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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
LadyMacbethssweetArabianhand · 11/06/2025 13:55

Enjoy buying things you want just because! Mine was buying clothes. Exh wouldn't let me buy new clothes. He made such a fuss if I did, that I stopped doing it. I was "too fat" or "we need to save money" or "whatever you buy is hideous". Of course, he could spend hundreds on leather jackets etc.
So now I buy clothes when I want to. No emotional abuse. Go you!

SweetLathyrus · 11/06/2025 14:07

"I'm going to treat myself too to some really nice towels and expensive loo rolls - isn't it funny what makes you feel empowered!"

Been cheering you on quietly from the sidelines, @TwinklingPotato but this really resonated.

20 years ago I left a partner who was remarkably similar, and who controlled how the house was decorated. My first solo purchase was two duvet sets, one deep purple with a cherry blossom design, and a rich turquoise and gold one, to replace all the beige. And I took down and binned the paper ball light shades.

Those small things really count.

Mix56 · 11/06/2025 14:09

Bravo OP, what a milestone.
i agree get your name removed from joint account.
change the council tax
remove your card from Amazon Account or any supermarket/other account
He may have your card info. I would get cards frozen & replaced asap.

Re his eloquent reply. My guess is he thought you’d bite back. Saying “Is that all you have to say after all these years & everything I’ve provided?”
Silence is all that us required.
Tell you Mother/all family to block his number.
You dont want him making out you are “crazy” need help & unhinged!
Oh & Cancel his Golf club subscription!!!

Shesellsseashellsnotinmystreet · 11/06/2025 14:18

I think he doubs6you will cope alone and will be crawling back..
Seems he don't know you at all op!
Coz we all know you rock and you've got this!!
Starting over is so exciting ime.
Did you ever think a flat tyre could be such a great 'event' ??
Someone is smiling down on you op. And you make them proud I reckon..

Mixedviewer · 11/06/2025 14:20

This reply has been deleted

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sesquipedalian · 11/06/2025 14:51

OP, I’m delighted for you that you have got away, but like others, I fear you haven’t heard the last of him. You talked about paying for his motorbike - is it possible he might follow you from work to find out where you live? Just have a care, is all I would say - I just can’t believe he is letting you go this easily.

Motheroffive999 · 11/06/2025 14:55

Leave him and set up on your own.
If you wanted to have children you could do too.

Waterweight · 11/06/2025 14:56

Id push him to get a job. Let him get angry let him dump you

Motheroffive999 · 11/06/2025 15:12

Congratulations, well done you !!!

TheBossOfMe · 11/06/2025 15:20

Well done @TwinklingPotato My first day in my new home also felt surreal, but I feel so light in comparison to how I used to feel. It's wonderful, and you have all of that ahead of you now.

Shell18celhave · 11/06/2025 15:21

You owe him nothing. I'd tell him when I was out the door for the last time

PeopleWillAlwaysNeedPlates · 11/06/2025 15:24

I have just read all of your posts in one sitting, OP, and I am so so proud of you. Wishing you every possible happiness in your new home Flowers.

RightMoveAddict2025 · 11/06/2025 15:39

The poisoning thing is worrying - he sounds paranoid. I have moved house several times and when I put myself on the electoral roll I just tick a box to say I don’t want to be on the public register. GDPR prohibits sharing address data.

MyTwinklyPanda · 11/06/2025 15:39

Get out and get out now. He will turn the tears on, he'll change etc, all of that, but he's freeloading off of you.

13 years ago I met a really nice guy. I moved in after about 2 months of dating, into his inherited home, like yours, it was dated, he hadn't done hardly anything since both his parents died while he was in his 20's. After I moved in it gave him the confidence to tackle the house which we started doing up together. My mother passed and I used some of the inheritance to do the house up and we had children. Ive been on the mortgage for years. We've grown well together and learnt lots as we've got older.

If a man/woman loves you they will see you as equal and learn and grow with you. You're situation is so very wrong. Don't worry about a 50 year old freeloader who is too lazy to get a job and is more than content to let you go to work and pay for everything. It's not a relationship. He's keeping you as his maid and money machine. Have some pride and leave. He'll get angry as you're severing his finances which is hard luck.

