Meet the Other Phone. Child-safe in minutes.

Meet the Other Phone.
Child-safe in minutes.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

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

What DD said to DH

135 replies

Bookwormm · 06/07/2019 21:00

Things at home have been very tense since having DS who is 1 year old. DH has not pulled his weight mentally and emotionally at all since DC2. I have had to deal with huge pressures with the children who both have allergies. DH has slept in the spare room much of the time so as "not to disturb" me as I was breastfeeding and needed my sleep.

We were certain we would need to separate and were barely on speaking terms for months. DH would not communicate with me at all and my pleas for help fell of deaf ears, to the point I would cry in frustration. He wanted to continue his hobbies as normal and would say things like "just because you can't go out, it doesn't mean I can't." Leave me with poorly kids to take care of and just please himself etc...

The result has been huge mental health issues for me, to the point I was frightened about what might happen to me.

Things over the last few weeks have been better as DH has really made a lot of effort to be more supportive after witnessing me reach my lowest ebb.

Today however, DH told me that DD accused him of being lazy for not helping her with something and said "mummy says you are." She must have overheard a conversation between us when things were tough a couple of months ago.

He is furious and has told me I am not to ever call him things like that infront of DD again. I have said that I haven't done so in the last few weeks and not since being so frustrated and desperate for his help as I was a few months ago. I tried to explain that I was immensely frustrated and that he was not pulling his weight when DD overheard me tell him he was lazy. I have also explained to DD that her father does a lot for her and certainly was not being lazy for not giving her what she wants.

He says there is no excuse and I need to apologise to him. I get I need to avoid saying things like that infront of DD, but he will not acknowledge the fact that he WAS being so incredibly lazy and selfish and that I was so desperate for his help and commitment to our family. I was an absolute state and that he also needs to take responsibility for DD overhearing me call him lazy too and that this doesn't just fall on me.

He refuses to take any of that on board and says that if I think it is acceptable to refer to him as being lazy infront of DD then we are over. He has been sulking all day.

I get it isn't acceptable to argue infront of the children, but I can not get him to see that his behaviour has been so incredibly selfish and lazy at times over the last year or so that it has pushed me to say things and behave in ways that may be aren't acceptable out of sheer frustration. Also, I don't want DD thinking I've been behaving like some crazy stressed out lunatic for no reason... her father has been lazy and selfish. And that it is not really acceptable.

I feel I've insulted his ego and he wants DD to see him as faultless. And yet DD has seen me in such a state this last year because basically, I haven't been coping. He has not given me the support that has been needed.

What is the answer? Please be kind, I'm still not in the strongest of places at the moment.

OP posts:
whatswrongwithmyarm · 09/07/2019 11:35

@Bookwormm I left a lazy git of a partner, also a gaslighting selfish prick. Well, he left me then tried to weasel his way back in when he realised how much I actually did and what he had missed out on. Unfortunately for him by that time I had discovered -

There was less housework to do without him being a lazy prick and leaving his crap everywhere.
I didn't have to worry about ds not having his nappy on properly, being scorched in the bath etc as there was no idiot living with me who might do those things.
That while being a single parent was tiring, my mental energy was no longer wasted on him and I was left with energy to focus on myself and ds instead of his bullshit.
That I could run my life happily without feeling constant resentment towards the twat.

In short, life was a million times better without him and I can't believe I ever dated him at all.

DistanceCall · 09/07/2019 12:19

@Bookwormm, if you have a job and own half a house, you have options, even if you aren't married. It's not as if you are financially dependent on him.

Yes, you need to talk to a solicitor ASAP. I think you know this relationship is over, and you're absolutely right that living together in misery would be good for no one - not for you or him, and certainly not for your children.

It sounds like he's gauging you to see if you'll back off (like you have in the past). Don't. Insist that this relationship is over, you won't be living together any more, and you will both need to make arrangements.

And again: stop doing anything for him. Don't cook for him, don't wash his clothes, don't remind him of things he needs to do. You're separated now.

Wallywobbles · 09/07/2019 20:45

Yes being single was so much better. No one else to motivate, to clear up after, to be patient with. Your rules no compromises. It's brilliant frankly.

Cerealtoaste · 09/07/2019 21:38

"No-one else to motivate" sounds heavenly

motherofcats81 · 09/07/2019 23:01

I'm currently single and pregnant (by my own choice) and tbh I already prefer it and am pretty sure that's going to continue. I could have had a kid with my ex and I am certain it would have been much more stressful and difficult with the emotional trauma and lack of contribution/partnership that relationship brought.

Admittedly I don't have the child yet so I don't have the benefit of the experience that other posters do, but I have been told by many single mums that "parenting alone is infinitely easier than parenting with a twat".

WhoKnewBeefStew · 10/07/2019 07:52

I was a single parent with two dc and it was, without a doubt easier that way. I was doing everything anyway, but once I left, that seething feeling of resentment that would be in the pit of my stomach everyday was gone. I love doing everything for the dc. But it pissed me right off having to do it all for my dh too, and he wouldn't lift a finger. God it's winding me up just thinking about it.

Bookwormm · 11/07/2019 22:28

I spoke to a friend today who said to me "you think it's difficult parenting with that lazy, selfish git now. Try parenting with him when he is under another roof, playing by his own rules and being even more of a shit father, only you won't even know about it."

I hadn't considered this...

Can it be harder to leave/get him to leave?

OP posts:
Wallywobbles · 12/07/2019 07:55

No. Not once you are emotionally detached. If he sticks to the rules it's relatively simple. But I'd advise really solid rules. Times. days, places for swop overs, clothes etc everything pinned down on an official agreement. I think you can google them.

WhoKnewBeefStew · 12/07/2019 08:12

Because he's a selfish lazy git, chances are he'll continue to leave you to do the lions share if the parenting. But what that means is you do it 'your' way, without having to look after a man child in the process - win win

Redred2429 · 12/07/2019 08:21

Definitely see a lawyer op and don't tell him you plan to it will give you an advantage

New posts on this thread. Refresh page