Meet the Other Phone. Protection built in.

Meet the Other Phone.
Protection built in.

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

Husband prioritises sick mother over me and baby

166 replies

Disgruntledwife2023 · 12/01/2023 17:16

There is a fair bit of backstory here... My husband and I have been together over 10 years and married for just over 6. His mother was diagnosed with stage 4 cancer in spring 2016. I was there for all the tests, the hospital stay, was driving across the city every day after work for over a week to the hospital to be there to support them etc. We then got married very quickly (within 6 months) because we didn't think she would have long. I planned the whole wedding by myself as well as moving house to live with husband during that period, and getting a puppy together. We never had a honeymoon and instead went away with his parents for 2 weeks. On our first wedding anniversary, my husband went on holiday with his mum, also missing my birthday (without discussing this with me at all).
I spent 6 years commuting over 1 hour and then this became 1.5 hours each way so that we could live 5/10 mins drive from his parents. We have been away on holiday with his parents nearly as many times as we have been away together as a married couple.
I finally had a bit of a breakdown with the commuting and we decided to move to be closer to my work (I am a teacher) and I also moved to work part time for my mental health. Within a month his parents moved 10 mins drive from us and spent a week living with us before they could move in.
Throughout the Covid pandemic, my husband was constantly on edge that I as a teacher would catch Covid and infect him and he would then infect his mum. I was so super careful about this and really anxious to avoid this happening but nevertheless he would ask me on a regular basis about had I had contact with positive people, if I was going out somewhere reminding me all the time about masks and hand sanitiser etc. In the end, it was his dad who caught Covid when I was 8 months pregnant. I then said yes to his mum coming to live with us even though she had therefore been exposed. My husband basically moved into the spare room with her as she needs assistance walking and going to the bathroom. It turned out she had caught Covid from his dad and then my husband also got it. She had a bad reaction and had to go into hospital for a few days, and when she left for hospital, it turned out she had wet herself and vomited all over the spare room bed. I carried the mattress out to the garden and spent hours scrubbing at it - at 8 months pregnant. My husband barely thanked me.
More backstory - his dad shows 0 interest in me at all, still doesn't know what I do for a job (I am a languages teacher - it's not that hard to remember...) and creates lots of conflict with my husband every holiday we go on together. Once he took off at 3am and left his wife (who was very ill at that point having deteriorated) with us for us to sort out getting her home in our car.

I thought now that we have a baby together that we would become his priority. I ended up having a traumatic birth and a emergency c section delivery. On the day this happened, he was pushing for his parents to come to the hospital. Fortunately the visiting hours didn't work out! The following day when we came home, he had his parents come over and his dad made comments about me looking fat and asked how long it would take for me to look normal again. At first, my husband was sympathetic to me being upset at this, but then told me I am overly sensitive and I should now his dad by now doesn't mean bad by those comments. I needed a lot of care for the first couple of weeks as I couldn't drive, couldn't stand up or sit down or get out of bed by myself. Still, my husband didn't do any housework and only offered to cook for me once. As soon as I was more able he was back to having his parents over all the time or going round to theirs, and commented that he feels bad for spending the time at home with me rather than looking after his mum.
I ended up feeling extremely depressed, even suicidal, and highly anxious in the first couple of months. I felt like I had no support and wasn't a priority. I voiced all this but was essentially told it can't be any other way. My husband works 3 days a week and before Christmas all of these were from home. He was still seeing his parents three times a week on average and making time for bike rides, gym sessions, and online language lessons, plus developing an app he is working on. Meanwhile I was still doing all the housework, arranging everything for our baby like health checks and a passport for her so we could go on holiday with his parents at Christmas, and cooking for all of us.

During the first 6 weeks he also tried to get me to let him take our baby daughter to his parents place without me. She is breastfed. He tried to get me to agree to using formula so he wouldn't need me to be there. I was distraught at this and couldn't bear the idea. He finally relented but then would raise the subject a couple of days later again and this went on and on until he realised I just couldn't agree to this and so his parents would come round ours every other day.

The holiday at Christmas fell through because his dad hadn't been organised enough to arrange more medication for his mum before going and I lost hundreds of pounds I had spent on flights there and back. I had also spent so much mental energy getting myself feeling robust enough to fly with a 2.5 month old whilst still managing my depression and anxiety.

My husband also blocked my parents coming to stay with us in October, a month after our daughter was born and on my birthday, saying he would feel it was an intrusion on his space. This was after they had had a row in the summer when they came to stay with us (I was 6 months pregnant) and my husband spent the whole time up in his office playing computer games.

Finally I persuaded my husband to let my parents stay at the end of December and it made a world of difference to me to have my mum around cooking dinner and just knowing she and my dad were there for me and I could rely on them. Finally I no longer felt depressed and my self esteem was getting better.

In the meantime I have flagged up to my husband on multiple occasions that I'm not happy with the state of our marriage. I have voiced that I feel like I'm not a priority and things need to change. He has finally agreed to do more housework, he now empties the dishwasher, hoovers and wipes the kitchen surfaces once a week (I do these all the other days a week...). And he walks the dog when he is around - but in reality he is now going into the office one day a week and helping out at his parents on the other days.