Also, speak to a solicitor to see if you're entitled to any money from the property. If you can prove you've lived there and paid bills etc, he may have to sell to pay your half of what's yours.

Alliod40 · 11/06/2025 15:40

Awe so delighted this has turned out so well for you and continues to do so now,look forward to your happy updates 💕💕💕💕

Bimblebombles · 11/06/2025 15:44

Very well done x

Jollyhockeystickss · 11/06/2025 15:47

You wait until you have somewhere to live and you hire a van when he is out of the house and you take all your stuff which is everything in the house as youve paid for it and you dont tell him your new address and then you text him saying ' you deserve better and youve ended the relationship and dont respond to emotional blackmail, dont tell him you are leaving he doesnt love you he just needs you to pay his bills, if he wont let you leave involve a friend or the police

WhiteCat13 · 11/06/2025 15:50

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You think leaving now would be a mistake? Have you read this glorious thread?
Just because you don't have a child does not make singledom useless. Freedom is superb. Celebrate great women getting away from servitude and really LIVING. Getting a share of a house is sometime more trouble than it's worth. Get up on your 2 feet, buy the gaudy things you hanker after and learn to love life. We all have only 1 and it is way, way too short to waste it keeping a man in luxury and your own light under the proverbial bushell. It is never too late to live.

Pashazade · 11/06/2025 15:55

@TwinklingPotato get a giant furry beanbag and a big snuggly throw, plus something else that he would hate just because you can! Sounds like a lovely new spot you’ve found. Well done. Keep going.

DraigCymraeg · 11/06/2025 15:57

Oh my love. I've read your posts - if you re-read them I think you know what you need to do.
Please arrange a new place to live, and move your most special belongings. Would he even notice?
Before you move please make sure you have everything sorted - for example stop any payments for utilities etc. at the current address. Post Office redirect your mail so he won't see any of your mail like your bank statements.
DO ALL THIS BEFORE YOU LEAVE!
Then simply go quietly.
I wish you all the luck in the world.
Please let us know how you get on.
Gaynor.
xxx

Sympathy111 · 11/06/2025 15:58

I'm sorry to hear of your predicament. Simply ask this one question of yourself: can I live like this for the next 30 years? If the answer is no, then you know what to do. Be brave, you only have one life.

Azureshores · 11/06/2025 16:01

I've just read all of your replies OP and phew...the relief was palpable at the end when you had finally moved! I really wasn't convinced you were going to do it.

He is awful. An awful, lazy, nasty, selfish user of a man who is an expert in manipulation. He was even pretty open about the fact he was totally using you..He played you like an absolute fiddle, but no more!

And this stood out for me:
He hasn't played golf in around 4 years. When he did, it would be when I was at work or at my mum's. He just doesn't like leaving me in the house alone

I think you should ask yourself why (or don't - who cares now?) But I think he was definitely up to no good - you'll probably never know the half of it. The keeping in touch with exes, being on SM but not allowing you to be, checking when you're returning home from work etc. It seems pretty obvious he's hiding stuff from you.

Good luck, I'm so excited on your behalf 💐

RightMoveAddict2025 · 11/06/2025 16:02

Thank goodness you’re away from him. Don’t spend a single second feeling guilty. If you do go on Facebook, set your location to somewhere totally different and then set privacy to “Only Me” - don’t ’Check in’ anywhere because that can be seen by anyone on Facebook, as well as groups and pages you have liked. Use a different name and a photo of a landscape or something.

Sometimesbetter · 11/06/2025 16:07

Unless you are happy, leave. At least you have worked on your career. Depending on how far you are into your 40s, you may even have a good chance of being able to have a kid (if you want them). Regardless you will have a chance to be happy and free. I left a man child in my mid 30s and it was the best thing I ever did.

Sometimesbetter · 11/06/2025 16:08

Apologies, see you have left. Great. Good luck and stay strong.

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