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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

Boyfriend gets annoyed when things aren’t perfect

67 replies

Stfutfu · 04/08/2021 21:44

I am in a relationship for 2.5 years. Because of covid / living in different countries until 8 months ago things have not been as serious but have become more serious over the last 8 months. At the very beginning of this relationship he admitted he had just broken up with his ex and was recovering from that break up, and there was quite a bit of insecurity on my part for the first couple of months about whether he was still hankering after her (although I kept it to myself.)

We don’t live together but see each other very frequently (2/3 times a week or more.) we are saying I love you, and he is very frequently in touch, reliable, kind to me.

I get a lot out of the relationship in terms of mental/physical connection. He is interested in my work too which is great for me as I work very hard.

He has one issue though which always causes arguments which I just fail to understand. If he perceives anything I say to damage how perfect our relationship is, or how perfect the situation is (say we are at a nice dinner and everything is great) he gets really really upset and storms off / gets grumpy/ sulks. I consider myself quite an intuitive person but I can never quite understand what has been so triggering to him.

He especially gets like this if I express any kind of insecurity. Say if I talk about how I feel I am not good enough for something (at work) or if I ask for reassurance from him: today for example, I am going on holiday and I asked him if he would see his ex if she was in town, while I was away. He got really upset and said how could I mention that when things are going so well. He stormed off and messaged me saying for him it was the equivalent of me doing a massive turd in the middle of the table, it showed “bad faith” and spoiled things and how could I deny or even question the perfection of our relationship for that thought to even run through my head. My response is always a bit surprised at the reaction and saying “ok sure. Sorry about that…” but he holds on to it. Shaking his head, sighing, muttering under his breath that he “cannot believe” I brought it up. That “how could I not feel” how much he loves me. And it always ends with him walking off and me following him.

I’ve started ignoring it and not giving him the response he wants and that doesn’t go down well either.

This happens quite a bit. I feel I am to blame but the things I say and the reassurance I seek is actually quite innocuous and normal for a relationship. I have had quite a few long term relationships so I am used to the usual reassurance dislodge. Another eg, last week he was away from me, got drunk and started texting me how much he was in love with me. I could not reply immediately and I actually have a different emotional temperament to him and express my feelings and love in other ways. He got very upset and sulked again, saying I had ruined “how perfect things are.”

Every time we have sex he says it’s perfect. Every meal is perfect, apparently I am perfect. My body and mind and spirit is perfect. But if there is any tremor in the force at all, I have ruined the perfection.

How toxic is this? And what does it mean? I can’t work out if it’s his own compulsion to have “perfect love” and the parameters of that are very fragile for him (his parents had a very acrimonious divorce) Or whether it’s just controlling. But I don’t understand what he is seeking to control?

OP posts:
billy1966 · 05/08/2021 07:05

He sounds like an utter gobshite and very toxic.

HelenHywater · 05/08/2021 07:09

I think he's toxic too OP. He's got you where he wants you - chasing him all the time. You're becoming scared to say things now too.

He has an impossible ideal of perfection that you just can't live up to (because nobody can).

It's controlling ultimately.

Rangoon · 05/08/2021 07:11

My husband had to tell me that our teenage son had cancer. It was not perfect. It sounds like your partner would be off in such a situation. Similarly, if you get old or ill or even get a scar it won't be perfect any more. The thing is that he is not perfect either - I am assuming he is not so gorgeous that women gasp in the street at his looks. He really doesn't sound like a keeper.

Mix56 · 05/08/2021 07:42

Please go, enjoy your holiday, & never look back.

Polkadots2021 · 05/08/2021 08:03

@Stfutfu

Ok but can you explain???
He's put you and the relationship on a pedestal with an idealised version of love, which you have to slot into exactly as he needs you to, else you get massive blow back. That's why he needs to control you all the time, to force 'perfect' all the time, which is of course not what a relationship is. You have to fit into his vision like a director in a play. It might be because of his parents divorce but it's very unhealthy
honeylulu · 05/08/2021 08:35

Firstly, no relationship is "perfect ". There is simply no such thing. A relationship can be good and happy but unfortunately that isn't what you have here either.

Your boyfriend has an idea of a relationship that is like a professionally performed and rehearsed stage play, lighting, costumes, the lot. He is the director, producer and lead actor. If you get your lines "wrong" or don't play your part as written for you he goes ballistic. He isn't interested in who you are, what you want, think or feel, only in you keeping up the performance to his standards. Can you see how fake and controlling this relationship is?

Moreover, the person who is spoiling your dates is him, storming off in a strop about a single comment. What would he do if something serious happened? Bereavement, illness, unplanned pregnancy, redundancy? He would probably spontaneously combust!

SmileyClare · 05/08/2021 08:43

The person spoiling your dates is him Exactly.

Imagine if you had children? His sulking, muttering under his breath and storming off are all so childish and self absorbed.

ShallWeStartTheMeeting · 05/08/2021 09:06

What happens the day you are sick? How 'perfect' would you be then?

ShallWeStartTheMeeting · 05/08/2021 09:09

He stormed off and messaged me saying for him it was the equivalent of me doing a massive turd in the middle of the table

Re-reading the OP I realised I hadn't noticed the above.
About bizarrely extra is that comment??? It's oddly... specific.

frozendaisy · 05/08/2021 10:23

@ILoveShula

Grab your trainers love, the hills are that way.
Yep........
CaptSkippy · 05/08/2021 10:41

I believe this is called "dread-game". It's an abusive tactic to control your behavior and to make you fear losing him, so that he holds all the cards in the relationship.

Run now, before he destroys your self-esteem.

Dfdsdfds · 05/08/2021 10:56

I had an ex like this. The slightest thing triggered an outburst, flounce and sulk. These people are deeply insecure and can’t handle the slightest challenge.

Run fast and far.

TempleofZoom · 05/08/2021 11:07

@babbi

I agree with previous posters OP . Get out immediately, this strive for perfection is common in narcissistic people . No good will of this. Well done on noting the toxic signs . You will do well when you get shot of him .
This! He doesn't want to see the real you. Just this in his head idea of who you are. He's following the idealisation, blame, abuse, discard formula of narcissistic abuse. Probably the relationship would continue like this until you get pregnant and have a baby and then the really toxic behaviour will begin. You will no longer be " perfect", have a different body and have a baby to look after. He will go full throttle into abuse telling you that you have ruined his life, he hates and discards you.

Please leave now, it's already abusive, you can never live up to his ideal because that person only exists in his head.

wewereliars · 05/08/2021 11:21

This man will destroy you if you stay run run run

Mischiefofmice · 05/08/2021 11:32

I’ve just been thro 5 yrs of hell with a covert narcissist…….this was him to a t in the beginning. End it now. I promise he will escalate and it will get worse.

LittleRed53 · 05/08/2021 11:32

I'd say the relationship is not a good one, but from both sides really.

His behaviour sounds like emotional abuse- the overreactions, storming off and sulking are big red flags. Not good at all!

However dating someone who will bring up a long-distant ex in the middle of a lovely date night would also be really difficult to put up with. Especially if it's something you do fairly often, which it sounds like you probably do judging by your OP. You need to find a way to work through your insecurities, or it will turn into a self fulfilling prophecy where you ruin your relationships by always being so worried that it will go wrong, that your need for constant reassurance will wear the other person down until they give up on ever feeling that they've actually gained your trust, and can just enjoy being together.

Taliskerskye · 05/08/2021 11:43

He doesn’t see you as a real person
He sees you as someone who makes him feel good about himself. And if you don’t then you have let him down.

NPD

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