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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

Found out about my DPs addiction and I’m not coping

70 replies

Liellacat · 08/03/2023 15:18

Hi,

I am in need of some perspective, some wisdom and some encouragement as I’ve had the shock of my life and I’m struggling to process everything to move forwards.

Three and a half week ago found out my DP is a drug addict (cocaine) and has been the entire relationship, and has hidden it from myself and everyone on his life. I only found out on my birthday weekend when he got arrested whilst driving us home, and therefore had no choice but to come out over what was going on.

For some context, I have been with him for 4.5 years, we have a child each (same age) who have grown up together in this time and see each other like sisters. We have had a wonderful, beautiful journey up until the past 6 months where the stress of buying a house and my child becoming chronically I’ll had taken its toll and it’s been met with depression from both sides and a lot of unhappiness (of his doing). This man came in to my life where I was in a good place and happy single, and after being consistent and effortful, a supportive best friend to me I could not have wished for a better man or relationship at the time. We are great together. He has taught me to love my insecurities, one of those transformative ‘solid’ partnerships (or so I thought). I would have 100% married this man and vowed the rest of my life with him, and had no doubts whatsoever that he loved me.

We bought a house middle of last year and since then with everything going on it’s been so so difficult. The back end of the year he was out of the house more and more, struggling with ‘work’, with the stress of the house etc and although I begged him to be home more to support me it would change for a day or two then back to me being on my own to juggle my sick child, trying to keep a full time job at home with her off school, my own finances, hospital visits, her being anxious and clingy as expected my days were taking care of her and a demanding job, trying to keep the house running, then crawling in to bed exhausted at 10pm after I had settled her to sleep too tired to eat or shower myself. I lost sleep due to my worry and anxiety over her, lost weight as I didn’t have time in the day to eat and I was exhausted. Really hard on all of us but in retrospect much harder on me. I was so so lonely and he wasn’t there because of x,y,z excuse.

In December - he had some job changes etc and was struggling, always had to take another job on in the evenings for money. I was trying to support him too, he was losing weight and had been doing since the summer, not eating, and being so tired he couldn’t get up at the weekends so the morning were always me tending to the kids doing housework etc. During the week was painful, it took around 2 hours every morning to wake him up drag him out of bed and I was losing sleep (his alarm 5.30am and mine not until 7.30am, with his snooze going off every ten minutes and me shoving him to try and wake him you can imagine my frustration on the loss of sleep on my efforts), this went on for ages. He was constantly late, losing track of time and that perfect, consistent and reliable man just disappeared over time. But due to the depression and the clear pressure and stress he was under, I wanted to support him.

Due to the money struggles he was having, I noticed I found myself having to pay for things on my credit card more and more, the food shopping for the family, our cat had surgery, the kids Christmas presents etc etc. we would nip into to a shop for something and he would pile expensive ‘treat’ food on to our shop, always including a bottle of whiskey on a Friday for a treat for working so hard. I’d always ask if we can afford it but when we got to the till it was the same story, his card was at home or he would just put his head down and it would be me paying a weekly ad hoc £80 Tesco bill which I could not afford! But it was always a ‘one off’ or he would ‘send me money’ which of course never happened.

In January - the month before his arrest. I was 3k on my credit cards through December and paying for my child’s counselling sessions an extra 40 a week, and I had to dip in to both mine, my child’s savings and extend a loan just to clear the cards. Then I reviewed our joint house account and realised that the whole of December and in to January he had not paid a single penny in to the joint bill account, that was all me too, so I went ballistic at him. He has been out of the house all December evenings ‘working’ (enough for me to suspect he was cheating as I KNEW something was a miss), but he had not paid a single penny in to our family life at all. I was met with the usual depression this, personal bills and credit cards getting too much etc, fuel for work was expensive. That was when I realised that he was the reason for my unhappiness, and I seriously questioned the relationship and his selfishness. He cried and sorried and promised he’d be better. And he did. January his mood picked up, he was home more, helping more, trying to pay back what we had lost in December for bills and I started seeing his old self again. Our intimacy returned. His mood around the children (also something I spoke about with him multiple times over December) had lightened, he became the dad he always had been again.

