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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

Help me figure out how to tell him

1000 replies

TwinklingPotato · 19/05/2025 11:52

Hello!

Let me preface this by saying I'm fairly sure I have Stockholm Syndrome, at least on a lower level. My friend showed me some stuff on it and yep, it makes sense..

I have been with my partner almost 13 years. We are unmarried, no children. He owns our home outright (inherited).

I moved in quickly, after a few months. I'd lived with him around 6 months, living off of my savings and his. We had fun, we laughed, it was new and exciting. He then said he didn't feel I was bringing enough to the table, that I should get a job, which I did. I have worked ever since (albeit in various positions climbing a ladder I didn't even realise I was on!). I now earn a good wage for my career.

He is (was) self employed. He stopped working with any regularity within a year of me moving in. The work dried up to some extent, he stopped looking, too. He said he would do the house up (it was very old fashioned!).

For the last three years, he's submitted a zero tax return, before that, he earned less than £2k per year (and that was largely the Covid payments he got, which shows how little he earned before that). I have paid 100% of the bills, food, gifts, all and any purchases for a decade.

He's done the bathroom (not 100% there but more or less), and 70% of the living room. He's also created two spaces for himself in two of the 3 bedrooms. One is a workshop, the other is a room for his hobby.

He is now working on his hobby, because he can, and because I have indulged him. He hopes it will make him some money (it's creative). Since 202 it hasn't, but it has cost (me) a lot in equipment, subscriptions, and software.

He sees no need to get any kind of paid employment. Because if he did, that would mean he would spend the weekends working on the house because he'd be out working all week, and then there would be no point being in a relationship.

Lots of this has come to a head for me recently, and I am really resenting it. I really don't enjoy my current position and would like to leave. doing so would mean a pay cut and he's not a fan of that. He'd rather I was unhappy because it supports us both really well.

I have been looking at houses to rent and have found one, and I really want to go for it.

However, I am racked with guilt and uncertainty.

  • Is it better to stay where I am, and keep paying for everything for us both, but not have to worry about paying rent. Though I can't decorate or hang pictures etc., it's very much his house.
  • I'm worried about him and how he will survive. He's in his 50s, so my sane mind knows he'll be ok and that he's not my responsibility, but my attached mind is concerned and putting him before me.
  • I've sacrificed marriage and having children to sustain this relationship for this long. It started with promises that went nowhere, and now I am childless and in my 40s.
  • If I don't praise him he gets angry, if I ask him to consider getting a job, he says that would mean the end of the relationship.

I know the right thing to do is go, I just don't know how to. I don't know what to say to him. I don't want to hurt him or throw accusations at him. I've allowed the situation, too.

How should I word it, what shall I say? When? Should I wait until I have somewhere to go, or tell him before? Or should I stay?

OP posts:
Thread gallery
8
TattooedDad · 24/05/2025 08:24

The man is a financial leach on you! You are not his partner, you’re his investor! Walk out that door and never look back.

eldermillenialmum · 24/05/2025 08:25

Have you ever asked him to get a job?

eldermillenialmum · 24/05/2025 08:30

I've RTFT and sounds like you're doing the right thing

imfae · 24/05/2025 12:54

Hi op ,
hope you are doing ok. I posted earlier in the thread and it seems like you have got a lot of great advice and support from lots of people .
You have to focus on yourself and try and push away any guilt about how he will cope without you . He doesn’t seem to have any particular health issues preventing him working and also he owns a three bedroom property . I appreciate that this may not be in a rentable condition currently but renting out rooms does give him a potential income in the future .
You have also given 13 years of your life to prioritising his needs , that is a substantial chunk of your life . As they say - people get less for murder !!!

So I wish you the very best of happiness for your life going forward and peace in your new home . FlowersFlowersFlowers

Sodthesystem · 24/05/2025 13:06

Yes be sure to have your money in your own account asap. I'm assuming the deposit and rent for month one are paid already but you don't want him to tweak and drain the accounts. Abusive men do that a lot. Take no chances. Withdraw his access to your money and tell him it must be an issue at the bank if needs be.

Cherrysoup · 24/05/2025 13:21

I get that you probably don’t want reminders, but surely most stuff in the house actually belongs to you given you’ve been the only earner for over a decade? Are you going to take anything?

You are absolutely right to get out, he has treated you disgracefully.

