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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

Partner's indecisiveness is driving me crazy

64 replies

afishcalledbreanda · 01/08/2023 15:21

Name-change for this. Sorry it's long but there are necessary details.

I've always struggled with my partner's indecisiveness and FOMO. He's the kind of person who spends 30 minutes trying to choose from a menu and then regrets his choice and wants to change his order. Faced with booking a hotel or a holiday he goes into meltdown and ends up not booking at all. It drives me nuts but it's the worst thing about him, the rest is lovely.

Three weeks ago he was walking the dog in the local country park when he saw a man exposing himself to a female runner. My husband yelled and the man ran off. My husband got a photo of him as he ran away and recognised him as someone who works in a local pub. The woman who'd been flashed seemed less bothered by the incident than my husband and when he suggested they call the police she said she didn't want any hassle and ran off.

My husband spent the next fortnight talking about this incident and whether or not he should go to the police. He talked it over with everyone he knows — work colleagues, neighbours, friends, his family. I said I wanted him to report it but said that I'd support him whatever he decided, then tried to ignore the 'What should I do?' whine.

Eventually he phoned the police, told them what had happened and was told that it was an offence, they took it seriously and that he could choose their response. They could visit the man and interview him and he might end up in court and on the sex offenders' register or they could talk to him, see what he had to say and warn him that his name and details of what happened would be be recorded on file. Cue more anguish, hours more spent bending peoples' ear and repeated calls to the police to confirm that these were his only two options. Yesterday he decided to ask the police to have a phone conversation with the guy, which they did. He admitted the offence, was apologetic and embarrassed and understood that there was now a record of the incident which would remain attached to him name on police records. He said he wouldn't do it again. The police were satisfied with the outcome. My husband immediately decided he'd made the wrong decision and he wants the man charged and has now phoned the police three times to see if he can get the action changed.

For the third time he's come into the room where I'm working and wanted to go over the conversation we've already had 20 times over the last week or so. I've finally snapped and told him to let it go and he's shouted at me that I promised to support his decision and that I've let him down badly. It'll blow over and he'll wind down — but how could I have handled it differently/ better and does anyone else have a partner like him? How do you cope? He makes everything more stressful and complicated than it needs to be and he ropes everyone in.

OP posts:
HardcoreLadyType · 17/11/2023 12:43

afishcalledbreanda · 01/08/2023 15:44

So, given that none of you would have married him in the first place, what decision would you have made regarding the flasher? Would you have regretted that you didn't press charges when you heard that he'd confessed?

Just point out to him that there’s rarely a right or wrong answer and that we are all just bumbling along doing our best.

He did what he thought was best after due consideration (!) and now he needs to leave it be.

HibernianHibernator · 17/11/2023 12:44

@KiltedKoala -- glad to have been of service!

HardcoreLadyType · 17/11/2023 12:45

He sounds like a good person, fwiw. Lots of people would have turned a blind eye, and the flasher would not have had his warning, which may well give him pause, another time.

AmaryllisNightAndDay · 17/11/2023 13:00

What's a life partner for if you can't run things past her?

Set limits. There is a big difference between "running something past" your partner and going over and over it repeatedly. Or expecting your partner to make the decision for you. "We've already discussed it, you know what I think. Now it's up to you" on repeat.

And do not allow him to keep going over his decisions at you either. "You made a sensible decision. It's done. Move on." and don't discuss it with him any more. If he wants to keep going on at someone he can pay a therapist. Yes, that what was we told a relative of mine to do in similar circumstances. It helped a little with his anxiety, and it also stopped the rest of the family being driven crazy because he had someone specific to save it up for.

RantyAnty · 17/11/2023 13:14

This is exhausting and he needs professional help for this. I would insist he gets treatment for it.

I have people like this in my family who ruminate obsessively over things like this and I've had to set very firm boundaries with how much of their shit I will listen to.

You really don't have to listen to him endlessly about things like this. You can set a boundary that you'll listen to it once or twice and that's it. He doesn't have the right to endlessly dump on you. You're not his therapist or emotional rubbish bin

overwhelmed2023 · 17/11/2023 13:29

Basically he doesn't trust himself to make the right decision and/or is overwhelmed with the responsibility / anxiety about which is the right decision.

afishcalledbreanda · 17/11/2023 14:09

This thread was started on 01 August and since then I've posted loads of replies which have said everything I need to say.

