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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

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To be beginning to have a bad feeling about new boyfriend?

999 replies

Neverkins · 07/10/2021 15:34

I’m 3 months into a new relationship with a man I knew years ago. I always fancied him but he wasn’t into me. We lost touch after I went to uni, he stayed in our home town and got married. I contacted him over the years, mostly between my two long term relationships. He always seemed very focused on how attractive/slim I am ‘now’. He contacted me very very soon after his wife left him (I didn’t know at the time but it was 2/3 days). We met up, one thing led to another and we’ve been dating since. He told me he loved me very quickly and I reciprocated very enthusiastically. I felt head over heels and couldn’t believe he finally loved me.

I’m sure there are red flags in some of the backstory but I still mostly feel that I really am in love with him. There are some minor things bothering me though, mostly about money.

I work in a large firm I joined as a graduate. I’ve worked my way up the ladder and earn a very good salary in a part of the country with low cost of living. New guy was very nosy about my income from day 1, googling my job and firm to find out what I might earn. Asked lots of direct questions until I told him an approximate figure. He became belligerent and argumentative, told me that it wasn’t much money and he earns 10k more than me anyway. Now, I don’t particularly care what he earns as I can and do support myself, but the way he reacted was really odd. It seemed like he was trying to put me down/in my place and it was interesting that he volunteered no information about his own income until he knew mine and could compare. Also, I have some very good reasons to believe he doesn’t earn the money he claims he does.

He left his phone open with a WhatsApp conversation on the screen in which he was ‘bragging’ really grossly to a new friend of his about how much money I earn and that I’ve agreed to get him (this friend I’ve never met) a job in my firm. Needless to say I’d said no such thing and never would.

I make sure I pay for at least half of our dates and offer to pay for them all. We’ve enjoyed some very nice meals out and some lovely hotels so I’ve spent good money on him and vice versa. One morning we went to a cafe for breakfast and he disappeared off to the toilet after we’d both finished eating. He was taking a while and I felt awkward waiting for him in front of empty plates in a busy place so paid and found him outside smoking. He shouted at me for ‘embarrassing’ him by paying. This was a £15 bill when he’d been fine with my buying dinner and hotel rooms. 10 minutes later he apologised and said his outburst was because he isn’t used to women paying for things, that no woman has ever so much as bought him a drink before and he doesn’t know how to handle it.

He’s asked me a lot about what savings I have, and tells me he has great business ideas for me to invest in. Is very keen to bring this up in frequent conversations and talks about introducing me to business associates of his.

Despite supposedly earning more money than me, being 4 years older than me (40 years old), living in a very inexpensive part of the country and never moving out of our home town, has never owned property. Obviously there’s no problem with renting but it just doesn’t make sense for someone in his supposed position.

Within a week of meeting up he was talking very seriously about living together. Seemed very keen on me selling my home and us buying somewhere together. When I took it at face value and asked how we would structure it, what sort of price range we’d be considering, he fluffed around and gave me some noncommittal answer about how I should definitely buy it myself for my own legal protection. It seems like he just wants me to provide somewhere for him to live that’s convenient for him and to his taste. He’s living back with his parents as he generously (in his words) let his wife stay in their rented home.

We were at a local pub a couple of nights ago - just the two of us (and nobody we knew in there), and were taking it in turns to buy the drinks. It’s a very standard pub I’ve visited many times, where a glass of wine is around £5-6 and there’s nothing expensive by the glass. A pint of lager/ale and a glass of wine is always

OP posts:
ShuddaBeenMe · 08/10/2021 07:03

I bet it's a relief, have a good weekend.

pilates · 08/10/2021 07:11

Are you ok op?

Charley50 · 08/10/2021 07:15

Good news OP. As others have said, don't let him in your house if he does turn up, and call the police if he is even mildly threatening.

Cherrysoup · 08/10/2021 07:16

Proper weirdo!

DressBitch · 08/10/2021 07:16

Well done, OP. Stay strong.