DelphiniumBlue · 24/05/2025 13:32

My thoughts:
He is abusive, and had brainwashed you into accepting his twisted version of life. It's not normal not be be able to hang pictures up, or spend your own money, or see your friends and family. The fact that you've only managed to save a few hundred pounds since Xmas is shocking, as is the fact that you've funded his lifestyle using up your own inheritance.
When you open a new bank account, do it with a different bank, just to make sure he can't somehow access it. Move the money out of the joint account just before you tell him that you are leaving. It is fine to do that, sounds like he owes you big time, even if you have been living rent free.
He does sound quite scary, you should be scared of him. "Controlling" doesn't cover it, and now you want to take away his meal ticket. So have someone else with you when you tell him ( as you walk out the door) so that he won't hurt you, and so that he won't be able to persuade you to stay/give him your new address/carry on funding him.
Get your favourite stuff out now, leave the ordinary stuff till last, so that if you have to leave it behind it, it won't matter.
Once you've gone, change your car and phone, in fact get a new phone ready to set up once you are out.
If you are still feeling guilty, do a financial tally - how much you've paid out for his benefit v. rent you would have paid had you not been living with him. It might make you feel a bit better about leaving him.

thedancingclown · 24/05/2025 15:18

He then said he didn't feel I was bringing enough to the table, that I should get a job, which I did.

He sees no need to get any kind of paid employment. Because if he did, that would mean he would spend the weekends working on the house because he'd be out working all week, and then there would be no point being in a relationship.

These are the two phases which stood out for me. He does not nothing and after spending all OP's savings decides she is not contributing enough to the relationship and needs to work. He however should not work as otherwise it is not worth being in a relationship (as the other person provides all the income). Bear in mind this is 10+ years the house should have been completed years ago.

It is just a prime example of male entitlement - he has got you right where he wants OP. Never mind all the other stunts he has pulled. He has got an easy life, you are funding it and he is bringing absolutely nothing to the table in this 'relationship' (using that word loosely).

The sooner you are free of this the better. Get a job you like doing, have your own place, own rules and seriously don't look back at this. I still advocate a note on the table stating you have gone - he really does not deserve anything more.

Jaichangecentfoisdenom · 24/05/2025 16:37

@thedancingclown is absolutely right, you know, @TwinklingPotato. Put yourself first and foremost, for the first time in decades, and try not to look back.

TwinklingPotato · 24/05/2025 21:25

Thank you all for your support.

@imfae thanks form posting again, the advice and well wishes I've received have been amazing.

Today we went out. On the drive to where we were going he started talking to me about what men need (sex, basically), and how of its not forthcoming there had to be something worth sacrificing it for. He said he still has desire, but right now it's not for me (because all he gets from me is the income, I've not been affectionate for months, and we haven't been physically in almost as long). I said I'd lost my desire to have sex, and that a big reason, though not the only one, was the pressure I felt and being the sole earner. I asked what would happen if I got too sick to work, and he said that the relationship would be over, as he couldn't nurse someone when he was getting nothing back.

It's all building ready for the out. He was shocked I didn't cry I think, kept telling not to "read between the lines" because usually when he speaks like that I get really tearful.

He's not interested in working, he actually said today that he didn't have to. I said I resent going to a job that 70% of the time I really don't enjoy, he said "it allows us to live the way we do".

Everything has been cemented for me after that. I felt a bit like I should make more of an effort for a little while, then I thought why? He clearly doesn't think he needs to..

OP posts:
Jaichangecentfoisdenom · 24/05/2025 21:32

I asked what would happen if I got too sick to work, and he said that the relationship would be over, as he couldn't nurse someone when he was getting nothing back.
What exactly does he think he is giving you now? Why does he think he is God’s gift to you? Who does he think he is? 1st June can’t come soon enough - have no qualms about walking out without telling him, @TwinklingPotato, he deserves no consideration whatsoever. And be sure to take ALL your money (well, what he hasn’t taken from the joint account) with you without a backward glance.

LurkyMcLurkinson · 24/05/2025 21:35

What a horrible entitled toad he is. So you have to provide enough for him to be a kept man, put out on his demand and your reward is someone who wouldn’t care for you if you got sick. With kindness op I think once you’re out you have some serious self reflecting to do to figure out how you got here and to protect yourself in the future from other abusive relationships.

TwinklingPotato · 24/05/2025 21:54

I was shocked, to be honest. I didn't think he would openly be that heartless.

Someone asked about the furniture etc, and yes, with the exception of the bed and his wardrobes, I paid for it all. But fighting to take any of that will just prolong things, and I will be able to buy new things, things that I like, not that suit his taste and vision, I'm quite looking forward to it!

My plan once I'm gone is to find a decent therapist to try and get some sense from everything, find out why I've allowed myself to be treated this way. It's been a slow burn for almost 13 years, and it's come to a head now. I either crumble and I'm trapped serving his every whim, and paying for it, or I have to stand up and say no, which is what I am doing. It's hard to not feel guilty or sad or responsible, but then he says things like he did today and I think so you know what? Go and sleep around, get all the sex you want. I need, and want, more from my life

OP posts:
BeNiceWhenItsFinished · 24/05/2025 21:55

@TwinklingPotato My jaw is on the floor at your latest update about the relationship being over if you got sick and couldn't work.

