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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 help a (male) friend who's miserable?

253 replies

notaverygoodagonyaunt · 20/11/2022 15:54

I've got a male friend who seems to be a bit stuck and unhappy in his home situation. Trying not to get too involved but he struggles to talk to his male friends about it as openly.

Him and his girlfriend aren't happy, don't have any intimacy anymore, no date nights and don't really get along as a couple. They have children, and one child has a specific type of autism/behavioural issues.

In his mind, he's not young anymore, doesn't want to be a part time parent and couldn't afford financially to split up. I expect there's also a level of fear of being alone/shaking up the current level of 'comfortable' too. Seems like they're together for convenience and children - they do have a lot of shared friends and have been together a very long time.

He thinks she is very controlling, but I think he has also at least contemplated being unfaithful in the past. Not with me. He seems to be truly miserable but at the same time feels like he can't do anything about it as it will make it worse.

I've said it's not too late to start over and find someone who might make him happy. But he thinks it'll mess the children up and financially cripple him. He's not married but a far higher earner, I'm not too sure realistically what that means as I don't have children yet.

I think he has low self esteem and anxiety which is keeping him stuck. I don't know his girlfriend very well, I assume she's in a similar boat as she has taken him back after him getting close to someone he used to work with.

I think he's actually a good guy - he does his fair share of the parenting, he provides most of the money, he doesn't complain about his partner or blame her for this - but he seems totally lost and miserable and thinks he's too old now and can't change it.

I'm not sure how I can help him - if he wants to stay with her I think he needs to take some steps to improve things and work on date nights, intimacy etc. He says neither of them is interested. But without that there's more likelihood of getting close to other people surely?

If he doesn't want to stay with her - surely it's best that he move on now and hopefully meet someone new before he's wasted any more years and even older. I want to help and offer advice, equally I don't want to get too mixed up in it - he just seems so unhappy and it's really sad to see.

OP posts:
Palmfrond · 22/11/2022 17:42

@notaverygoodagonyaunt i haven’t read the full thread, but you sound over concerned about something that isn’t/shouldn’t be your problem. You should take a step back.

Sandra1984 · 23/11/2022 09:50

Palmfrond · 22/11/2022 17:42

@notaverygoodagonyaunt i haven’t read the full thread, but you sound over concerned about something that isn’t/shouldn’t be your problem. You should take a step back.

Exactly. Op should be concerned about getting a better job that pays enough so she doesn’t depend
on having to listen a creepy old guy because she can’t afford her commute,

Branleuse · 23/11/2022 10:15

I find it odd that you seem to be defensive when people are accusing him of wanting to shag you, as if theyre calling you stupid or a slag or something. Its not the case. Loads of women have just experienced so many men like this over the years, and 99.9% of the time its the same old story. Weve all fallen for it, thinking men were friends. The first sign is so often coming to you with their relationship woes or to slag off other women, esp their partner.

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