Obviously, although the past few months i have been unhappy, the relationship up until that point had been wonderful so the pain I have been experiencing and the realisation of how many lies (so many lies I’m starting to realise he had told they just keep coming every day and it’s never ending) and other lives he had been hiding with his drug addiction was a huge hit for me to process mentally and emotionally. Although I have found some relief in this, because now everything makes sense to me, it’s been so painful for me to find all this out.

He was a mess when he got arrested, he had bitten himself everywhere and had his own fantasy of what his life was crash down on him. He needed help, and therefore I have supported him whilst he gets well. He had hidden this from me, his family, his boss, his friends and had to come out over it all. The amount we found out he was taking, was costing him about £300 per week, he was on it DAILY for almost 5 years and had hidden it from everyone. Nobody knew but his dealer. Tried to get off it a few times on his own, failed time and time again no more than a week or so clean. Debt got out of control, sent him in to depression, took a huge toll on his body where he lost all his weight and strength and then as a result come December, he started taking it more and lying about his whereabouts where in reality he was out getting his next fix, covering up his misery with even more drugs. He had a rolling debt with his dealer which was accumulating, and couldn’t pay it off as he was adding more to his bill on a weekly basis. As for me, I have had to come to terms with that I have never known this man off drugs and the reason why he hid it so well is because I hadn’t known him any otherwise. I thought he had ADHD and his personality was just consistent, why would I? It hurts so so much. I knew something was not right in December when things got bad, but I just didn’t know what that thing was.

Since he has been on anti-depressants, going to support groups for his mental health, got a drug worker, GP appointment for his overall health and working to pay his debts off. Bi weekly drug tests and he is chipping away at his debt and trying to make amends to everyone on his life. As if this wasn’t hard enough, I haven’t been able to leave because once again I have become secondary. I tried to go to a hotel for a few nights in the second week after I found out just to escape but I had a breakdown and had to come back home. I have needed to be home whilst I processed the shock of it all. As he is rising from the ashes of his own mistakes, I am withering away in my grief and pain. I have not even told my own parents what I’m going though.

This week, we went though his debt and it was much worse than i thought, totalled up to about £15k altogether and that has been the thing that has tipped me over the edge because I cannot to be in the relationship with someone who has lied and hurt me so badly, and now I really can’t because I cannot afford to take this debt on I would be so stupid to do so. As much as I want to be there for him, of course I do I love him, I am now this week processing that I cannot be here anymore. He has hurt me too bad and done too much practical damage. Although he is trying to support me now in my grief, and doing everything he can he has made such a mess of everything there is too much for me to cope with. The house and my current finances worry me, how I will cope, the kids, the car etc and I am scared.

I am I’m in desperate need of some clarity over this and some support and words of comfort because up to now I have been dealing with this on my own and trying to be strong for himself and the children. Thank you

OP posts:
InBedBy10 · 08/03/2023 16:07

As someone who has been through this my only advice is to leave. Leave now and don't look back.

I spent years with an addict. I stayed because he had lots of great qualities and I thought he would change, that I could help him. The truth is they don't change, they just get better at lying.

You describe your DP as rising from the ashes as if he's sorting out his addiction. Well he may be trying (or pretending to try) but it really isn't that easy. So many times my ex got help and seemed to be off the drugs but it was only a matter of time before he relapsed.

Addicts are pathological liars. They can't help themselves. It got to the point I couldn't believe a word out of my ex's mouth. I ended up a patanoid mess constantly questioning his every move. If he was happy, i was wondering if he was high. If he was down, i was wondering if he was strung out. Looking back I'm annoyed with myself for staying so long.

The debt is also a serious issue. Drug dealers are not going to let 15k go and if they can't get it from him they will be threatening you to get it. Even if you clear this debt there's no guarantee he won't run up another one. And they'll be back to you again.

Lastly, there are many many women in your situation. Coke addiction is rampant and has ruined many families. I really don't think its recognised enough in society. Like if your on heroin your vilified as a junkie but coke is seen as an acceptable recreational drug and doesn't have the same stigma even though it causes the same problems.

