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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
supercali77 · 20/05/2025 10:45

@TwinklingPotato I know it'll feel difficult, once you're out you'll really feel the rightness of this choice as time goes on.

I'm really not surprised that he was borrowing from his mum, my ex - exactly the same. Still doing it now, I know because I'm in touch with his sister.

The pattern is the only true thing and the thing to focus on. I wish you all the luck and every happiness.

Noshadelamp · 20/05/2025 10:58

You should be angry.
Anger will fire you, motivate you, give you the energy you need to leave.

You have avoided feeling your emotions for all this time. That's how he's been able to manipulate you and chip away at you.

How dare he!

He's delusional and sold you a dream that is never going to happen, all whilst taking your money, time and life from you.

I'm so angry on your behalf. Not angry at you, my dear, but at him. And you should be too. Not at yourself but at him.

Angry at him, raging at him and all the men like him that steal steal steal from us.

Here to support you, you deserve a life of autonomy, freedom and happiness 💐

mewkins · 20/05/2025 11:04

ItGhoul · 19/05/2025 12:36

I used to do all of the cooking, too. that stopped earlier in the year as he thought I was potentially doing something to his food to make him ill

So essentially, he's insane.

He does sound nuts. And if you upset things by discussing you leaving it will end up with you going round in circles too. He will grind you down. Sort your new house. Move your stuff in. Pack what's left in a bag and leave a note or plan a brief chat where you tell him you're going (depending on how volatile you think he is). Leave and block.

thedancingclown · 20/05/2025 11:11

Keep your head high and eye on the end goal. A life which is just about you and not supporting a man child. It really sounds like you have just replaced his parents- he sponged off them and is now sponging off you. The gravy train has come to an end and you owe him nothing. Agree that a clean break is probably best.

Noshowlomo · 20/05/2025 11:20

You’ve had amazing advice on here OP, and I wish you the best of luck,
With every post, he sounds more and more controlling and also bonkers.. putting something in his food?!
You can have, and are entitled to a lovely life and you are young enough to still be able to enjoy life, with YOUR OWN HOME AND MONEY. It will be yours!
X

Lubilu02 · 20/05/2025 11:39

Like in the post you wrote, you have been paying for him to live in his own home.

He doesn't trust you or see you as an equal, how on earth could he dare accuse you of trying to do things to his food.

That alone would make me stand back and re-evaluate just how he sees me. That would never even enter the mind of someone if they loved and trusted them.

What's his is his, and in my mind there comes a point where it should become 'ours' but I suspect that hasn't entered the mind of this gentleman.

You've carried this man for long enough, it's time he grew up and learned to fend for himself, doesn't sound like he ever has.

Spend your money on creating the fulfulling life that you dream of - will be worth every penny!

ItGhoul · 20/05/2025 11:46

@TwinklingPotato, your first post was describing a lazy twat who was sponging off you while farting about with his hobby-job. That was bad enough and certainly reason enough to leave him.

But your later posts are actually way more bloody concerning in terms of his behaviour. He isn't just sponging off you. He's controlling every aspect of your life - financially and socially. He is obsessive, paranoid and abusive. He won't let you have social media?? He makes you send him a photo to prove where you are when you go out? He gives you the silent treatment if you see your family?? HE THINKS YOU'RE TRYING TO POISON HIM??? Seriously, this man is fucking nuts.

You are being emotionally and financially abused by a man who is in all seriousness probably mentally unstable alongside being a complete prick. The moment you're in a position to leave, leave. Set up another bank account for your salary and withdraw everything from your joint account into it as soon as you possibly can.

Could you possibly afford to rent somewhere short term (Airbnb or similar) until your new place is ready for you to move into?

You sound great and you deserve SO much better than this utter cunt.

ItGhoul · 20/05/2025 11:47

mewkins · 20/05/2025 11:04

He does sound nuts. And if you upset things by discussing you leaving it will end up with you going round in circles too. He will grind you down. Sort your new house. Move your stuff in. Pack what's left in a bag and leave a note or plan a brief chat where you tell him you're going (depending on how volatile you think he is). Leave and block.

