Meet the Other Phone. Child-safe in minutes.

Meet the Other Phone.
Child-safe in minutes.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

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

I just don't understand why he's doing this

234 replies

TotallyUninspired · 06/04/2022 17:28

Just over three weeks ago after months of increasingly distant, cruel behaviour from him I asked my husband (of 14 years - 2 children) what was going on.
In January he had said that he felt unhappy and confused and 'loved me to bits but the spark had gone a bit'. I asked if there was someone else, he said no. I asked if he was still attracted to me, he said yes. I suggested marriage counselling, he said 'I don't know - I can't talk about this any more now'. I spent the next few weeks/months doing everything I could to spend more time together, talk more, sleep together more, go on dates, etc. I could still feel him pulling further and further away and making no effort at all (he was happy to sleep with me). He left rooms as I entered them, shrugged off my touch and it was like pulling teeth to get him to do anything with me.
This time, when I asked him he said that he 'loved me but was not in love with me', and this time, when I asked again, he told me that he was in love with someone else (also married). He then turned it round and blamed the whole thing on me, coming up with completely random instances from the past when I'd annoyed him by, for example, not telling him he was amazing in bed, not riding my bike enough, not wanting to go to a particular holiday destination one time. When I stood up for myself he got nastier and more personal - attacking my personality, telling me I was scared of life and he couldn't be with someone like that, and this new woman offers him things that I don't: 'happiness, joy'. He also told me it was 'none of my business' who it was.
I just don't recognise the version of our marriage he presented me with - to me we have been largely happy with good communication, were sleeping together, got on well, had the same values, had ups and downs of course, but no more than any other long relationship.
I don't recognise this cruel, selfish person as the man I married.
He is sorry for hurting me but doesn't regret it and would rather be single (if he doesn't end up with her) than be with me and our children, so really I have no choice in any of this. I certainly wasn't prepared to beg - it's gone too far - and I didn't.
It's been such a short time - he hasn't even properly moved out yet and I am brokenhearted and endlessly analysing how this happened and why he never talked to me about any of this at any point until it was too late in his eyes.
I'm scared for my future and for the childrens' future, barely functioning, but keeping it together as best I can for them and taking practical steps to sort it out.
What's really messing with my head now is that, while he's quite determined that this is the correct course of action, and even though he's broken all our hearts, he's phoning me up telling me he misses talking to me and spending time with me. I told him that he didn't get to betray me and then enjoy the benefits of my company. He was astonished and said I was throwing away the 18 years of our relationship. I told him that he had done that and I was only prepared to talk to him about practicalities/the children.
I honestly can't stand talking to him right now. Why doesn't he understand how much pain it causes me, and why does he think I would be in any way fine with being his friend 3 weeks after he's detonated our marriage?

OP posts:
Deathraystare · 07/08/2022 19:37

So if he cannot be with the other woman, he would rather be single. Remember his words! Cos as sure as eggs are eggs, if she gets bored with him/whatever, he will come running back. This is not your cue to say "Welcome back Darling" but to say, "I thought you said if you cannot be with her, you would rather be single" and slam the door in his confused face!!!

billy1966 · 07/08/2022 19:46

goody2shooz · 03/08/2022 21:32

Too right you deserve better than ‘this weak and selfish man’ ! If you have any doubts, reread your first post - he’s not only weak and selfish, but thoroughly unkind, nasty and a cheating liar. You deserve a million times better! 💐

Here here.

You are worth 10 of him on your worst day.

Yankydoodledandy · 15/09/2022 22:13

Was thinking about you @TotallyUninspired so how are you?
Have you and DH worked it out?

TotallyUninspired · 16/09/2022 09:24

@Yankydoodledandy Thanks for thinking of me. No, we haven't. It's been a hard few weeks. We are co-parenting much more proactively, which is good for the kids. He's on a downward spiral and I'm worried sick about him. Whether or not he deserves it is a moot point - the children need their father and I desperately want him to be okay. It's taking its toll on me and I've just started on antidepressants for depression/anxiety but at the moment they're making me feel worse!
On the plus side, I have managed to get another job, which starts in a few weeks. I'm amazed I got it as I was petrified the whole way through the interview process after the bad experience with the last job.
I wish I had a more positive update about getting my life together, being swept off my feet by Henry Cavill, etc. but unfortunately I'm a long way off that.

OP posts:
Yankydoodledandy · 16/09/2022 09:34

God to hear from you. I often wonder how you are.
Ummmm I get you. He is their father and they need him.
Well hopefully he can get in a better place, settled and a routine in place.
Massive congrats on the new job. Meds - not a bad thing, we all need some help along the way sometimes. Take everyday as it comes and if yo need to talk, vent, just post here....

FictionalCharacter · 16/09/2022 09:54

“I told him that he didn't get to betray me and then enjoy the benefits of my company. He was astonished and said I was throwing away the 18 years of our relationship. I told him that he had done that
Precisely.
Why doesn’t he understand? Because he’s only thinking of himself. And because he wants to blame you for everything and see himself as the innocent, wronged party.
It’s incredibly painful but I’m time the heartbreak will fade, I promise.

Pinkbonbon · 16/09/2022 10:08

Thats great about the new job!

As for him, I would just try to put as much distance in as possible. You don't need to to about his 'terrible mental state'. Block contact on everything bar one agreed on device and only reply on that if its to something regarding childcare.

He isn't struggling at all id bet.l (well, maybe financially) It's just some bullshit act to manipulate you. Also, chances are he hasn't split with her at all if she us still claiming to love him

Pinkbonbon · 16/09/2022 10:14

Posted too early.

Just to say I'd bet he told her somethjbg like- you desperately want him back and he is worried about your mental health btw.

Narcissistic triangulation. When they start trying to play one woman off against the other. So that they aren't the bad guy. Also, it feeds their ego if the women fight over him.

So, watch out for that bs

billy1966 · 16/09/2022 15:12

Congratulations OP.
Well done.

Great advice from @Pinkbonbon.
Be wary.

Someone capable of being so vicious and nasty is not to be trusted.

Be very wary of being used and manipulated.

Remember your children need one decent parent, and you are it.

Stay well, at all cost.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page