Liellacat · 08/03/2023 16:15

Thank you all,

I have told him as much as he’s doing everything now (he’s wanted to come off for a couple years now because it was not ‘pleasurable’ to him and hasn’t been for a long time, he just couldn’t) and as much as he looks brighter and is in touch with the real world again and can feel his mood lifting etc - the real test will be in years so come whether he can sustain it and keep off it. Now means nothing in my eyes. That’s what I found anyway, coming off it was hard (it was tramadol mine, proper nasty!) the true challenge was the many instances in the years to follow after that where my strength of character was tested. It takes monsterous effort to say no and stay sober. Addiction is for life. I don’t think he fully understands this yet, but he will when it comes about again.

I am in a situation with the house. If we put it on the market now, it will not sell due to various reasons. all my money is tied up in the house and with the rinsing of my savings cushion from the December debt I do not have spare money to rent and keep up the mortgage on this place. The car he pays for is the car I use, in my name. I know I can’t afford to keep the payments up on those if no I took over it. Im not sure what to do here, not sure how to go about the house situation. I am trying to see it as just brick and mortar at the moment not the home we saved for years for. It’s all just a big bloody mess at the moment but I’m trying to focus on getting my practical stuff in order so I can actually move on securely

OP posts:
Vegrocks · 08/03/2023 16:21

He has lost his license? How is he working?

Liellacat · 08/03/2023 16:21

@InBedBy10 I’m sorry you went through this too 🙁

Yes the lying is something isn’t it. I said to him how he could expect me to move forward and stay on the relationship when everything he says from now I will not be able to trust. I know a person can change, as I have done myself. But it doesn’t mean other people will. From what I’m reading on the internet and forums and peoples experiences of this, mine was a very rare story. I’m incredibly proud and grateful for the person I am today and who I have become. It’s torturing believing this has come full circle now and my mistakes in my youth have come back to bite me in the most horrific way.

OP posts:
Liellacat · 08/03/2023 16:23

The debt from his dealer is now paid off.

He has maxed three credit cards, two loans, borrowed off a friend, and a few smaller bits that make up the 15k. I know about one of the loans but I was blindly believing he had been paying this off. It was much more than he made it out to be.

OP posts:
Ionlydrinkondaysendinginy · 08/03/2023 16:26

Bunnyishotandcross · 08/03/2023 15:49

Post was too long.
Answer needed is short..... Ltb. No other solution..
When my exh got charged with drink driving I filed for divorce. Didn't occur to me not to ..

Bit harsh

notapizzaeater · 08/03/2023 16:31

He is not your problem at all, have you checked to see as a single person you can claim some top up benefits ?

oakleaffy · 08/03/2023 16:57

@Liellacat Wow, that must have been a shocker..But I bet he was lying about ''Never using/stashing it in the house''.

Cocaine leaves the body fast.
He would be boosting his 'high' when he felt it dwindling, usually after half an hour or so.

''Just popping to the loo, the bathroom, the bedroom..''
Takes seconds to inhale a line.

He has to be absolutely honest with you about this.

I can't see him ''Keeping it in the car''.

The main stash, possibly.. but I bet he had it hidden away indoors as well.

I personally couldn't live with someone with an addiction, especially not as you are basically paying for his drugs {By buying food for the family}..Sod that.

Cocaine Anonymous?

Might help him.

oakleaffy · 08/03/2023 17:01

@Liellacat Please try to keep hold of your house if at all possible..Even if it means renting a couple of rooms to lodgers.
You do not want to be renting!

Houses tend to maintain their value over time!

Do not be pushed into selling it.

I knew a couple who lost a beautiful Georgian house because of addiction issues.. and they have never been able to get onto the housing ladder again.
{Luckily no children involved}.

Liellacat · 08/03/2023 17:10

I have had a look and the best I can do is single person discount on the council tax. I’m not entitled to any benefits.

I am going to ask him to leave tomorrow and try and stay on the house on my own for now until it is unsustainable and I can figure out alternate options. I have work and stuff to think about, I work here. I have no where else to go - there are two spare bedrooms at his mums him and his child will have to go there. He won’t be able to afford to buy me out right now and vice versa.

He will have to pay half the mortgage still won’t he? and house insurance? the house is jointly owned.

I know what’s coming he is not going to want to go. It’s his home but I cannot have him here I am dying. He will have the chance to pay his debts off without the house bills it is the best situation all around right now.

