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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

Since house move partner's behaviour on pain meds becoming increasingly erratic trying to support him but it's becoming difficult

79 replies

Anon1996 · 02/11/2022 03:26

Hi, I'm posting this at almost 3am even though I have to get up for the school run because I'm at my wits end.

I've been with DP for three years and we live together. He is stepdad to my two DS's age 7 and 8.

Hes on the painkiller oxycontin as well as paracetamol and an anti inflammatory for what is essentially a floating kneecap and uses a walking stick on occasion. He can't walk far and if we go out somewhere he is often in huge amounts of pain if he has to walk for over 20 mins and we often have to sit down or go back to the car. He has a blue badge and works full time from home.

I knew his situation when we got together and knew he was on strong opiods- this didn't stop him being a great stepfather and partner to me. He has supported me and my children and we have had great times together.

However, each month when he gets his script he takes a few extra - its obvious he is addicted to the meds. This was never a huge issue and he admitted to me when he gets his knee replaced he will need the support of the GP to wean himself off of them.

We moved house in April after living in a horrible run down bungalow on the same street as his mother (who he lived with when we got together as a means to "save money" or so I was told). We took the place as it belonged to his mother's friend and options were limited in the pandemic. I couldn't stand the house and it was half an hour walk from the kids school ( I don't drive) and luckily my boss was understanding. My partner would do the schoolrun but would moan about the impact on his work so for arguments sake I would do it. After almost two years there I had enough. The shower didn't work, there was a constant mould problem and the landlord wouldn't sort anything that was broken such as light fittings/exposed wires etc. It wasn't safe for the kids and when the rent increased by 200 pounds I put my foot down and said I'm not paying almost a grand for a heap of shit place.

Also, despite his mum being lovely, I didn't think it was healthy to live practically on her doorstep the houses were so close she could hear our conversations in the garden.

I found a place near to the school for a similar price that had a nice garden and a friendly family neighbourhood. The kids finally have their own rooms and we have a bath which we didn't have before.

DP was v happy with it too.

Fast forward to now and since we've moved here DP's med use has increased heavily. He slurs his words, "nods out" constantly and doesn't remember half of what he's said. He gets extra meds from a woman he knows who has the same script.

We've hardly been out of the house together and spent little to no quality time together.

His behaviour has become strange and erratic and he will be hoovering or clanking about in the kitchen at 1am/2am. If I confront him about it he gets angry and acts as if I'm being unreasonable.

He shouted and swore at me the other night and can't remember it.

Every year we have a Halloween party for the kids. He left me to do all the cooking and prep myself after promising to help and drove off to get more meds mid party. I confronted him about swearing at me the night before and he got aggressive with me and said "he's not sorry because he can't remember". I then then said for the first time since we've been together I was considering leaving. He then had a breakdown where I found him passed out at the wheel of his car in his pants with his head beeping the horn. I took him inside and he started to cry and scream and said "the black cloud" was coming back. He threw lemonade all over his work computer. I tried to get through to the crisis team but was on hold. He spoke about killing himself and was slapping his own head and banging his fists on the table and crying loudly. I called his mother and she came over. By the time she arrived he was asleep.

I told her in detail the extent of his med use and showed her all the empty pill packets in his office bin. He also steals her co-codamol which she is aware of.

The next day she came and spoke to him.

She then told me "He feels the stairs have caused the issue" and he is in more pain and he "feels selfish going to the gym so he's stopped" and I need to support him going to the gym.

I've been diagnosed with ADHD and she said "I know routine isn't your thing because of your ADHD or whatever but you need to understand routine is very important to him".

I work full time in a professional job and when it comes to routine I try my best, I was a single parent for years so know how to have a routine. I used to make him a salad every single lunch and bought him a gym kit. With the meds he sits around eating ice cream all day, I was still serving him healthy home cooked meals thay I would cook for the kids. Yes I struggle with routine sometimes but I always try. She also recommended that I get a different job as he "struggles with my hours". I'm hurt by this as I've always supported him in what he wants to do and never stopped him doing anything. I'm going to be totally honest and I might come off as a bitch but I feel he's told a total sob story to his mum and she's lapped it up hook line and sinker. Am I wrong in thinking that?