He has again now raised the issue of taking our daughter to spend time with his parents without me and that I am not meeting his emotional needs by not being okay with this. I said actually I would probably be fine with it if he can let me know the day before so I can pump milk for him to take. Apparently that's not good enough and he wants to be able to go at a moment's notice and doesn't care about her having a nap schedule etc.
He hasn't been helping out at all with nappy changing, bath time, bedtime, coming to any baby classes or appointments on the days he isn't working. He has only just started playing and reading to her at my suggestion. He said he wasn't doing any of that stuff because it was too painful for him to accept I can't let him take her without me spontaneously to his parents.

For context- his mum's cancer hasn't got any worse in 6 years, but she now can't walk unassisted and struggles with speech. She needs help with basic tasks like bathing, bathroom, eating, and getting dressed - largely from the radiation therapy that she was treated with. His dad is only just pursuing getting some help with carers.

I'm at breaking point in our marriage. I have started to contact mediators and solicitors for separation to understand how this would work. I know I've partly engineered the situation by allowing myself to be on the back burner our whole marriage, but I thought him becoming a father would change things and it hasn't. I don't want our daughter to grow up seeing me not being prioritised and think therefore that it's okay for her to not be number one for her future partner.

If you're still reading - well done! I'm sorry it's so long, but it has been years of this and I feel like the examples are relevant.

Am I being unreasonable? I am so scared about starting a separation / divorce process, but I feel like I need to think about our daughter and what we model for her in a marriage.

OP posts:
Silvers11 · 12/01/2023 19:30

Disgruntledwife2023 · 12/01/2023 17:44

If anything he tells me that it is normal what he is doing and I actually am unreasonable and irrational.

It absolutely isn't normal. He's gaslighting you now. Please leave this man and get support from your own parents. I know it's scary - but once the dust settles you will wonder why you ever stayed with him as soon as you discovered what he is like. Life is too short to put up with this crap

Itsnotaferret · 12/01/2023 19:34

Get yourself the fuck out of there

pocketvenuss · 12/01/2023 19:36

He's fucking weird OP. Get the heck away from him and his crazy family.

thelionthewitchtheaudacityofTHISbitch · 12/01/2023 19:36

How can 6 years "terminal" diagnosis be terminal? I know you said you were there but I would be wondering, a lot, about that. And by a lot - I do mean the actual Stage 4 diagnosis.

But leaving all that aside the rest of it still sounds shit and unacceptable. So do investigate your options, and quickly. Don't set a pattern.

pawprintseverywhere · 12/01/2023 19:37

Yanbu

whatausername · 12/01/2023 19:40

thelionthewitchtheaudacityofTHISbitch · 12/01/2023 19:36

How can 6 years "terminal" diagnosis be terminal? I know you said you were there but I would be wondering, a lot, about that. And by a lot - I do mean the actual Stage 4 diagnosis.

But leaving all that aside the rest of it still sounds shit and unacceptable. So do investigate your options, and quickly. Don't set a pattern.

Because it is no cure and if something else doesn't kill her sooner then the cancer will. You can live a surprisingly long time with terminal cancer. It's a word people often misunderstood, same with "palliative".

Arrivederla · 12/01/2023 19:41

Silvers11 · 12/01/2023 19:30

It absolutely isn't normal. He's gaslighting you now. Please leave this man and get support from your own parents. I know it's scary - but once the dust settles you will wonder why you ever stayed with him as soon as you discovered what he is like. Life is too short to put up with this crap

Exactly this. Don't let him make you doubt yourself, you are not in the wrong here. 💐

whatausername · 12/01/2023 19:42

@Disgruntledwife2023 you poor thing, what the f have I just read!

As everyone else says, the cancer is a red herring. Your "husband" is a crap husband, father and partner who is, quite honestly, a bully.

Get rid of him. You're alone in the marriage anyway. Kick him out. Raise your DD and your dog yourself. You're pretty much doing that already.

whatausername · 12/01/2023 19:44

@thelionthewitchtheaudacityofTHISbitch the irony of me explaining something whilst making a bunch of grammatical errors 😂 I'm sure you'll be able to puzzle out my message!

UWhatNow · 12/01/2023 19:44

As pp have said, his mother’s illness is irrelevant. He treats you and your dd like shit. You are just a maid and a nanny in his eyes. Please bin him off and don’t allow your dd to grow up with such a poor role model for a father.

strawberry2017 · 12/01/2023 19:49

I'm so sorry that your husband is such a wanker.
You are 100% doing the right thing, sadly if you and your baby are not priority now then you never will be. Nothing normal about his behaviour at all. X

thelionthewitchtheaudacityofTHISbitch · 12/01/2023 19:50

whatausername · 12/01/2023 19:44

@thelionthewitchtheaudacityofTHISbitch the irony of me explaining something whilst making a bunch of grammatical errors 😂 I'm sure you'll be able to puzzle out my message!

I did, thank you. It's just that nobody I know (I'm in late 50s so sadly a few) with "terminal" cancer has survived 6 years, so I was puzzled. But am not in the health or medical field.