I’m not sure what to do about the car 😭 what a mess. I am panicking but I can’t see any other way around it right now I just can’t

OP posts:
intrestedvic · 08/03/2023 17:10

this was me with my daughters dad. I was 7 months pregnant with my daughter he come home and was gurning eyes rolling, (I was a raver I know the signs like the back of my hand) he cried his eyes out. I was there with my son who was from a previous relationship. I asked him if it was just the once and found out he was in £500 worth of debt. It broke my heart.

some one the comments saying you don't get to grieve are unfair your a human and a mum. But a human first and your world has been turned upside down.

cocain is extremely expensive (£80- gram) so if you are struggling with finances being with someone who is snorting hundreds of pounds won't make life any better. I'm saying this as understanding the money helped me to realise I was better off without him although my entire life was about to change.

now he doesn't see his daughter yet still does cocain every weekend. (We don't miss him at all) and nearly every small issue is over.

please grieve him but walk away your life is worth more your daughters life is worth more. I wish you every bit of success x

Maray1967 · 08/03/2023 17:15

Liellacat · 08/03/2023 15:51

@Vegrocks

my child was with her dad (we have shared care) on a holiday at the time. Which came on good timing. As for my DP He’s never been alone with her, I’m responsible for her and therefore when she is home she is under my care no matter what. He’s been alone with both children at the same time however, various situations and vice versa with me and the children. I can’t believe he put them at risk. Who does that.

A drug addict does. Which is why you need to dump him and never go back.

jemimapuddlepluck · 08/03/2023 17:16

Before you even found out about his addiction, why were you allowing him to take advantage of you financially? You literally took money from your own child to fund him essentially. Ask yourself why. Then fix that. Your child deserves to be at the forefront of every decision you make, thats being a good parent. Do not let her grow up in this grim environment. Concentrate on her and step away from him and HIS problems. I'm a broken record but why do some women insist on putting these absolute losers before their kids?

Lavender14 · 08/03/2023 17:17

I'm so sorry you're dealing with all of this, the worst part of addiction is that it has such a huge ripple effect with the lies and the betrayal and the financial side and he's obviously got in way over his head and then floundered completely and probably not known how to get it out in the open.

You have a lot to process and decide what you want, and he has a lot of work to do on himself and to attempt to rebuild things with you and prove that he's trustworthy (you may decide that this isn't possible for him to do and that's understandable).

I would separate from him for now but maintain contact in order to protect yourself and your girls. Maybe he needs to live elsewhere perhaps with his family for now and split your finances so he can pay you for shared bills but can't take money out. Would this be affordable for you? He needs to seek advice for the debt he's run up and debt action or CAP might be able to help him develop a realistic repayment plan but that's for him to sort as part of rebuilding things.

I think a bit of space and separation would let you decide if you think it's worth giving things another go, when it's the right time for you to give things a go, or if you feel the best decision is just to walk away and move on with your life.

There's no easy answer here and I do believe that addiction is an illness and he's not lied to purposefully hurt you, he's just been struggling himself. But the effect is still the same regardless so you need to do what is right for you and your girls from now on and that's something he just needs to accept.

Humanswarm · 08/03/2023 17:20

@Liellacat I'm just going to say this. You will be distraught, bitter and angry now, in shock and disappointed. He will work at being better. Because he's been found out. Make no mistake, he's only detoxing and dealing with everything, because he was found out. He may even appear to do well, and your resolve will falter. Don't let it.
I know from experience, granted a long time ago now, I lost my home, my self respect and most of my sanity from being exactly in your situation. I had no idea. He was so good at covering his tracks it got to the point our home was repossessed. I was broken.
I fought my way up and out and have truly lived. He died. From an overdose. That's the reality. Do not falter. You will survive, in fact, you'll do more than that, you'll thrive..

Johnisafckface · 08/03/2023 17:22

For me drugs is a deal breaker. I'd leave.

MadeForThis · 08/03/2023 17:26

He needs to deal with this mess by himself. It won't help him if you bail him out. He may recover but even if he does you don't have to go back.

JumbleSailor · 08/03/2023 17:30

Johnisafckface · 08/03/2023 17:22

For me drugs is a deal breaker. I'd leave.

