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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

Red flags…. Here’s mine

148 replies

Anon778833 · 19/07/2021 18:16

I’m spectacularly naive. But I wanted to impart some ‘knowledge’ I have acquired re: dating. Men (because I don’t date women) who change your name to some schmaltzy nickname on FB messenger ALWAYS turn out to be more full of shit than a music festival loo. You have been warned!! ⚠️

OP posts:
GotBeatenUp · 20/07/2021 08:50

@StormBaby

These threads always make me laugh because my DH had a lot of these red flags and he’s seriously the best husband in the world 🤣 If I’d been on MN at the time I’d have never gone on a second date and would’ve really missed out. He had the crazy violent ex(she actually was), fell in love with me instantly, pushed for us to settle down quickly, was lavish with gifts, is over protective. I should’ve run a mile. 🤣 But he’s never put a foot wrong in 6 years.

My own personal one that makes my spidey senses go off is when someone says “what you see is what you get” or “I’m just too honest”. This means they have no brain to mouth filter in any area of their life and will constantly fall out with bosses, friends and family for being an arsehole.

Oh @StormBaby, do you not think that some of us thought exactly that?
Amdone123 · 20/07/2021 08:50

@Arghshdh, Grin.
My friend's ex used to say to her, ' Why don't you straighten your hair and dye it blonde?'
She has the most amazing red, naturally curly hair ( the type that people stop and comment on). We laughed at the time and it is to this day one of our private jokes.
Note he's an ex.

Journeynotdestination · 20/07/2021 09:18

Love bombing and future faking leading me to continually say ‘you don’t even know me’ - and yes he had a crazy Ex. Luckily I didn’t invest too much but still got kinda reeled in!

Crikeyalmighty · 20/07/2021 09:35

Champagne lifestyle expectations and beer money wages and reverse is true also

GravityFalls · 20/07/2021 09:53

My exH said to me that he didn’t know why we’d had DD as neither of us wanted her - er, she was planned and very much wanted by me at least! He probably tells his new wife that he was tricked into having her.

Amdone123 · 20/07/2021 10:04

@GravityFalls, that's awful. What a twunt.

StormBaby · 20/07/2021 10:07

@GotBeatenUp I think over 6 years is quite a long time to never let your mask slip, not once, and for those things to be red flags to ingrained sinister behaviour underneath. I get that people get their heads turned later on in relationships by others, or people fall out of love, but to be a covert narcissist after all that time? Nah! Give over 🤣 Not everyone is a wolf in sheep’s clothing.

In all that time we’ve never had a single argument or a cross word, no issues with cheating, no issues with our blended family, he does his fair share of the housework, he works hard running a business, he buys me flowers twice a week and makes my lunch for me every single day. He apologises when he’s wrong. I never have to ask him to pull his weight with the things that need doing. He shouts about how wonderful I am from the rooftops. The worst thing he does is work too hard, which is ultimately what made his ex wife run off with his best mate, but I’m not like that, I also work very hard, so not an issue.

GotBeatenUp · 20/07/2021 10:28

In all that time we’ve never had a single argument or a cross word
@StormBaby, neither had we. Then we did and I got beaten up.

Summer452 · 20/07/2021 13:39

Great thread!

  • Sulking if you have a different opinion
  • Critical of family.
  • Upset if you are happy around your family
  • Sulking if you come home a little later than you said
  • Sulking or quiet and in a mood if you don't perform quite how he likes it in the bedroom
  • Can't hold a job down - disagreements with colleagues or boss
  • Road rage
DukeofEarlGrey · 20/07/2021 13:46

Another one from insensitive idiots: “I just say what everyone else is thinking”. Nope. I want thinking it because my inner monologue isn’t that vile.

Summer452 · 20/07/2021 13:49

Also I dated a guy once who was very religious - no problem with that at all but he was critical if I did things which his religion advised against: shopping on a Sunday for example! He also asked me to remove some of my make up on one of our dates as he thought I'd put too much on!! 🚩
A few dates in this man also asked who I thought was more important, my own family or a husband 🚩
When I broke up with him he told me I'd never find a more divine and holy many than him. Just wow.

lastqueenofscotland · 20/07/2021 13:50

Men with pictures of them holding fish on any of their socials.
Men who wear schoeffel, chinos and boat shoes (I’m from a very posh/rural background and all of these men thought they were the dogs bollocks while living with mum at 37)
Being called sexy Envy

rishisboater · 20/07/2021 13:55

Has someone already said "school of hard knocks" on a social media page?

