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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:
BetLynchWhatCanIGetYouPet · 01/11/2019 20:05

Blimey
Not too late to start being brave /resilient/calm enough to face his parents. Dont try to control every situation.

At this point they are bound to feel anger and resentment.

SueDoeName · 01/11/2019 20:07

In the face of such overwhelming opinion op I truly hope you'll get some counselling and an assessment for whatever the issue you have is.

I genuinely do feel for you but you need to recognise that you are the one in the wrong here and not your dh or his new partner, nor your children. You. Get help before you end up lonely bitter and alone. 💐

LonginesPrime · 01/11/2019 20:08

I worry for DH that he is obsessed with OW and that in due course limerence will wear off and he will realise all that he has lost

He's a grown up and that's his decision to make - you seem to think of him like your child rather than another adult.

You don't need to 'protect' him from his current partner, from his family, from decisions he makes for his life or from anything else - if he wanted to be with you, he would be.

It was brave of you to come back to the thread, OP - have you had any counselling? I think this might help you to get some perspective and work out how to be happy without relying on your ex.

JK1773 · 01/11/2019 20:22

OP you are seriously in the wrong here and have been for 30 years. I don’t know if I can add to what others have said. You are hugely abusive. I feel so so sorry for your ex husband. What a life he’s had. I hope he’s happier now and recovering from a lifetime of abuse. Just terrible

CornishCreation · 01/11/2019 20:30

The very way he said he wants you, his parents and OW to all get along implies he is staying put with OW and wants a civil relationship with you for the sake of seeing the children.
He doesn't want to be with you op or he wouldn't be somewhere else.
I'm sorry but he's made his choice and now he's trying to be amicable.
He'd discovers how he can have a loving relationship with a partner and his children and his parents and sister all at the same time, sure he probably misses you but he's gone for the whole package.

wXyZ123 · 01/11/2019 20:41

It was an affair, he started seeing her before he left, I don't think he would have left if he had not known what was on offer from the OW, I think he stays for the sex, he does not realise that most people our age (late 50's) have only infrequent or no sex. I'm sure that when he and OW start to tire of the sex he will realise there is nothing else and regret what he has lost

For the first year after he left I knew nothing of the OW's reemergence on the scene, I was left at home with our two children to help them through GCSE & A levels. Of course they knew a bit of what was going on, I used to go away for weekends to see DH in hope of sorting things out, they wanted updates. I had no idea I was competing with OW, I thought he was alone seeking to sort his priorities.

Earlier this year DH replied to a mail I had sent him about a holiday I was planning for the children, saying he wanted to return.We have met up a handful of times since, he repeats that he loves OW but feels he should return, even wants to, that he can imagine a life back in his home with contact with us and his family. His parents are ailing, I would not stop him seeing them or his sister provided I was sure OW ( who is friends with all of them) was out of the picture and I knew I came first. But he keeps reminding me of things long before his affair started , saying it was in my gift to allow him to see his parents that I should accept my culpability - but what of his culpability, his parents condoning his secret contact with them and now his adultery, If am in the wrong so to are they, As DH used to say sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander

OP posts:
SueDoeName · 01/11/2019 20:47

Oh dear op. There is no getting through to you is there ? Your poor family and your poor dh. I really do feel for them all. You're delusional.

annienone · 01/11/2019 20:50

Right she's just taking the piss now

ReceptacleForTheRespectable · 01/11/2019 20:50

I don't think he would have left if he had not known what was on offer from the OW

Tbh, the exact timings and whether it was an affair is irrelevant. He been with her for 3 years. He's moved on. She's not the OW, she's his long term partner.

SueDoeName · 01/11/2019 20:51

Your putting yet more conditions on him seeing his own parents and sister.

He's moved on! You don't see that? Really? Cos you're such a fucking catch? Ffs get real you silly narcissistic woman! He's gone! Rightly so because you were abusing him . What don't you understand ?

FrankenCat · 01/11/2019 20:51

HmmConfused
Wow.
Just wow.
In the nicest possible way OP, you are utterly bonkers!
You are an obsessed, controlling woman who needs help.
Leave him alone.

Anotherlongdrive · 01/11/2019 20:51

I think he stays for the sex, he does not realise that most people our age (late 50's) have only infrequent or no sex.

