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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

Relationship ended because I have a child

56 replies

CorsaG19 · 19/05/2021 21:26

I've seen this is quite a regular topic on here and it's helped reading the threads somewhat but I just feel like I need to talk to someone as I'm really struggling.

It's a long read so I apologise and thank you if you stick it through. I'm a lesbian with an 8 year old daughter who does not see her other parent. 4 years ago I met someone at work. It was honestly love at first sight for me. We instantly clicked but there was one issue, she had just got into a relationship. For the next 6 months we had this emotional whatever it was. Speaking most days. Facetime. We came close to kissing at work a few times but never went through with it and it never got sexual. It was just a really intense situation. I then realised I couldn't do it anymore and cut all contact. We obviously saw each other at work and we were always drawn to each other. Just conversations here and there, looks and smiles, but we worked shifts and very rarely saw each other.
First lockdown she messaged me and we spent 2 weeks back having our intense all day conversations but she was in the middle of a very messy and volatile break up and we both decided we should stop.
Fast forward to November when she again gets in contact with me. It was like we had never stopped talking. We spoke all day every day. It escalated into being on facetime up to 18 hours a day (we slept overnight on facetime to each other). We had both been made redundant due to covid and she had to move back to her parents 120 miles away so I spoke to her family on facetime most days.

Now she was obviously fully aware I had a daughter. She had met her once before back in the day. She spoke to her most days on facetime. Her family spoke to her. Once lockdown started lifting we decided we couldn't wait to see each other again anymore and she came to stay with me.

She always made it clear that she wasn't keen on children. She didn't want them herself and she didn't know if she would cope with mine as she had never been in that situation. She is 8 years younger than me so we are at different stages of our life. We decided at first for her to come during the week when my daughter was at school so she just saw her a few hours in the evening. Then she asked if she could stay the weekend. It then turned into about 6 weeks of her mainly being at mine and going back to her parents the days I had work. Everything was perfect between us. We never argued. We have the same interests. We liked doing the same things. I had never ever felt like that with anyone. It was never awkward. I saw her as my soul mate (cringe I know). She did some baking with my daughter, she bought her a few things she thought she might like. I never asked her for anything and never put it on her. I wanted her to go at her own pace. He started talking about one day buying a house together and then having a child together. Last week we spent the week together with my daughter going on a sleepover at her cousins Friday night. When I collected her Saturday, the gf decided she would go home. For 24 hours everything was fine. Constant messaging as usual. The 'I love you' message at bedtime. Then she rang me sobbing. She couldn't get her words out. And then she said it. She couldn't see it working with us as she's struggling too much with the child situation. She's spoken with her mum (who wants her to stay there with her and not move back to where she now calls home) and realised she doesn't want children and she wants to be in a relationship with someone who makes her a priority which I cant and that's not fair to me or my child.

Now as much as this hurts, I respect that. She doesnt have children and she made it clear at the start she doesn't know how she will react. I had an evil step mum growing up and I'm thankful she hasn't let it get to that point. But I am absolutely devastated. I cant stop crying. I cant eat and if I do I end up throwing it back up. It's only been 4 days but I've never felt like this in my life. I'm just lost. I feel like I've lost my best friend. I've cut all contact. Deleted her off everything and all our pictures. Everything that reminds me of her. But this feeling is horrendous. I spent the day looking at the Samaritans number and crying. I just feel so stupid but I dont really have anyone to talk to and it's destroyed me. It's not ended on a negative as such. We didn't argue. No one cheated. We had a grown up discussion with us both crying and I accepted her decision. I feel like thats what's making it feel worse

I know it will get better but I just feel so mad that she never said anything for all this time and we had the best few months finally together and then boom she rings me and thats it. Its just gutting.

OP posts:
MyCatHatesEverybody · 20/05/2021 13:16

I guess this is how so many people end up with "evil" step parents as OP references in her opening post about her own experience as a step child - all the warning signs were there loud and clear that this was never going to work (especially with the Christmas Day thing) yet OP was clearly not going to be pulling the plug on the relationship any time soon.

It's this kind of shit that gives all step parents a bad name - people who are clearly never cut out for that role from the start get lumped together with genuine step parents who are simply asking for a little balance when it comes to considering their children's wants vs that of their partner (emphasis being on wants, not needs).

OP I'm sure that once your initial sadness starts fading you'll see you judged this relationship through the lens of "much better than the last abusive one" thereby missing the many red flags with this one. As my counsellor once said, never attribute any merit to a relationship from an absence of bad things, only judge it by how it actually is.

