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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

How to get verbally abuse partner to leave

57 replies

Kayo123456 · 24/10/2021 19:34

I have a 17 month old toddler and since starting work 5 months ago my partner criticism has escalated into verbal abuse because I demand things from him and it’s now daily.

He shouts when I say something he doesn’t want to hear, calls me useless fat, cunt and lazy. Today he spat at me. He occasionally cleans the kitchen, feeds our daughter or takes her for a few hours but it’s always in negotiation for going to the gym, him having a lie in or watching a match.

He calls me lazy yet I’m the one that breastfeeds at night, prepares breakfast, cleans does the laundry and folds everything up, does the admin, does the mental load stuff etc. I used to be slim but hey I don’t have the time to go gym and if I take a break and workout he’ll call me down to find something, go toilet or change a dirty nappy.

We’re very lucky because my parents do most of the childcare when I’m at work but when he argues he claims that my parents to everything and all I do is sit on the sofa instead of interacting with my daughter. In fact he goes to the gym when my parents arrive instead of starting work which annoys them because they feel like he’s taking advantage of their kind nature whilst I’m running around sorting things out.
My parents say that I’m an amazing mum only implying that he needs to step because they notice that I do everything around the house while he plays with our daughter. (He doesn’t argue in front of them ). They said that playing with her is the minimum level of being a good father (he does take her out etc).

We don’t sleep in the same room because he can’t cope without sleep at night and wakes up if my daughter calls me to breastfeed. Yet he still complains that he couldn’t sleep at night because he was insomnia when and asks for a lie in whilst I probably have had less sleep and more broken sleep!
I own my house and we are not married and have begged him to leave and find his own place multiple times but he never does - just tries to rule with terror and I tell him leave our relationship is over.

Today’s incident was that I was playing in the garden with my daughter and saw some nettle weed in the garden and asked him for some garden gloves under the stairs so I could get rid of it. He said he checked and it wasn’t there - I said well open the door and you’ll see it to which he got annoyed. He didn’t check properly because I went inside and found the gloves straight away. He started getting angry at me saying I left our daughter outside by herself for the sake of making the garden look pretty when in fact he was the one watching the match and being lazy because if he checked properly I wouldn’t have had to leave the garden.

I want him gone but he doesn’t leave and I don’t want to go nuclear and tell my parents what he does because I don’t want to escalate things. I just want him to leave amicably and he is refusing to do so

OP posts:
Chocaholic9 · 25/10/2021 11:02

@Lana07

Lack of basic respect can ruin any relations.

We have clear house rules (like at school:)): NO

  1. name-calling

  2. swearing (God forbid spitting or fighting, breaking things in anger)

  3. shouting/raising voice

Instead:

  1. mutual love

  2. respect

  3. help (teamwork)

  4. support

  5. understanding

  6. encouragement

  7. apologizing if you made a mistake and broke any of the rules

That's lovely for you, but OP handing him a set of rules is not going to stop him spitting at her and calling him a cunt. You are clearly very naive.
Chocaholic9 · 25/10/2021 11:02

calling her a c*t

Chocaholic9 · 25/10/2021 11:07

@Kayo123456

Thank you for the thought out replies everyone. I’m going to try to gather my thoughts and tell my parents tomorrow.

To confirm he is not on the mortgage or the deeds. I’ve tried putting his stuff in bags before but it didn’t work. All his clothes are in a wardrobe in a different room now.
What doesn’t help is that we live in a different city to where he is from so he has no where to go even though he has considerable savings. His reasoning for not want to leave is to be with his daughter - funny because he gets stroppy after 1-2 hours with her. He apparent hates me and can’t stand me.. then why are you still living her???
Suggested an AirBnB near us but he said no.

Did I mention he broke the chain on the door once when I told him not to come back in? I’ll be changing the locks once I get him to leave.

You need to get the police involved. Him breaking the chain shows that he will do anything to stay. You can't do it by yourself. He doesn't respect you and thinks he can just intimidate you. It may end in violence. You need back up.
FatCatThinCat · 25/10/2021 11:27
  1. Tell your parents exactly what has been going on.
  2. Tell him the relationship is over and he needs to leave immediately. Have your parents there for support when you do this. Where he goes is not your problem.
  3. If he refuses to leave call the police and tell them your abusive ex is in YOUR property and refusing to leave and that you're scared.
  4. Once the police have removed him change the locks.
  5. Never allow him to step foot on your property again. If he tries it call the police immediately every single time.
  6. If he persists seek a restraining order (or whatever they're called these days)

You do not have to stay with an abuser just because they refuse to leave.

Chocaholic9 · 25/10/2021 11:35

@FatCatThinCat

1. Tell your parents exactly what has been going on.
  1. Tell him the relationship is over and he needs to leave immediately. Have your parents there for support when you do this. Where he goes is not your problem.
  2. If he refuses to leave call the police and tell them your abusive ex is in YOUR property and refusing to leave and that you're scared.
  3. Once the police have removed him change the locks.
  4. Never allow him to step foot on your property again. If he tries it call the police immediately every single time.
  5. If he persists seek a restraining order (or whatever they're called these days)

You do not have to stay with an abuser just because they refuse to leave.

This.
Hen2018 · 25/10/2021 11:44

I would phone the police now and ask to speak to their domestic violence officer. The coercive control and spitting would certainly interest them.

I would also mention it to your health visitor and make a diary of what events happen and when. I’d look back at try and make a note with a rough date of other incidents.

This way you are getting information ready in case he decides to apply for sole residency or if he kicks off in any other way.

Depending on what the police said, I would then give him a few hours to leave (on a day that suits you), having invited friends round to support you. Any trouble, call the police to have him helped on his way.

Then immediate lock change and Ring doorbell.

FOJN · 25/10/2021 11:49

Amicable is not possible here and that is not your fault. Its time to stop hoping he will be reasonable, he hasn't been so far so it's unlikely he will suddenly become a decent human being.

Tell your family what is going on, stop protecting him from the nuclear option. Force him to leave by changing the locks while he is out of the house. If you wait until you've managed to convince him to leave to do it, you'll be waiting forever or until he finds someone else to prime for his abuse.

Have a friend or family come to stay for a few days. After the locks are changed pack up his stuff and message him to tell him he's not welcome back in the house and he can collect his belongings from the doorstep. Tell him you will call the police if he tries to force entry and you will have no hesitation in reporting him for harassment if he doesn't leave you alone.

Whilst I think arrangements for child contact should be negotiated amicably this is a DA situation and you should tell him to apply through the courts. He cannot be trusted, your safety should come before all else.

Make notes of everything that happens (and has happened) just in case you do need to call the police.

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