Says who? That's not true.

OP regardless of all the other shit he isnt coming back.

You can twist and turn all you want. But you simply, think that what ever you think is right.

Or this is all bullshit.

ReceptacleForTheRespectable · 01/11/2019 20:53

I would not stop him seeing them or his sister provided I was sure OW ( who is friends with all of them) was out of the picture and I knew I came first.

You know you have no right to stop him seeing his parents in ANY circumstance, right? You simply do not have that right, and you never did.

FrankenCat · 01/11/2019 20:53

OP do they have any pet rabbits?

AloneLonelyLoner · 01/11/2019 20:53

Secret contact with them.

Doesn't this sound absurd to you OP?

I just don't get it. It's nuts.

SueDoeName · 01/11/2019 20:54

franken I sincerely hope not .

Bunny boiler ? Yep.

AmberDino · 01/11/2019 20:54

Your (ex) husband is only saying that he feels he should return through a sense of guilt and duty. However he clearly would rather not be in a relationship with you.

It is too late for you to now say that you would allow him to have a relationship with his family. You have already robbed him of decades of time with his family and made him feel guilty for remaining in contact with them.

Yes, he has not acted in the best manner in terms of leaving you and starting a new relationship. Ideally he would have left, made it clear that your relationship was over, and then considered starting a new relationship. He is clearly quite weak-willed to have put up with your nonsense for 30 years and evidently hasn't mustered up the confidence to just be straight with you and say that your relationship is completely over.

funnylittlefloozie · 01/11/2019 20:54

You sound like my sister. She has a personality disorder, and doesnt behave or see the world like normal people. She postures and pontificates like you, and alienates EVERYONE in her life.

For whatever reason, though, you are terribly controlling and abusive. You CANNOT behave like this. I am glad your DH has finally escaped from you, and is now learning what its like to be in a normal loving relationship where he has autonomy.

Oh, and stop harassing the new partner. You will end up in prison if you dont stop this ridiculous behaviour.

Anotherlongdrive · 01/11/2019 20:55

but what of his culpability, his parents condoning his secret contact with them and now his adultery,

Of course they condone it. Their son was being abused.

OP why havent tou commented at all on the fact that you want him to take responsibility for you cancer. Based on bullshit.

And yes, his parents are probably ly happy he isnt being abused anymore. Not surprising they arenr thay fussed about him leaving his marriage.

Collision · 01/11/2019 20:55

I think you should leave him alone and get some serious counselling.

SueDoeName · 01/11/2019 20:56

Op
You need help. Go and get it . Leave your poor bloody ex to enjoy the rest of his life with someone who is t abusing him and work out wtf is wrong with you.

PlacidPenelope · 01/11/2019 20:56

Can you actually hear yourself, OP?

His parents are ailing, I would not stop him seeing them or his sister provided I was sure OW ( who is friends with all of them) was out of the picture and I knew I came first.

How very big of you to decide he can see his family but it is all on your terms and yet more ultimatums, isn't it?

But he keeps reminding me of things long before his affair started , saying it was in my gift to allow him to see his parents that I should accept my culpability - but what of his culpability, his parents condoning his secret contact with them and now his adultery, If am in the wrong so to are they,

It should never have been in your gift to allow him to see his parents, I mean - wtf??? How controlling and abusive are you? Why the hell wouldn't his parents condone his secret contact with them, they are his parents, they want to see him, he wants to see them and they have to all hide it because of YOU. You have no contact with them and clearly despise them for no good reason and yet expect them to confide in you about their son which would cause more detriment to and abuse of their son by YOU.

The more you write the worse you sound which is one hell of an achievement.

SueDoeName · 01/11/2019 20:58

Totally agree with placidpenelope

MiddleClassProblem · 01/11/2019 20:58

The affair still comes after decades of abuse. OW was probably what made him realise just how bad he was being treated.

You’re still controlling him and attempting to control his family. One day I hope your children realise just who you really are.

You are still in the wrong but this is such a clear example of how some abusers can’t recognise their behaviour due to narcissism.

There’s no telling some people.

FrankenCat · 01/11/2019 20:58

@SueDoeName bunny boiler was exactly what I was thinking. OP is fucking scary! No wonder her poor husband left!

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