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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

Opinions please what is going on here?

79 replies

Confusedcrush · 18/01/2021 15:50

Long sorry. Have nc and changed some details in the hope of not outing myself. I have been on my own with DC for a long time, and frankly didn't have much relationship experience before that, so I feel pretty clueless and unsure.

DC has specialist physio, and I'm confused about what (if anything) is going on between me and the therapist. Sometimes I think he's just friendly and gregarious, sometimes I think there's more. Therapist comes to our house to work, sometimes he comes an hour early to 'catch up' with me, will ask about DCs exercises but also talk about general stuff. He is often very chatty/kind of flirty in texts, eg banter about coming in disguiseduring lockdown so he's not stopped by the police got a bit edgy. He works across a big area as it's a niche kind of physio, so is often driving distances and a few times we've talked on the phone while he's driving and he's been a bit open - eg talking about doing stupid things when you're a teen ended up with him telling me his eldest DC was conceived when he was a teen and only exists because he was hoping the girl in question would give him a lift to a club, and one thing led to another and there's a DC. I mean, that's a bit familiar, isn't it?

There have been other things, one time DC had a bit of a breakthrough in physio and the therapist took him for a burger as a reward - when they gotback DC said next time can we get KFC, and therapist said 'yes but we'll bring it back for other DC and mum, so we can all eat as a family'. Another time DC asked him to stay for dinner, and he rang me from the car to say he would have done if he didn't have another appointment later. He messaged on xmas day to thank me/DC for his very unexciting, box of Quality Street-type xmas present. But then he goes quiet, after that nothing for 2 weeks til he messaged to book the next session. I don't know what to think, we can message back and forth even quite late at night, then nothing.

I'm not 100% whether he's attached or not - though if I was his partner I don't think I'd be happy with him having bantery messages with single women into the evenings and on weekends. I know he's got several DC from more than one relationship, youngest are teen/20s at least, oldest nearer my age - he's 15 years older thanme. I think 2 DC live with him, but he never talks about a partner, he never says 'we' always 'I' - I'm going camping at the weekend, I'm getting takeaway can't be bothered to cook. He's got a flat in a part of the country he often works, and I know he stays there alone as he's left from here before for a few days there. But he's got dogs so there must be someone at home with them while he's away, could be the DC I guess. I've tried fishing for info, eg asking if lockdown messed up his xmas plans, he said it meant he wouldn't see eldest DC and extended family.

I'm fully aware that I'm starved of adult company, he's basically the only adult who's come in our house for months, and I had no male interest way before that, so I sometimes think it's that I'm just lonely and reading too much into it. But then I think he seems genuinely to want to see or message me. I'm so confused! Please MNers who have more experience than me, opinions on this?

OP posts:
Sssloou · 20/01/2021 13:14

Also he may be subtly grooming your son to get to you rather than to assault your son. I think it is unusual that a child would ask a parent for a therapist to stay for dinner - has your son ever asked for any other professional he is involved with to stay for dinner?

MuckyPlucky · 20/01/2021 14:00

OP I get that you’re feeling conflicted/reluctant about the potential withdrawal of this individual’s support as I imagine you’ve faced an uphill battle to get any support and are petrified of this being withdrawn.

However- if social services / health care is professionals have deemed this specialism as required for your DS the removal of one rogue individual shouldn’t mean the end of that kind of input- there will be another professional assigned to pick this work up with your DS instead whilst this is all investigated.

Fear of withdrawal of a service shouldn’t be the factor preventing whistle-blowing. People don’t have services entirely withdrawn from their care plan because the named worker responsible for that intervention has been predatory. If anything, they would probably step-up support to ensure you and DS haven’t been negatively impacted by this grooming/abuse of power.

Confusedcrush · 20/01/2021 14:48

No I know he's not the only person in the world who can work with my DC, it's just hard because it takes a long time for DC to trust and like someone, and it's hard to think of him having to start again with someone else.

To the poster who questioned it, to be fair yes DC has asked professionals to stay to dinner before, more than once! (none ever have). And yes what he said about eating as a family was creepy. And not fair on my DC who don't have a dad in their life at all. Another time he said something about not wanting to be a 'just wait til your father gets home' type figure with DC, at the time I glossed over it as it made me uncomfortable. He didn't say that in front of DC though, just to me. It gets worse the more I think about it Sad

OP posts:
AryaStarkWolf · 20/01/2021 14:52

Saying we'll eat "as a family" is a bit creepy, isn't it?

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