Most nights he's up several times, spends hours in the bath laughing to comedy podcasts or watching grand prix clips happy as a clam. At lunchtimes he goes shopping, visits his uncle to fly drones or is cleaning the house. At the weekend his mum usually "books herself in" by cooking us dinner and we spend most of the evening there. Some days she just appears at our house unannounced.

This depression has come on very suddenly and I've spoken to him very softly and been as nice as I can, giving him space and time - encouraging self care, I've made a meal plan for him and got him a fresh new pair of gym shorts as he's put on weight and his old ones don't fit. He asked me to tell him where I feel he's been not acting himself in our relationship.

Every time I try to talk to him he turns it on me, gers aggressive and defensive or "nods off" from the drugs. He takes ages to reply, often sighing loudly, slurring his words and not making sense. So I say look let's just go to sleep and he gets angry and walks off. Next breath he's crying saying he's not good enough and scared I will leave him and talks about engagement rings.

I shield the kids from alot of it, and most of the behaviour happens at night when he takes more meds.

We never go to bed together anymore, have a decent conversation and I feel I just don't know him anymore. I'm trying so hard to support him but I don't know what to do. I'm so so tired. I can't communicate with him at all. And when we do have a breakthrough conversation it turns out he can't remember it the next day.

His mum seems to think the gym will solve it and I don't get for the life of me why she's ignoring the addiction issue? It's her son and its a powerful pain medication that could kill him. I get its hard for her to face but I thought she would care more???

My family are far away and the hours I work don't leave a lot of time for a social life so I haven't seen much of my friends lately. I just do the school run, cook the kids dinner, get them in the bath and sit with them. We went out trick or treating and they had their party and they have their clubs. Aside from that I've barely left the house as DP isn't forthcoming with any kind of plan with me - he makes plans with people who he wants to see but the most we do is watch TV together. Our sex life is non existent as the meds mean he can't do it.

I need some advice on what to do next. I feel guilty for my working hours and picking a house with stairs - his mums house had stairs and as he can do the gym and run about cleaning I didn't think the stairs would be such an issue as he mentioned at the time the house was perfect.

I overheard him telling his mother he was "In tears to the GP about the stairs" he also said he doesn't have enough money and the house move cleaned him out- which i also feel guilty for. He earns 100K a year and just before we moved bought himself a new audi and an expensive speaker system for the TV. I paid the deposit for the house as he said he was "paying for the moving van and new bed so it's only fair I pay the deposit as I wanted to move" so I paid it so he wouldn't have to be in more debt. I'm on 30K and send him half my wage each month to cover my half of the rent and bills as he's made it clear he can afford it.

I feel so bad about this house move and that its worsened his abuse of meds and made him depressed. But I knew if I didn't put my foot down we would have stayed in that manky bungalow forever two doors down from his mum. He cried the other day and said he was "devastated" I didn't like the bungalow - that it was meant to be our family home and he put his heart and soul into it.... he said I didn't make enough effort with the move and he felt he "did the heavy lifting" he said it took a long time to forgive me for that and a house move is the same as losing a loved one it's a huge life event etc

I was having a miscarriage at the time and had lost my job so I couldn't physically lift so I did small things like setting up the kitchen, decorating and unpacking boxes.

So for this move I went above and beyond and did most of the heavy lifting with my friend. All he did was set up his work office and drive the van and do the wardrobe with his dad. So i felt I had redeemed myself from letting him "move in alone" last time. It took him a year to stop talking about that before. He also complained I didn't earn enough as I was working in a care job because my profession was laying a lot of people off at that time. I started a masters alongside it and he said it was a useless bad idea. Luckily because i was a keyworker the kids went to school. I quit the masters in the end as he complained so mucb about driving to the school that as a result i was missing lectures. In 2021 I got a call from my old boss and was offered my old job back- and he asked me for more bill money. As I was earning again I felt I could finally address the issue of the house. I now just feel it was a terrible idea because of his knee and now depression.

Sorry for long post xx

OP posts:
Sarahcoggles · 02/11/2022 06:53

He's essentially a heroin addict and you need to leave. It will only get worse.