I'm setting boundaries, as suggested: I'm not going to respond to any post where it's clear that the poster has only read the opening post.

OP posts:
AmaryllisNightAndDay · 17/11/2023 14:28

Oh sorry, I didn't realise it was an old thread. Hope things are going better for you now.

Pinkbonbon · 17/11/2023 14:52

Sounds like possible autism to me op. Don't want to armchair diagnose but decision making is a big struggle for some ppl with autism. As is a fixation on doing the morally right thing and a struggle with 'morally grey'. I'd be having him speak to his gp.

FictionalCharacter · 17/11/2023 14:56

afishcalledbreanda · 01/08/2023 16:07

Yes, Grey Carpet, it was left to my husband to decide how he wanted them to proceed. He was given the option of doing nothing, which would have left the incident unrecorded, or having the guy spoken to on the phone and told that the incident would remain on record, or having the police go to his house, take him into the police station for interview and then possibly facing a charge which could end in court and the sex offenders register. He took the middle way. The police don't venture an opinion on how likely or unlikely a prosecution is, but I think everyone assumed it would be very low.

With hindsight, he should have told the police that he was leaving the decision to them. It wasn’t fair of them to make him feel responsible.
He is obviously a PITA but you’ll have to start not responding. “You’ll have to decide for yourself Harold”. “I can’t help you with that Harold”. Rinse and repeat.
One absolute no-no for me would be having him disturb me while I’m working. I assume he wouldn’t turn up at your employer’s premises to bother you, so he should not do it at home.

overwhelmed2023 · 17/11/2023 15:41

afishcalledbreanda · 17/11/2023 14:09

This thread was started on 01 August and since then I've posted loads of replies which have said everything I need to say.

I'm setting boundaries, as suggested: I'm not going to respond to any post where it's clear that the poster has only read the opening post.

Right. Okay. 🙄. Apologies for missing you had four sessions of counselling.
Do I need to underline?
Are you sure it is ethical to post details about someone else and also a police case??

KiltedKoala · 17/11/2023 15:42

What form does your husband's anxiety take?

Well, it can be anything (including menus, lol @HibernianHibernator ) but the current struggle is buying a house. We viewed it 3 times, got initial (low) offer rejected and solicitor advised us what to up offer to to get accepted. I spoke to him later that day and my understanding of the conversation is that we agreed to follow the solicitor's advice and he was going to call him. About 3 hours later, when he picked me up from work (and I had been distracted all afternoon, jumping every time the phone buzzed) he said - oh, I changed my mind, I didn't call. I'm not sure about it. Ahhhhhh! He'd apparently not understood how urgent it was. So now we've missed out on the house. That's why I'm feeling pretty bruised atm.

KiltedKoala · 17/11/2023 15:44

afishcalledbreanda · 17/11/2023 14:09

This thread was started on 01 August and since then I've posted loads of replies which have said everything I need to say.

I'm setting boundaries, as suggested: I'm not going to respond to any post where it's clear that the poster has only read the opening post.

I'm sorry OP, I reawakened the thread. Thank you for your support.

afishcalledbreanda · 17/11/2023 17:02

No problems with the thread being revived if it can prove useful to anyone, but the number of people who read only the OP before commenting is a bit irritating. That's why I emboldened and underlined my last post, to try to draw attention to the fact that this is an old thread and I've responded to suggestions.

The house situation must be really annoying, @KiltedKoala Buying a house is such a big deal, you have to commit and stick with it. I think even the most laid back of us probably start to have doubts as the solicitors take their time, so trying to imagine what it's like for our indecisive partners is tough.

Good luck with the purchase. I don't know what I'd do. Probably ask if he really likes it and if he wants to buy it and then say I'd handle it and do so without involving him. This week DH's car has started playing up and we're currently dealing with the 'on the one hand perhaps I should pay £3k to fix it and on the other maybe I should trade it in' dilemma, replayed several times a day. I give him ten minutes and then shut it down. It stops me ending up a gibbering wreck.

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