Kindly, RTFL. The OP says the relationship is over. Their finances are all tied up together so the difficulty is how to make it happen and get through this in one piece.

Johnisafckface · 08/03/2023 17:33

JumbleSailor · 08/03/2023 17:30

Kindly, RTFL. The OP says the relationship is over. Their finances are all tied up together so the difficulty is how to make it happen and get through this in one piece.

THanks @JumbleSailor ! 😊

Zanatdy · 08/03/2023 17:39

If he doesn’t pay half the mortgage there’s nothing you can do about it. My brothers ex wife paid if for a few months but couldn’t afford it and rent so stopped paying. She still got her 50% share when it was sold. Hopefully he will but if he doesn’t then you’re going to have to find the money to pay it or ask for a payment break whilst you sort out selling etc

Mizzl45 · 08/03/2023 18:07

I am in a very similar situation myself. 6 months ago I found out my partner had started taking cocaine in secret for a year after his dad had passed away. After a lot of heartache, he admitted everything and stopped. Or so I thought. We started to get back to some semblance of normality and then the other day I found a video on his phone of him frantically searching his work van for his coke and then you can clearly hear him chopping and sniffing it. He didn’t realise it was recording on the passenger seat- this was 3 months after he supposedly stopped. I then went searching and found a bag with traces in the summerhouse.
He is now absolutely denying using again. The video he says he doesn’t know what’s going on or it must have the wrong date on it. The bag must be from before I found out (couldn’t have been- completely cleared and redecorated space).
i just wanted to share my experience of this evil drug and how it’s ruined my 14 year marriage. I can’t let him leave because I can’t afford the house/bills/debt he’s ran up without his wage I would be over £300pm in debit.
My life is shattered, my trust is destroyed, I feel half insane from the gaslighting and lies.
just so you know, you’re not alone.
Its soul destroying.
I hope if you give him another chance he will stay clean but that’s the problem- you can never go back. You’re sense of trust in yourself and him has taken a beating and in my case, my trust was miss warranted. I naively thought I’d closed the book on that story but it looks as though it was only the first chapter.
I have started to see it as the man I loved died and there’s some kind of demon walking around in his skin.
When you spend months thinking that this is behind you and talking about how happy you are they’ve stopped, that you’ve supported them, start building a future again to then find out the whole time you were living a lie again and had no clue is devastating to say the least.
I truly hope that your situation resolves itself and there’s no relapses. 💐

OriGanOver · 08/03/2023 18:33

It's not the addiction that's the issue. It's the cause or root of what makes him use cocaine as a coping mechanism.

Tbh 300 quid a week on coke isn't an awful amount of cocaine. It's 4 grams. That's really not every day use. It's a little over a half a day for basic middleclass coke.

Why did he have to go to a detox? You don't become physically addicted to coke and the only time you'd get a detox bed is if you were going to rehab straight after.

He needs rehab, he needs to get to the bottom of his shit. It doesn't sound like he has. He is coming across that now he's so say stopped then everything should be okay.

I can't believe you paid off his 15k dealer debt. I concur with previous poster who mentioned codependency.

Fannieannie63 · 08/03/2023 18:53

I am so very sorry that you have been going through this and alone, I really am. As someone who was in a relationship with a malignant narcissist, I can tell you that to keep their secrets is not the way to go. Please confide in your parents so they can support you now. I think you know that the relationship is over and it will give you the opportunity to regroup, gather your strength and with the support of your family you will get over this. It’s painful I know but you are correct when you say that the lies and so many of them will keep on coming from him. Advice I wish I’d given to my younger self: Your loyalty, your first and only concern is to you and your child. I wish I had taken that advice sooner because the truth is your partner will choose to get help and get better or he won’t and that’s on him. You do not have to go through that process with him and nor should you. The ideations will be dealt with by his doctor and he does not have any right to say any of that to you. I’m sending a huge hug to you xxx

Emmamoo89 · 08/03/2023 19:01

LTB

Emmamoo89 · 08/03/2023 19:02

Bunnyishotandcross · 08/03/2023 15:49

Post was too long.
Answer needed is short..... Ltb. No other solution..
When my exh got charged with drink driving I filed for divorce. Didn't occur to me not to ..

I wouldn't leave someone over that. Everyone makes mistakes