Cowbells · 20/07/2021 13:59

@Summer452

Also I dated a guy once who was very religious - no problem with that at all but he was critical if I did things which his religion advised against: shopping on a Sunday for example! He also asked me to remove some of my make up on one of our dates as he thought I'd put too much on!! 🚩 A few dates in this man also asked who I thought was more important, my own family or a husband 🚩 When I broke up with him he told me I'd never find a more divine and holy many than him. Just wow.
What an utter creep. He sounds insane to me. And you sound like a saint for sticking to more than one date with him.
Cowbells · 20/07/2021 14:00

He apologises when he’s wrong.

@StormBaby - conclusive proof he's not a narcissist ime.

AnaViaSalamanca · 20/07/2021 14:03

Thinks women are gold diggers. Actually mentioning the word gold digger

Maybe not red flag for some, but for me: telling small inconsequential lies

mbosnz · 20/07/2021 14:13

Uses the word 'feisty' unironically to describe a woman so bold as to assert her own opinion.

acolderwar · 20/07/2021 14:20

@EarthSight

What's wrong with 'Good morning beautiful' ?
It's so contrived and generic. Especially when it's some random yet overfamiliar man from an online dating site who has never met you. Same breed of man who usually does all the 'I would make you breakfast in bed every day/I'm amazing at X, Y, and Z/sends emojis in every message
rishisboater · 20/07/2021 14:38

Oh I also remember the guy who in the first date told me he was pissed off his ex wife got half of HIS house after "sitting on her arse" for 8 years.

Turned out they had 3 kids in that, 4,6 and 8.

So, anyone who doesn't value the role their ex has played

antwacky · 20/07/2021 14:46

@Summer452
Wasnt Jesus of Nazareth was it?

MissConductUS · 20/07/2021 14:54

[quote antwacky]@Summer452
Wasnt Jesus of Nazareth was it?[/quote]
Actually, one remarkable thing about the NT is the fact that Jesus treated women as equals.

Sandra15 · 20/07/2021 15:12

My friend is having therapy and is sharing her experiences with me along with the handouts and reading material her therapist is sending to her. I have learned so much from this as well as supporting my mate.

I met someone a long time ago when I was really young at ice skating lessons. He came over and said 'I only have ice for you'. He was with his mother who was a youth worker and he had tagged along. He asked me for a drink and then a date. At the date he said he had the choice of going out with the skating teacher who looked like Christina Aguilera, or me and he had chosen me. I felt flattered.

He was an amateur photographer and had a cardboard box full of photographs (proper ones not on his phone or device). 95% of these were of his ex (I found out he had been dumped by her days before he zoned in on me). I hated this and ruminated on it all the time, causing arguments.

He said then that the ex was trying to get him back. I had become infatuated by this time and asked him what he was going to do. He said "I don't know she earns more than you". (He was 7 years older and I was a student). I just tried to work harder to keep him.

He also talked about a previous ex who was still friends with his sister and mum and how amazing they thought she was and wished he had never broken up with her.

He booked a weekend in London after we had been seeing each other three weeks and when we got there, and had eaten in an expensive restaurant (the first night out was at MaccyD's!) he said he couldn't pay and I had to fork out for the bill.

This led to arguments and me being demanding and jealous, attention seeking and being called names like stupid cow, demented, idiot etc.

I came to hate him.

It's only through my friend's therapy that I've realised these were early red flags and he was a terrible choice, but I was so insecure I wanted to prove I was worth it and picking me would validate me. In fact picking me was the Road to Hell.

cookiecreampie · 20/07/2021 15:17

Man in late 30s/ early 40s who's never had a long term relationship and tells you the faults of every female he has dated but tells you you're special and different. Will drop you like a rock as soon as shit gets real. Years later you'll be married and he'll still be doing the rounds on the dating sites looking for the perfect woman who meets his standards.

cookiecreampie · 20/07/2021 15:17
  • married to someone else, not this man.
CarnationCat · 20/07/2021 15:21

Asking where you are and what you're doing multiple times per day.

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