CorsoG19 · 20/05/2021 13:34

It's clear I massively dropped the ball with this relationship. My previous ones have always been negative in the aspect of the abuse etc and so from reading the comments here I literally have no idea how it actually should be.

After my last 2 relationships I took a lot of time to evolve myself and learn from them. I honestly thought this time it was different because everything was always so positive. Never any disagreements or arguments. She always went out of her way to see me etc etc. I had never even heard of love bombing. So this has been a big learning curve and I know that if I do meet anyone else one day (I'm definitely not looking) I will take a step back and look at our actions.

I'm in my final year of uni and I start my job in September once I've qualified so I have that and my DD to concentrate on.

It definitely helps to share this with people who don't know us.

youvegottenminuteslynn · 20/05/2021 13:55

@CorsoG19

It's clear I massively dropped the ball with this relationship. My previous ones have always been negative in the aspect of the abuse etc and so from reading the comments here I literally have no idea how it actually should be.

After my last 2 relationships I took a lot of time to evolve myself and learn from them. I honestly thought this time it was different because everything was always so positive. Never any disagreements or arguments. She always went out of her way to see me etc etc. I had never even heard of love bombing. So this has been a big learning curve and I know that if I do meet anyone else one day (I'm definitely not looking) I will take a step back and look at our actions.

I'm in my final year of uni and I start my job in September once I've qualified so I have that and my DD to concentrate on.

It definitely helps to share this with people who don't know us.

I think it would be good for you to look back at your previous thread as you've made very similar mistakes before in that the other person told you outright that they weren't suitable candidates for a relationship with you(in that case for other reasons, in this case not wanting to be with someone with kids.

That time you also romanticised your connection, put it on a pedestal, involved your child by introducing them, went all in despite them telling you it wasn't going to be a relationship, then were devastated when they were with someone else.

You need to do some really hard work with a counsellor to try and unravel this. A combination of your attachment style and the trauma from bad relationships is always going to mean you have to be more guarded than other people, as does the fact you have a child.

This is a very similar dynamic to the previous one you shared, maybe if you read back you can see that clearly?

gottakeeponmovin · 20/05/2021 18:44

It's really not selfish to want to go to NY for Xmas with your partner. It is impossible to go with your partner if they have a child. That's why this woman has made the right decisions. Before I had kids I wanted to roam the world and have a good time. I wouldn't have wanted to be restricted by someone else's child. I didn't want a child. I therefore wouldn't have entered a relationship with someone who had kids. I don't think she's evil. I think she doesn't want to be tied down to kids but really liked you and so thought she would try and give it a go. Things like NY will have made her think that she isn't prepared to compromise her freedom for someone else's child. Undoubtedly her mother felt the same (and I probably would if it was my daughter) so encouraged her to end it before she go to involved. Having children is hardwork even when you've made the choice to have them. Dealing with someone else's when you are not at a stage in your life when you want kids is nigh on impossible - and that's without the ex partner issues that will undoubtedly occur at some point. It just isn't the right relationship for either of you

HJ91 · 20/05/2021 19:05

I have been in your exact situation but I was the one without a child, and was pretty sure I didn’t want kids. But like your ex, I tried and tried - but failed - to become comfortable with coming second for life, because I loved her. We broke up and now I am incredibly thankful for that. We are in touch as acquaintances 10 years later, and we’ve both learnt lessons: she had to make sure she didn’t fall for people who didn’t want exactly what she wanted for her and her child, and I learnt that I didn’t want children and now had the life experience to be 100% sure about that. It’s probably stopped us both from getting involved with the wrong people and situations since then.

I know it hurts now, and feels super intense, but I really hope the painful side goes away and you can see it as a really valuable experience sooner rather than later. As for the super intensity of the relationship - I get why it’s strange to many people, but I do think that almost obsessive connection happens more often between two women. I’ve certainly never had it with a man and I’ve dated both men and women; my lesbian friends say the same. So don’t worry, some of us get it.

Chin up :) this will be best for you and your little girl, but please don’t feel too bitter about her. It sounds like she’s been fighting an internal battle and just lost it.

Miasicarisatia · 20/05/2021 19:15

but I do think that almost obsessive connection happens more often between two women
I've no romantic or sexual feeling toward women but I can see that this makes sense.
The flaming here is undeserved imo

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