Riverlee · 12/01/2023 19:52

You have three options

  1. Do nothing - allow the current situation to continue (not acceptable)
  2. make changes -
  3. leave the situation - ie separate,
wonderwhattodo · 12/01/2023 19:52

OP
Hope you are ok

Astaphorial · 12/01/2023 19:53

You should have left before the baby. Long before.

Why on earth would you think bringing a child into a shit relationship would fix it? 🤔 children aren't relationship plasters.

PurBal · 12/01/2023 19:57

@Disgruntledwife2023 my relationship with DH isn’t perfect, and since having DC things have been really hard. But I will share our experience. MIL has had cancer three times in the last 10 years and multiple ops and rounds of treatment. The second time she had cancer FIL died the week before she finished treatment, she planned a funeral rather than celebrating the end of chemo. The third time she was having surgery 2 weeks before my due date. DH felt terrible he couldn’t be with her, help walk the dog, cook and clean etc. But he was with me, knowing I could go into labour at any moment and knowing I needed him more then than she did. We travelled to see her over an hour away when (breastfed) DC was a few days old because she couldn’t travel for 6 weeks after the op. My point is that this isn’t about his mum, this is about how he values his relationship with you and your child. There are ways of supporting your parents without completely disregarding the rest of your family. You deserve better 💐

amonsteronthehill · 12/01/2023 19:59

Divorce him.

Seriously.

You will never come first. He's not only prioritising his parents, but all his own hobbies and down time while you do EVERYTHING to facilitate this.

He's a selfish arse, not noble, and you will always come last.

surreyisik · 12/01/2023 20:01

He's operating as though he's married to his parents Confused
A friend of mine was in a similar situation - her ex was a man child who couldn't part with his mum long enough to be in a proper relationship. He even had a joint bank account with his mum and refused to have one with my friend with the excuse that "he had enough savings, no need to save anymore".
Well done for prioritising setting a good example for your daughter. You deserve being prioritised and feeling loved.

Wibbly1008 · 12/01/2023 20:01

I guess the answer to this that his mother could live like this for another ten years. Are you going to put with this for the next ten years? If not, move back to your parents and end the marriage. Let him go to court for an order of contact so you know exactly when he is seeing the baby and when he is not. He is not a flexible, reasonable man so don’t rely on his word about contact arrangements - you want a child arrangements order .

PeppermintChoc · 12/01/2023 20:03

That’s a lot OP. You have been totally saintly.

AuntieEntity · 12/01/2023 20:06

God, please leave him. I'm so sorry love, you must've had an awful time of it.

theycallmejane · 12/01/2023 20:08

thelionthewitchtheaudacityofTHISbitch · 12/01/2023 19:36

How can 6 years "terminal" diagnosis be terminal? I know you said you were there but I would be wondering, a lot, about that. And by a lot - I do mean the actual Stage 4 diagnosis.

But leaving all that aside the rest of it still sounds shit and unacceptable. So do investigate your options, and quickly. Don't set a pattern.

Please don't - that's a bloody awful thing to say.

You never know how long someone with a Stage 4 diagnosis will actually live. And whilst you want them to stay alive as long as possible, it drains you constantly thinking, "this is it" and then it not being it.

It's a horrible, horrible sentence to live with, for the person and for their loved ones.

WhenIAmOldIShallWearPurple · 12/01/2023 20:09

The apple doesn't fall far from the tree and his Dad sounds awful so I guess he gets it from him.

Absolutely you should leave. This isn't a marriage. There's no partnership here. It's his needs and his parents needs and nothing else.

It sort of sounds like you rushed into the marriage initially because of MIL's cancer. Would that be a fair assessment?

Violetthedamagedbutterfly · 12/01/2023 20:10

Your ill MIL is a red herring. You are blaming her when you husband is a cunt. Leave, rent somewhere or move in with mum and dad. Think how lovely it will be when they are all out of your life.

theycallmejane · 12/01/2023 20:14

OP, I read your post and started thinking off you were being unreasonable given what your OH and his family are dealing with, but my sympathy for him began to dry up as I read on. I don't think it's actually relevant that his mum is dying. I think some of the things he's done to support her are entirely normal and something you have to suck up as the spouse of someone whose parent is terminally sick.

However, a lot of his behaviours aren't down to his situation. It sounds like he's not very respectful of your wants or needs, and he would be like this even if both his parents were healthy. I suspect you've ended up letting a lot of shit slide by putting it down to circumstances when actually, he's not that nice.

His dad's comments towards you are appalling (not to mention his behaviour), and it does worry me that he's been your OH's role model. You would have thought that with his wife dying, he understood what the important things in life were, and those weren't his DIL's weight after giving birth.

You've been ground down, sweetheart - you have a tough job, you're doing all the heavy lifting around the house, your OH is not supportive, your FIL is a twat, and you've been isolated from your own support network.

You're at breaking point. And it's not because you're not supportive of your MIL. Don't let anyone spin it that way. It's because your OH is a shit husband and father.

Swipe left for the next trending thread