Lighteningstrikes · 24/05/2025 22:03

Jaichangecentfoisdenom · 24/05/2025 21:32

I asked what would happen if I got too sick to work, and he said that the relationship would be over, as he couldn't nurse someone when he was getting nothing back.
What exactly does he think he is giving you now? Why does he think he is God’s gift to you? Who does he think he is? 1st June can’t come soon enough - have no qualms about walking out without telling him, @TwinklingPotato, he deserves no consideration whatsoever. And be sure to take ALL your money (well, what he hasn’t taken from the joint account) with you without a backward glance.

This in spades.

He sure knows how to make a girl feel special and secure.

He’s a fucking card who’s done a complete number on you.

You owe the entitled and deluded prick nothing. You’ll be so much better off without him.

Noshowlomo · 24/05/2025 22:11

Just think, 2 weeks today you’ll be in your own place, own bed, a car money will be yours, you can get a lovely takeaway and just breathe… and he can fuck right off!
Or he can be job hunting which is what he should have been doing for years

LurkyMcLurkinson · 24/05/2025 22:15

He’s clearly so confident of his manipulation and control of you that he feels secure enough to treat you this way with the belief you’ll never leave. That will only make it an even bigger shock though to see you taking back your power and the idea of him being blind sided and miserable brings me joy after how he has treated you and his disgusting comments today. Personally I’d try and find a time he will be out and hire a removal company to take as much furniture as you could get out to really rub salt in the wound but then I’m petty and I appreciate the best revenge is to go on and to be happy.
As well as looking for a therapist i’d also have a look at completing the freedom programme. It will offer valuable insight in to abusive relationships.

Sodthesystem · 24/05/2025 22:20

LurkyMcLurkinson · 24/05/2025 22:15

He’s clearly so confident of his manipulation and control of you that he feels secure enough to treat you this way with the belief you’ll never leave. That will only make it an even bigger shock though to see you taking back your power and the idea of him being blind sided and miserable brings me joy after how he has treated you and his disgusting comments today. Personally I’d try and find a time he will be out and hire a removal company to take as much furniture as you could get out to really rub salt in the wound but then I’m petty and I appreciate the best revenge is to go on and to be happy.
As well as looking for a therapist i’d also have a look at completing the freedom programme. It will offer valuable insight in to abusive relationships.

Either that first line...or, he's cheating and laying the ground work so he can go 'i told you I'd cheat if you didn't have sex with me'.

Tbh op based on the update, I'd to stay at a hotel for now until your flat is ready. He sounds distinctly like he thinks he's owed sex. And thats a worry.

I'd also dump him by text. Once you are out.

Never tell him your new location. Vary your routes home from work and maybe change your hours for a bit if possible.

cordeliavorkosigan · 24/05/2025 22:32

My jaw is on the floor, I'm so shocked. After all these years of you footing the bill, he wouldn't take care of you if you got sick. Wow. There is no love or care there.
So glad you've seen it and are getting your life back, op.

Sodthesystem · 24/05/2025 22:45

It would be laughable if it wasn't so horrid tbh. I mean how much of an idiot do you have to be to disrespect your cash cow? Good luck to him finding someone else to foot his kushy lifestyle. Fool that he is.

It's sad really that if he was a nice person, other than being work-shy, you may have stayed. You may even have been relatively happy. But they can't even give their partner that much. They're hell bent on breaking down the most beautiful thing they have in their life. Because deep inside, they are dark and they are cold and they are empty.

I'm so glad that you're going to get a chance to shine again once this fucking robot is out of your life. Good riddance to him.

Imsososohungry · 24/05/2025 22:53

I'm so glad that you're leaving Op. He sounds like an entitled man-child and a user.
It may take some time, because of the way he has manipulated your thinking, but you will see how much better you are off without him.
I feel like you've got an amazingly positive future ahead of you

thedancingclown · 24/05/2025 23:01

Glad you are getting out of this exploitative situation. I really would just leave a note saying bye, the gravy train has come to an end.

it does not even warrant a conversation-the situation is that much of a lost cause. He clearly does not think you are in a relationship of any worth.

you are going to be so much better off without this worthless leech.

Incakewetrust · 24/05/2025 23:04

He is despicable. He’s basically told you that you are nothing but a paycheck to him. He doesn’t care about you even a little bit and his behaviour and words prove that.

Honestly, I’m so so happy he’s shown more of his true colours today because now you can move forward without ever thinking “what if?”.

you have absolutely got this!!!

Littlemunchkinsmummy · 24/05/2025 23:31

I don’t have any advice, everyone has also already given wonderful advice. I just want to say you’re absolutely doing the best thing for you and you should be extremely proud of finally putting yourself first. You’ll look back and be grateful you got out whilst you could. This will be the start of the best time of your life. Wishing you all the very best and hope your new life will be all you could wish for..

Please keep us posted..

CoffeeBeansGalore · 25/05/2025 00:58

Do not have your next salary paid into the joint account. It is your hard earned money. You owe him NOTHING. You will need that money for your new start.
Have a wonderful life without him. Seriously wishing you all the best @TwinklingPotato .

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