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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

Getting my DH back

449 replies

wXyZ123 · 01/11/2019 12:21

I have been with my DH for over 30 years, he has left me, I don’t think he is happy, I would like him to come back and I am frightened of being alone, this is my story, please help me.

As soon as I met my in-laws I felt intimidated by them. DH shared too much information with them, was too influenced by them, put them first and became melancholy after he saw them. I asked him not to see them, to keep away for as long as it took for things to improve. We had occasional contact which always upset us both.

After about 5 years we married, my parents were unwell and could not attend, I did not want DH’s family there.

After our children were born we saw DH’s sister, we all seemed to get on ok but the relationship fizzled out, DH says that was because there was always an “elephant in the room” – the broken relationship with his parents who even now I have only allowed to see our 18 year old children twice.

I was frustrated that rather than build a social life for us or to recognise the efforts I had made with his sister, DH seemed only to focus on what he did not have with his parents and sister.

Nine years ago, I discovered DH was seeing his parents and contacting his sister behind my back, I gave him an “us or them” ultimatum. Later I discovered I had breast cancer, my oncologist told me the stress of discovering DH’s deceit in seeing his parents may have been a contributory factor. I told DH, I don’t think he accepts any responsibility. Our already minimal sex life dropped to non-existent.

DH tried to broker a thaw in relationships, but all that happened was that he and I rowed, he never saw how hurt I was by his parent’s attitude to me , how frightened I was, only how we had wronged them and how he felt

Three years ago DH walked out, leaving me alone with our children. I let him have space but told him I could not cope unless there was a chance of reconciliation. He said there was, we met a few times, he said he felt he should return but did not want to.

After a year he seemed to want to return, but confessed to an affair with a former girlfriend I was devastated. DH and his parents justified his behaviour suggesting I was at least partly culpable. I wanted DH to be contrite and to break all contact with OW . DH wanted me to make returning appealing to him, to promise not to keep him from his parents and sister. Meanwhile OW would not let him go, threatened me with police action if I contacted her and suggested to the police that DH had been the victim of coercive control inflicted by me. As a result of the police threat and learning of the affair our children don’t want to see DH till the OW is out of the picture.

Now DH tells me that the guilt he feels at having only seen our children once in 3 years (and not at all since he confessed to his affair), at leaving me alone to do everything, at the sorrow he has inflicted, makes him want to return but that he loves OW.

I think DH is depressed and unhappy, that he should leave OW and then try to rebuild a life with me and our children. DH says he wishes he could; rewind time, had handled our differences better and had not got into the position he has.

How can I resolve this? I want the best for me, for DH and our children. When I tell DH how I blame OW he defends her, says its not her fault and that she was his life raft in time of need, that he would like us all (his parents, sister and OW) to be friends – I tell him that is cloud cuckoo land which seems to drive him back to OW

What should I do?

OP posts:
tiredtrumpet · 01/11/2019 14:25

So what did his parents do to provoke such an aggressive reaction from you?

CmdrCressidaDuck · 01/11/2019 14:26

I bet everything I own that the conversation with the oncologist actually went:
Doctor: [explaining prognosis]
OP: "Can this be caused by stress?"
Doctor: "Er, some people think stress can be a contributory factor."
OP: "Yes! Obviously DH CAUSED MY CANCER."

Whatwouldbigfatfannydo · 01/11/2019 14:26

This is absolutely batshit Shock

Cheeseandwin5 · 01/11/2019 14:27

I am with all of the posters ( apart from @hellsbellsmelons whose misandry has well and truly been shown in their post), so I wont repeat what has already been said.
I would though applaud how honest you have been and not tried to change facts just to make your position more sympathetic.
Off course that may be because you think you are totally in the right, which would be more worrying , but I will ignore that for now so there is one positive post!

Morgan12 · 01/11/2019 14:28

OP won't be back 😂

Namechange8471 · 01/11/2019 14:29

You’re fucking batshit woman!

I hope he runs for the hills and never looks back.

hellsbellsmelons · 01/11/2019 14:30

We honestly have no idea how abusive her DH parents are or were.
And he ups and leaves after nearly 30 years.
He admitted to the affair so I can only assume that he left for OW?
Maybe not but that's what I'm assuming from this.
So until I know more about how abusive the parents are I'm not assuming that the OP is abusive.
Off to google 'misandry'

hellsbellsmelons · 01/11/2019 14:31

Oh yes - 'misandry' - I do fucking hate men.
Been screwed over enough to learn not to trust any of them.
Apart from my dad - who is wonderful - bless him.

MonsterMashedSpud · 01/11/2019 14:32

Leave your DH alone. He’s happier without you and I can understand why.