Lovesicecreams · 08/10/2021 07:18

Run away op

ThumbWitchesAbroad · 08/10/2021 07:21

The constant bombardment with texts is part of the control.
It may escalate - to him either threatening his own life, or threatening you.
Ignore any threats of his to kill himself - he won't.
But any threats to YOUR safety/wellbeing, keep and report to the police if necessary.
Stop responding - if he keeps going, send him one "cease and desist" type text that says you will take action against him if he continues to harass you.

Well done for getting out - I've been in a similar position in some ways, and it was SO intense SO quickly - but I got lucky that mine moved on, as I wasn't as compliant as he would have liked. I mean, REALLY lucky. Not so much the poor woman who he moved on to, although she didn't last long either.

headintheproverbial · 08/10/2021 07:24

Fab OP. Well done you for having the courage to listen to your niggle (and MN!). He sounds like a right loser at best and an abuser at worst. You're well rid.

MolkosTeenageAngst · 08/10/2021 07:24

Well done for being so strong and getting out OP.

SunshineCake1 · 08/10/2021 07:26

I'd be worried he'd come to your home anyway and try and break in now you've said you won't be there.

NewModelArmyMayhem18 · 08/10/2021 07:27

Good for you OP. You've done the right thing.

lap90 · 08/10/2021 07:29

Well done OP.
You are well rid.

Greengrass2020 · 08/10/2021 07:34

He's a narcissist get rid sorry !

Username817391920384747 · 08/10/2021 07:37

Oh my God, please leave him. You can do so much better than him. The red flags are literally screaming in your face at this point.

Username817391920384747 · 08/10/2021 07:37

Oh have just seen your update, well done OP! 👏

Mary46 · 08/10/2021 07:37

I would ask him about the pub money but then you prob dont want constant texts which he would do. Hope u ok.

Howshouldibehave · 08/10/2021 07:38

Well done. I agree with a op-that’s the best £27 you’ll ever spend!

As I said earlier, I don’t want to talk further about it so please don’t come round again. I have made plans with friends for the weekend so I won’t be at home, nor will I be in [hometown].’

Is that all true? If he turns up at yours over the weekend, will you be there?

Phoebesgift · 08/10/2021 07:38

You're a 36 year old intelligent woman. How can you not have seen this man for what he is from the first date?

AhNowTed · 08/10/2021 07:39

OP something similar happened to a friend of mine.

We're all 50s now.

So she got with a teenage crush. He was and still is physically very attractive.

It was like she felt finally accepted into the cool gang, 30 years later.

He would never had looked at her as a teen.

He very quickly was spending most of the week at her house, using her car, eating her food.

He has no real job, and a serious alcohol problem. Rents a room in a shared house.

He was basically using her for a warm bed.

It took her about 3 years to get rid of him.

HappyGoLuckyLuLu · 08/10/2021 07:41

Hurrah for empowered women spotting Cockfosters before they move themselves in! You've done yourself a huge favour - but sincerely hope he doesn't become a nuisance before he gets the message....

HappyGoLuckyLuLu · 08/10/2021 07:41

Haha *cocklodgers even

thinkingaboutLangCleg · 08/10/2021 07:45

Well done, OP. If he tries being super-nice to you, just ignore it. Stay strong.

I let a bad relationship drag on for years (long ago) because I kept feeling sorry for him each time he’d enraged me enough to split up with him. Of course it got worse and worse.

You have saved yourself a lot of pain and your future has opened up again. Enjoy it!

Hopeisallineed · 08/10/2021 07:46

Hundred percent the right decision.

MzHz · 08/10/2021 07:46

You did absolutely the right thing, telling him clearly again that you don’t want to hear from him is fine

The “I’m worried about you” is something I have learned is the biggest red flag in situations like this, it’s manipulative

Reject that every time

OnwardsAndSideways1 · 08/10/2021 07:50

I can totally see how the 'my dream crush' finally wanting to go out with you could suck you in fairly quickly, especially if you had a strong physical connection.

Great that the spell has been broken though, and he's been revealed to be a frog all the time!