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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:
FeckTheMagicDragon · 07/10/2021 16:16

You do not have to give him reasons (although the lack of sex alone would be a valid one) just meet him somewhere for a coffee and tell him it’s not working for you. Stay calm and go grey rock. Just keep repeating ‘it’s not working fir me’

Cosyblankets · 07/10/2021 16:16

So he lives with parents? Have you been? Does he? Someone suggested he's with his wife still. Maybe. He could be

Twinstudy · 07/10/2021 16:16

Don't feel embarrassed OP, it's easy to get carried away when you've carried a torch for a long time.

Sounds to me like he's well aware that you've had a crush on him for a long time and is taking full advantage. He sounds horrible. Please please dump him immediately.

CousinKrispy · 07/10/2021 16:16

Try not to dwell on feeling pathetic, OP, lots of us have made poor choices about relationships! The important thing is that you're smart and strong enough to listen to your instincts NOW and realize this isn't the relationship for you.

Read up on grey rock technique in case you need to use it when you dump him--just keep being boring and repeating over and over again that it just didn't work out and you don't want to continue a relationship.

You might want to consider therapy or at least some serious soul-searching to explore why you got into a relationship with him. Again, don't waste time feeling pathetic or guilty ... just work on developing the confidence and skills to see through this kind of guy even faster next time.

(Frankly I think him being into crypto is reason enough to dump.)

pilates · 07/10/2021 16:16

He is using you.

So many red flags.

HeartsAndClubs · 07/10/2021 16:16

Oh and, not having sex at this point is a good thing. At least you can’t get pregnant.

Don’t have sex with him.But don’t undress for him either

Member984815 · 07/10/2021 16:17

Dump him he's using you , 3 months in and talking about moving in or buying together is making alarms go off. He's love bombed you

CatBumJuice · 07/10/2021 16:17

Yeah, get out of this situation as quickly as you can.

TaRaLa · 07/10/2021 16:18

after your last update, end it today!
If he has a key, change the locks, tell everyone in real life it’s over so you don’t fall back and he leaves you alone.
Ikes to undress and look at you because you are slim now? WTAF?

Yes he stole money getting cash back at the pub

YodaiamsaidI · 07/10/2021 16:18

I'm sorry to be blunt,but he wants your money more.Which is absolutely no reflection on you,just what a leech he is.

Nirnroot · 07/10/2021 16:18

I agree with the PPs that say this is actually chilling to read. I'm getting a really bad feeling about this- agree with everyone leave now and block him on all levels.

I massively agree with changing your locks and all the other precautions. Change all your passwords, pins, bank cards and do a security check of your bank accounts, details etc. Honestly I'd probably go as far to notify my bank to put in extra security on my accounts and mortgage and a note on my profile re. Change requests (they can do this I used to work in banking). If you use a laptop/computer for banking do a full scan for keyloggers.

If you are scared for your safety break up in a public place with a friend, honestly get out now this is MAJOR alarm bells and sounds like someone who is planning to steal from you. Not that he hasn't already with the pub thing..

ISpyCobraKai · 07/10/2021 16:19

All I can say is he must have a massive cock and know how to use it.

Auroreforet · 07/10/2021 16:19

Cancel your cards, change your locks and block him everywhere.

Nc123 · 07/10/2021 16:19

Get rid, he’s almost certainly lying to you and he’s using you for sure.

HollowTalk · 07/10/2021 16:19

I think I'd set him up a bit - I'd message saying, "You remember you got two drinks on my card the other night? They took £27 from my account! I'm going to call them and see what's going on."

I'd love to see his response to that especially if you then tell him, "Well luckily they have CCTV on that bar...."

greyinganddecaying · 07/10/2021 16:19

There are so many red flags here. He seems to be using you to make himself look good (bragging about your job, money etc) - he doesn't seem to value you, just what you stand for.

You sound like you're doing really well for yourself - you deserve much better.

RobinPenguins · 07/10/2021 16:20

Trust your instincts, they’re telling you everything you need to know about him.

GreenTeaBlackCoffeeAndRedWine · 07/10/2021 16:21

@HollowTalk

I think I'd set him up a bit - I'd message saying, "You remember you got two drinks on my card the other night? They took £27 from my account! I'm going to call them and see what's going on."

I'd love to see his response to that especially if you then tell him, "Well luckily they have CCTV on that bar...."

I'd be tempted to do this too.

OP, I don't say this lightly, but please run. 3 months in you should be having fun.

Neverkins · 07/10/2021 16:21

I do know it’s not good. Again, thanks everyone for confirming what I kind of knew already (it was definitely becoming clearer).

I’m not sure who said it upthread, but it does seem like he wants to spend my money but resents me for it. The debit card transaction was strange and most likely dodgy, but I would never jump into any big financial commitments or investments. My savings are safe.

I could be worrying too much about breaking up with him. I just get the sense from how he talks about his wife (and previous relationships) that he would definitely paint himself as a victim, and probably lie about me to others. I know I should try not to care about that though. He’s the type who if I didn’t answer his calls I’d worry would turn up at my parents house and cause a scene to embarrass me into speaking to him. That kind of thing. He drinks too much and is a bit erratic at times (I know, I know).

OP posts:
Dragongirl10 · 07/10/2021 16:21

God run,and run faster....

MumofSpud · 07/10/2021 16:22

Run!

Ohpulltheotherone · 07/10/2021 16:22

Ah OP don’t be too harsh on yourself. A lot of us have held someone in too high regard without really knowing them.
I had an absolute fascination with a guy a few years back, not obsessed but not far off! We eventually hooked up and although it wasnt terrible, he certainly wasn’t this amazing magical creature I’d imagined him to be Confused

It’s disappointing to find out someone is a bit of a dick when you’ve had a picture in your mind but you sound pretty switched on and mature and now you’ve realised that he is in fact a massive twat, you can put this to bed and move on knowing that no, it wasn’t a great love story but it was a great lesson in listening to your instinct and not ignoring red flags. We should all do that more often - so well done.

Cocomarine · 07/10/2021 16:23

Don’t meet him for coffee to dump him - he’ll wheedle. You don’t owe him anything (he owes you the stolen £20 though!) you could even just ghost him if you wanted to.
I would just text him. Either telling him that he’s weird about sex and aggressive about your money so he can fuck off or… “hey, texting as I think it’s easier for you not to do this face to face. I’ve had doubts about dating you, and I’ve realised that I just don’t have that feeling. So best to call it a day. Take care.” Keeping it low key and that you just don’t have that unquantifiable / inexplicable feeling means that there’s nothing for him to argue against. You can save yourself rows about money, or persuasion that he just needs time to get over his ex… any reason you give will be something for him dispute. Telling him you basically just don’t fancy him is probably the biggest ego booting you could do 😉

Auroreforet · 07/10/2021 16:24

@Neverkins warn you family and they'll know to tell him to leave.
He's 40 not 14, he needs to grow up.

mintdream · 07/10/2021 16:24

Run and don’t look back.

This man is bad news - forget the teenage fantasy, you’re an adult now and can see him for what he actually is: a liar and a fraudster, and as for the undressing in the bedroom WTAF?!

Finish with him in a public place, and take one or two trusted friends/family to be nearby. Do the security checks that pp have already mentioned.

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