See a therapist before your kids cease contact too.

Interestedwoman · 01/11/2019 14:33

'Nine years ago, I discovered DH was seeing his parents and contacting his sister behind my back, I gave him an “us or them” ultimatum.'

No-one should do that, get someone to choose between their partner and their parents.

'Later I discovered I had breast cancer, my oncologist told me the stress of discovering DH’s deceit in seeing his parents may have been a contributory factor. '

I don't think that actually happened. No doctor would say that, unless maybe one or two renegade flakes. There's no evidence base for that. One in two people get cancer.

The most likely scenario is that you have said that to try and guilt trip your partner, and it actually didn't happen.

OldEvilOwl · 01/11/2019 14:35

YABVU! Read your post back as if someone else had written it. You sound unhinged

Paddy1234 · 01/11/2019 14:37

Did I actually read that correctly 😱

TheMasterBaker · 01/11/2019 14:37

Sorry I lost it where you forbid him to him to contact his family and then that you didn't want his family at the wedding.... I'm guessing what he wants is not a concern to you?
You sound awfully controlling, I'm amazed he's stayed as long as he has. For his sake, just leave him alone, let him have some freedom.

MrsTerryPratchett · 01/11/2019 14:47

The ex has contact with his family, a nice-sounding new partner. All that's left is contact with his children, which you should facilitate.

pemberlyshades · 01/11/2019 14:50

Wow... just wow...

AlternativePerspective · 01/11/2019 14:53

I would hazard a guess that the children are contacting their father “behind the OP’s back” as well... at least I hope they are.

LonginesPrime · 01/11/2019 14:54

He admitted to the affair so I can only assume that he left for OW?

The OP describes it as an affair that DH 'confessed' to, but he and the OP split up a year before, so I took it to mean that the OP, in her delusional state, saw the fact he started a relationship with someone else as an affair, when in reality it was just him moving on.

The OP is so carefully crafted to pepper in all these hints at her own delusion that I suspected this might be a wind up..the only thing that makes me think it's real is that the OP hasn't returned to enjoy the fruits of her labour if that's the case. Plus, it's almost a little too perfectly batshit.

Buttonnose45 · 01/11/2019 14:56

I'm sure this is a reverse

MsPepperPotts · 01/11/2019 14:58

You need to leave him alone to have a life
Why did you/do you want so much control over someone else's life/lives.
You need to look at your own behaviour which imo is extremely destructive for everyone around you.

Anotherlongdrive · 01/11/2019 15:06

And he ups and leaves after nearly 30 years. He admitted to the affair so I can only assume that he left for OW?

He left after 30 yeara of being abused. Thata obvious.

You are assuming he left for OW.

OP also said he cause her cancer and is angry he wont take responsibility for it.

That's abuse. She is lying and tried to get him to accept blame for her being ill.

Despite that huge lie, you dont think its probable this wasnt an affair either?

Flyingf1edgelings · 01/11/2019 15:09

Wow! Can everybody please read this post as a man writing about their wife.
OP you sound so controlling, his family haven't really done anything bad to you to warrant you forbidding your husband or children to have a relationship with your inlaws.
Children dont want to see their father to he dumps hi girl friend, that you blame (ridiculous, she owes you nothing) parental alienation. You have convinced your children this is ok and they can only have contact if he gets back with you.

Blaming cancer on your husband is so wrong and I highly doubt your doctor blamed your husband Hmm
Stopping Dh having no family at your wedding is terrible, giving him ultimatum is terrible, blaming him for cancer is wrong.

Sounds like your dh is a pushover and he took so much over the years you finally pushed him away.

Whereispeterrabbit · 01/11/2019 15:09

Unless there is a lot more to the story than you've written above, you sound abusive and controlling. Leave the man alone, find happiness and peace within yourself.

Why has your DH hasn't seen your children for so long? I believe, from your story, that you've interfered and not let them have contact, as a potential punishment?

sonicshoegazes · 01/11/2019 15:13

I'm sorry about all of this but I'm flummoxed that a dr told you due to stress you had developed cancer. This seems like nonsense.

You seem overbearing to me I'm afraid and they are his family! I cannot believe that this has gone on so long. Your poor children caught up in this life.

Thankful2020 · 01/11/2019 15:14

There is nothing to salvage here OP. OW is right, you do sound controlling from what you have written here. Your husband has finally seen the light and managed to set himself free. It’s a shame he didn’t find a way of doing so without losing a relationship with his children.

You need to take a hard look at yourself and the way you have treated your husband and your children. Did you influence your children to take your side in all this?

TheHodgeoftheHedge · 01/11/2019 15:17

Yeah OP is never coming back!

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