OldWivesTale · 02/11/2022 06:58

Assuming all this is true then if he's on 100 grand a year then he can pay for a fucking new knee. He shouldn't have to, the NHS should do it but since the Tories are deliberately running it into the ground then he needs to pay. How long has he been waiting for the op? Anyway, he sounds like a drain on you. What exactly are you getting out of this? You need to give him an ultimatum: he pays for his knee and gets off the meds within a given time frame or he leaves your home. Your poor children are getting nothing from him and you are setting a bad example by putting up with this shit.

Justcallmebebes · 02/11/2022 07:01

He's an addict. Don't subject your poor kids to life with an addict. It's not fair on them as he's not a stepfather, he's their mums boyfriend. Please do right by them

OldWivesTale · 02/11/2022 07:01

Sorry, just read that he's refusing surgery! Then you just need to get him out of your life now.

frozendaisy · 02/11/2022 07:02

Tell him to go back to his mum's.

Greydogs123 · 02/11/2022 07:06

You need to leave. For your children and for you. He is an addict and it seems like he is financially abusing you, by taking so much of your money when he is making 3 times what you do.
You are giving lots of reasons and excuses why you can’t leave, but you need to see that he is damaging you and your children.

OldWivesTale · 02/11/2022 07:07

Also, I'm missing the point here, but how is this waste of space on 100k a year?! This is what we all need to remember when people talk about those who work hard earning good money because they deserve it blah, blah. There's no correlation between hard work and a good salary; it's often the lazy fuckers who end up lucky and drop into a well paying job. And conversely, people working several jobs are often struggling to make ends meet.

ZeroFuchsGiven · 02/11/2022 07:18

Im so sorry Op. you really need to kick him out to his mums then she can see for herself whats going on, You and your kids deserve better.

I have not rtft only your op but will go back now.

My ex (kids dad) started on strong pain meds, he is now a full blown herion addict, homeless and the kids will have nothing to do with him, had no contact for over 2 years.

EarBake · 02/11/2022 07:27

Sounds like your still in denial about it all to be honest.

pensionconfusion · 02/11/2022 07:29

What awful situation to be in for you and your kids.

He is an addict and that is his problem. He will not get help unless he wants to and you can't make him.

If you want to leave him don't let the lack of money get in your way. Speak to citizens advise who will tell you how you can improve your credit score and what benefits you will be able to claim. Speak to woman's aid who will help you leave this abusive relationship. I haven't used them myself but I have been part of a team who helped a vulnerable woman and they were excellent. Lots of options and grants available.

Good luck and stay strong 💐

PermanentTemporary · 02/11/2022 07:31

I'm sorry, this just sounds awful. Awful.

An addict who is in debt on £100k a year? Who punishes you for buying you a tin of beans 2 years ago or whatever? No sex, no fun with you? Christ.

Would your mum help out with a deposit for a new place if you really can't afford to stay in that house?

This isn't meant as criticism exactly but please please don't introduce partners to your children 2 months in. Because they may be lovely to them but at least partly because that's how they hook themselves into your lives, so that you are now with a shit partner you feel you can't get rid of. He relies on your emotional stability and support.

I'm also going to say it is genuinely possible that he might kill himself. He might do it at any time, whether you leave him or not, and it is NOT your fault. If you think he is genuinely about to do it, call the police and protect your children from him. (My late dh took his own life, in case you think I'm saying this randomly.)

BEAM123 · 02/11/2022 07:35

I'm so sorry, it sounds like this relationship is over. He is not being a kind and supportive partner to you. He is an addict, he is financially abusing you. Your kids may have accepted him but this is only going to get worse and impact them. You might find they know more than they are letting on anyway - they just aren't saying anything because they think you are happy. It's amazing how much kids take in that they never let on.

He needs to sort himself out, if his mum thinks you are not doing a good enough job maybe he can move back in with her!!! It is not your responsibility, you have kids to look after.
Where did you live before you met him?
Can you afford the rent alone in the nice place where you are now?
Can you get any housing benefit to afford it? Don't forget about the council tax single occupant discount.

catfunk · 02/11/2022 07:40

Leave. Now.

Outtasteamandluck · 02/11/2022 07:44

Read that back.

3 years!! Knock it on the head before it turns into 30 years. Now that would be tragic.

You tried (too much), it didn't work, time to move on. Think of your kids.

