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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

What mistake will you never make again in relationships?

56 replies

something2say · 08/05/2020 11:07

Reading something here has struck me. Can you look back and see a mistake you made that ruined a perfectly good relationship? And did you never do it again?

When I was about 17 and very naive, young and harmed, fresh out of a terrible childhood, I started going out with a boy who had recently split with another girl. They were still in touch etc. We met and started going out, but I always wondered if she were better than me or he liked her more.

I had not been loved or wanted as a child. I'd been physically hurt a lot and shamed, hated on, ostracised. I took over where my mother left off, especially when I felt sad or bad.

I started asking this boy about his ex, her happy family, about things they did together etc. I went on about it so much, I pushed him back to her.

Afterwards, I really saw that I'd ruined it myself with my thinking. I hadn't respectfully given them space, I hadn't given their relationship the right to exist on its own, I probed it. I put myself down, I grieved about my lack of family, I compared us and found myself wanting. It was a form of emotional abuse of myself really.

But when it ended I never ever did it again. It took a long time to get the childhood sorted, but that experience really taught me that self harming in this way is not useful in any way. I had to grow up and become a woman in my own right, with my own gifts that are not to be compared to others. Life can be hard enough without a person putting their own self down too.

Started the thread as a look back I suppose, to see good stuff people learned.

OP posts:
Nestofvipers · 08/05/2020 14:22

Oh and the sunk cost fallacy. Just because you’ve “invested” a lot of time in a bad relationship, don’t continue it because otherwise the time invested will be time wasted. What will actually be time wasted is spending any more time in the relationship rather than ending it.

therona · 08/05/2020 14:30

Ignoring the signs that he was a dickhead who would never treat me right. I was young though, and didn't know my worth. Won't happen again.

Lonelycrab · 08/05/2020 14:41

Understanding what boundaries are, and when they’re being eroded.

something2say · 08/05/2020 14:53

Yes lonelycrab, that's a lesson worth learning for sure.

OP posts:
HerBigChance · 08/05/2020 14:55

Oh god yes, sunk costs fallacy is a killer.

My parents had a very long (60 yrs) marriage and it had its ups and downs but they were very devoted to one another, particularly in later years. I can't help but wonder, though, if that very long relationship gave me the wrong idea about staying to 'work at' my relationships long after I should have done.

WinterAndRoughWeather · 08/05/2020 15:01

My grandparents were together over 60 years too, but I don’t see them as a great example at all. They were so awful to each other a lot of the time, and Nanna was always going on about the one that got away and how she settled for Grandad because he asked her and that’s how it was done then. They stayed together because they were used to each other.

I’m happily married, but I hope I wouldn’t let my relationship deteriorate and drag on like that if we weren’t happy.

cinders15 · 08/05/2020 15:11
  1. Never have a joint account
  2. Make sure he isnt an alcoholic
  3. Make sure he doesn't steal from me
  4. Make sure he doesn't leave me is debt

Can you guess that this was my first husband?

Nestofvipers · 08/05/2020 15:16

Forget closure at the end of a relationship. If someone is behaving like an arse and won’t give you a proper explanation/answers, just forget trying to get this. You’ll work yourself up into knots trying to get closure and they’ll either evade you or lie. Far better to just completely ignore them and ideally to block them.

PicsInRed · 08/05/2020 15:26

I'll have a relationship but no marriage and no intermingling of finances.

something2say · 08/05/2020 15:52

Here's another one.

As an abused middle child, I've never had acknowledgement or apology. I have been told to get over it and that no one cares.

I accept this and think its true. They DON'T care. Any residual 'wow how can you just gloss over it like it didn't happen' just melted away after being told that.

Lesson? If they can tolerate it and do it, they DON'T care and it IS better to live apart from such people.

OP posts:
PrawnSacrifice · 08/05/2020 16:26

I would ensure sexual compatibility.

rvby · 08/05/2020 17:24

Never again will I take struggle as a sign that a relationship is "worth it". Love isn't meant to be predicated on investment (of time, of suffering, of effort) and waiting for a good return (e.g. sunk costs fallacy).

There is no prize for suffering, life is short, make the choice to be around people who like you and build you up, and vice versa.

In relationships, make hard (untraditional, rare) choices that make your life easier - not easy/obvious choices that make your life harder... be bold and don't fear loneliness.

Menora · 08/05/2020 18:59

Handing over control to someone else, even unwillingly but just not seeing it

Being too helpful and sympathetic

People pleasing

Not putting my own needs and wants first

Raidblunner · 08/05/2020 19:17

Never date a woman that lied to her ex husband and kept an affair going for the best part of two years. Thinking perhaps you could change what I now know to be a serial cheat. Sadly once a cheater always a cheater springs to mind. We live & learn

IWillNotNameTheTree · 08/05/2020 19:18

@rvby I needed to read that, thank you.

KateF · 08/05/2020 19:29

Hypothetical really because I'll never be in a relationship again, but,. I would never again be bullied into giving up my job.

PussGirl · 08/05/2020 19:34

Don't put up with a lot of drama.

Calm and kind doesn't mean boring.

BackseatCookers · 08/05/2020 19:36

Sunk costs fallacy

Love isn't enough

Good people do bad things but that doesn't make those bad things ok

You can't love the other person enough to make up for them not loving you

Hurt people hurt people

If you can't be 100% yourself to be 50% of a couple, you aren't in not the right relationship

Trust your gut

And again, love isn't enough.

rvby · 08/05/2020 19:44

@IWillNotNameTheTree Flowers

wobblywinelover · 08/05/2020 19:45

I'll never have a relationship again at aged 45, at a risk of getting flamed, I think men suck, but i'm not a lesbian so i'm kinda stuck -

sorts of things i've experienced from men have been infidelity on a devastating scale, full on lies and manipulation, child's father getting (an extremely easy life on parenting once a fortnight), shaving my legs and trying to look nice for someone who only cared about themselves and their ex wife, I could go on.. I really could

Long and the short of it is that men put on a good show so they can get a sex life, but a lot of them are really rotten eggs. I will never sacrifice my financial and emotional security to be with one of them ever again. Totally done here

DianaT1969 · 08/05/2020 19:50

To never invite a man to join me at a friend's wedding/family party/on holiday. Not until he has started including me in his life and invited me to things first. I'll merrily say "I'm off to Crete this weekend, see you in a fortnight!" "I won't be around next weekend as I've been invited to a party at a country house". Why? I think it's very telling when they start inviting you to join in with their life.

OhioOhioOhio · 08/05/2020 19:53

Sharing money

HerBigChance · 08/05/2020 19:57

Indeed, love isn't enough and love does not conquer all.

In relationships, make hard (untraditional, rare) choices that make your life easier - not easy/obvious choices that make your life harder... be bold and don't fear loneliness.

Excellent advice that really resonates.

HerBigChance · 08/05/2020 19:59

To never invite a man to join me at a friend's wedding/family party/on holiday. Not until he has started including me in his life and invited me to things first.

Ah yes, rushing to include. These are also not mistakes I'd make again.

PickledLilly · 08/05/2020 19:59

I’m never going to make the mistake of having a relationship again. My mother always told me that men were bastards and not to bother and so far, my experience has done nothing to prove her wrong!