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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

I have a crush on my awful hosuemate

186 replies

Reallyverystupid · 14/07/2024 03:19

I am so ashamed of the situation I have got myself into. I need some moral support finding my way out.

I am 34 and single with no dc. I was engaged to my ex but we broke up before the wedding. I’ve been single for about a year and a half. After the break up, I moved to a small town where I have no connections. I work online and I have an amazing job and I make enough money that I only need to work 20 hours a week, so I use the rest of my time to study for a totally unrelated degree online, surf and hike with my dog. I have not made that many close friends here yet.
I made friends with a man I surfed with a lot and after a few months, I realised I was romantically interested in him. I made a move and he very gently told me he does not feel the same way and that he is still in love with his son’s mum. He then left town almost immediately for a work project which lasted almost 2 months. We stayed in contact while he was away and maintained the friendship. He returned at the same time I had to move out of my house due to flood damage, so I ended up with nowhere to live and we decided to find a rented place together. We’ve been living together as housemates in a 3 bedroom house since May. The rental contract is in my name (I sublet to him legally) and lasts a year which is pretty good timing for when my house will be repaired. We have had some issues:

  • He did not pay the 1st month’s rent. He asked me to lend him the money and I originally agreed to it as a loan, but it quickly became clear he would not be able to afford to pay it back, so I said he should consider it a gift. He also did not contribute to the deposit.
  • I do 100% of the cleaning, buy most of the food and all of the shared stuff like toilet paper. He usually eats 2 meals per day at work and 1 at home. He is a chef and has cooked incredible food for us both quite regularly, but not everyday.
  • He sometimes comes home after I have gone to bed and cooks himself a midnight feast. I made a point of not washing up the pans he used for this and eventually he had used all of our pans and left them all dirty. When I told him he needed to wash them, he did but he was angry about it.
  • I have an adult dog and he has a puppy. Because I work from home, I do almost 100% of the care for his puppy. He does not walk her before or after work and I have taken her for all of her vaccinations etc which he has not paid me back for. I also buy all of his puppy’s food because I felt awful feeding my dog premium fresh food and giving her the cheapest kibble he could find. A few weeks ago he disappeared for the weekend without warning, leaving me with his puppy. She is very closely bonded to me because I do all of her training and almost all of her care, although she sleeps in his room at night.
  • He cycles to work but his bike was broken for ages. I lent him my bike and he took it for granted, caused some damage and used it without asking once.
  • The other day we had a BBQ together and he told me how much he misses his son. I’ve met his son a couple of times when he visited in the past but he has not seen his son since April and I do not think they speak on the phone that much either. He says that his ex will not let him see his son until he pays back the £600 he owes her for maintenance. Like an idiot, I offered to lend him the money which he gratefully accepted.
  • I lent him the money for his maintenance debt last week, and Sunday and Monday are the first days he has had off of work since then. I was expecting him to go to the town his son lives in (and leave me with the puppy!) Saturday evening. But instead, he came home with a woman he has known since childhood but who lives in a different city now. She immediately put her stuff in his bedroom and they had a BBQ which they did not invite me to join. He asked me to have his puppy in my bedroom tonight.
I feel like such an idiot. Partly because I can objectively see that we’re not really friends and I am just the useful moron who cleans for him, financially supports him and takes care of his dog. But partly because I just realised I still have a crush on him and I am jealous / heartbroken that he is shagging someone else in my house after I have done so much for him. Please help me get some perspective! There is no clause in his subletting contract for me to kick him out just because I’ve changed my mind about him, so I can’t just force him to leave.
OP posts:
Apolloneuro · 17/07/2024 22:44

Omg. I desperately want a GS. Well that’s a result, at least.

NeverMindTheBackProblems · 17/07/2024 23:42

Well, you've had a bad experience but got the most gorgeous pupper out of it so in the end you're the winner in this. She's beautiful, enjoy her.

Reallyverystupid · 18/07/2024 04:02

Yes she is absolutely gorgeous. I would never have chosen a German Shepherd, but now I have her, I love her. She is so clever it makes my ddog seem stupid in comparison.
To be fair on awful housemate he bought the kibble and then I tried to feed it to her. My ddog is extremely spoilt with fresh eggs, yoghurt and berries for breakfast and a combination of muscle meat, organ meat and veg for dinner and some gross stuff like duck feet, fish heads or pig snouts to chew in between. Dpuppy was understandably not impressed by a bowl of dry kibble when she smelt what he was getting. And I didn’t have the heart to persevere with feeding her kibble, so I just put her on the puppy version of ddog’s diet. Awful housemate did not have any say in that decision and I knew he could not afford butcher’s meat for her. He is at work for 2 of her 3 meals per day anyway.

OP posts:
coolkatt · 18/07/2024 04:53

Take the puppy and run. Tell
Him I will phone the rspca and name and shame him on every social
Media if he tries to stop you. Please whatever you do try to keep the pup, the poor baby will be so neglected if not for you. I'm sorry this man is a piece of shit and doesn't deserve you, and he doesn't deserve a loving puppy.

coolkatt · 18/07/2024 05:02

Sorry I'm just reading the updates and WOOOHOOOOO!!! So happy ur keeping the cutest wee pup ever! Thank god she found you!

Mummyoflittledragon · 18/07/2024 05:45

I’ve been following your thread on and off. It sounds as if you’ve seen sense with this man child. When I was early 20s, I managed to keep a dog after a man child got him and didn’t look after him. I loved the bones off that dog. I’m so pleased for you. She’s adorable and as the adage goes, everything happens for a reason.

geography21 · 18/07/2024 08:05

Think it's really good to have got the gorgeous dog out of that outcome!

Apolloneuro · 18/07/2024 19:05

I think we’re all agreed a pup pup is a good swap for a man child.

Cherrysoup · 18/07/2024 20:15

Genuinely, I’d lock up my stuff, including the puppy, until he’s gone. I would not be amazed if he nicked stuff as he leaves.

Fannyfiggs · 18/07/2024 21:27

OMG the puppy 😍 she is gorgeous. I'm so pleased she has you as her legal guardian. She's a very lucky dog indeed.

Pikapikapikachu11 · 19/07/2024 18:30

Puppies, dogs and kitties over men any day. Much better companions! 😄 🤣

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