You'll be fine.

frozendaisy · 02/11/2022 07:47

OP borrow or ask for a year's rent from your dad or stepdad, they are ex doctors they must have a bit of cash. Get a nice, small place just big enough for the children. If he says he can't afford the house if you leave he can run back to mummy.

thenewduchessoflapland · 02/11/2022 07:56

You know all it takes is one of your children to mention his behaviour/all the drugs a staff member at school and it will trigger a SS visit don't you?

Why are you allowing this drug addicted financial abuser in your life?

There are other men out there who aren't like this.

sazza76 · 02/11/2022 07:58

As is so often the case, it sounds as though his pain and subsequent addiction has been poorly managed. I have chronic pain myself and have been on opiate based patches for 15 years and although it hasn’t happened to me, I have met many others who have ended up with addictions spiraling out of control. There’s often an understandable fear around seeking help because people can left be left without pain relief and its a viscous circle. It’s easy for people to judge (other posters not you) it happens to people from all walks of life, and I believe it could happen to anyone.

You’ve got so much going on with everything happening OP, but it sounds like his addiction and pain is likely the root of it all. I know money is tight but private pain clinics in this country are a million times better than the NHS, but saying that the first thing needs to be getting him to agree to talk to his GP. It may be a really difficult time but he can get through it with the right support if he is onboard.

ZeldaWillTellYourFortune · 02/11/2022 08:03

This is a horrible situation for your kids to be in. Get rid of this bum ASAP.

sazza76 · 02/11/2022 08:06

I didn’t see some of your posts before posting my prvious post as it took me s while to finish so I now see there’s more to his attitude to his knee and pain meds etc. Got to get kids ready but will come back later.

EVHead · 02/11/2022 08:14

It’s a mystery to me how he holds down a job, never mind a high paying one!

It's not your job to fix him. He’s ruining your life. Take control back - stop living according to what HE wants.

Stop bending to his will. It’s ridiculous that he “demands” money from you. You’re a grown woman. He’s not your boss. Take control.

Focus on your kids. This is not a healthy environment for them to grow up in. It’ll be hard at first, but in time you will all be happy living without him.

You’re three years in. In the grand scheme of things, that’s nothing. Get out now - get Women’s Aid help. You won’t regret it.

LIZS · 02/11/2022 08:18

He is abusive and an addict. You need to distance yourself from his behaviour and safeguard your dc. You may think you are shielding them from the outbursts but I doubt they are unaware or affected by it. He needs to seek help, you cannot do this for him, but he needs to admit he has a problem first. How can he hold down a 100k job and be so volatile. Send him back to his mother's if she will take him,

ValerieDoonican · 02/11/2022 08:26

He's an addict.
It's not your responsibility to fix him, nor is it in your power to do so.
He's emotionally and financially abusive.
This situation is already damaging your family. You are so fixated on him, do you have any energy or attention (or money) left for your children? He is stealing that from them.
He may be wonderful in some ways, possibly (it doesn't exactly shine through your posts, I have to say..) but if he was wholly wonderful he wouldn't want you and your kids to be going through this either.
You have to protect yourself and your children. And that means getting away from him/getting him gone. Completely. His mother can have him back.

ThanksAntsThants · 02/11/2022 08:57

Coincidental that his sudden depression only came on when you said you might leave, don’t you think?

OP if school get even a whiff of this, they’ll be calling SS, and SS take a very dim view of mothers who put their drug addict boyfriends before their children. A very dim view indeed. And don’t you bloody dare think you’re shielding them from it and they don’t know, because they’ll know a lot more than you think. You’ve got a rude awakening coming if you don’t pull your head out of your arse and get your kids away from this drug addicted abuser of a man.

if you think I’m being harsh, you wait till you meet an assessing social worker, they are harsh, and they have power.

PearlclutchersInc · 02/11/2022 09:20

I wish I could wave a magic wand for you. You must leave him. Its a shitshow and you won't be able to end it without him cooperating. And it'll get worse before it gets better which is unlikely.

💐

Justcallmebebes · 02/11/2022 10:11

You may have a valid point that addiction, especially painkiller addiction, can happen to anyone. My mother was addicted to opiates and yes, if you love someone and they want to get better you can stick around and help them to do so.

But, he shows no signs of accountability or desire to deal with his addiction and you have 2 young children. They should be your priority, not helping someone who doesn't want help or doesn't want to help himself

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