This. I genuinely don't think it would be safe to discuss leaving in advance. Sort everything and go.

SugarPlumpFairyCakes · 20/05/2025 11:49

Wow.

Leave. Become free.

TwinklingPotato · 20/05/2025 12:52

I've done it... I've signed the tenancy agreement!

It starts on 1 June, so I will plan to start moving things in from day one..

Oh god, it's the right thing, isn't it? I deserve more don't I? I'm not imagining how bad things are..

OP posts:
LadyMacbethssweetArabianhand · 20/05/2025 12:59

I am so happy you have decided to leave and signed the tenancy agreement. I'm still concerned that you are minimising his behaviour and don't think he will turn violent at losing his money source. What your dad did is not a reason to be careful with this man. He absolutely will lose it with you if you tell him face to face, either violently or by a meltdown in an attempt to get you to change your mind. Do you really think he'll let you come and go freely from this house to your new house after you've told him? The chances are he will refuse you access to 'his house'. You seem kind and reasonable and think others are too. By all your posts, this is not a reasonable man. Please rethink telling him to his face.

Justlovedogs · 20/05/2025 13:06

thedancingclown · 19/05/2025 12:03

Have a new place ready to move into first, get your affairs in order so you can live independently of him and just say bye on your way out.

you really do not owe him anything but, like ripping a plaster off, a quick this is not for me anymore will be fine. Do not get involved in an in-depth discussion.

This.
I'd just add to not give him your new address and consider a change of phone number. Probably easier said than done, but it sounds like you really would be better off on your own. Good luck.

Justlovedogs · 20/05/2025 13:09

TwinklingPotato · 20/05/2025 12:52

I've done it... I've signed the tenancy agreement!

It starts on 1 June, so I will plan to start moving things in from day one..

Oh god, it's the right thing, isn't it? I deserve more don't I? I'm not imagining how bad things are..

Sorry, @TwinklingPotato, I didn't see your update before I posted.
Yes, you've done the right thing. It will be hard and you'll have doubts to start with, but just imagine being able to do what you want in your home - yours, not someone else's. Wishing you all the luck 🤞.

TwinklingPotato · 20/05/2025 13:09

Thank you, both.

My plan is not to say anything until the day I go. As in, the moment I plan to leave. It's going to be so hard, I know walking out of the door will kill me emotionally, but I need to understand where those emotions are coming from and what they're built on.

I'm scared, not of him, but of me failing and not doing it.

OP posts:
LadyHexham · 20/05/2025 13:14

Can you sneak bits of your stuff out and store it at work or at a Paul's hous

Hollietree · 20/05/2025 13:21

TwinklingPotato · 20/05/2025 12:52

I've done it... I've signed the tenancy agreement!

It starts on 1 June, so I will plan to start moving things in from day one..

Oh god, it's the right thing, isn't it? I deserve more don't I? I'm not imagining how bad things are..

Wow amazing 🥳

Do you have any days between now at June 1st when you know he will be out the house? Can you start filling suitcases/bags of the most important stuff and secretly get them out of the house and store them at a friends house?

And on June 1st (if it is safe) - you 100% need to take furniture, kitchenware, laptops - basically any physical items that you paid for are yours to take. Hire a van and do you have a friend or two who would help?

Pbjsand · 20/05/2025 13:26

Prepare for it to be messy when you tell him. I doubt he’d let you back into the house after you tell him, so have a friend and a van ready for when you do.

candycane222 · 20/05/2025 13:33

Pbjsand · 20/05/2025 13:26

Prepare for it to be messy when you tell him. I doubt he’d let you back into the house after you tell him, so have a friend and a van ready for when you do.

I agree, you ought to plan for this eventuality and secure the things you want to take. I think it would be a good idea to hire a 'man with a van' so the driver can be there in the house to help you.

Alway possible he will try to intimidate.the driver and claim your stuff is actually his of course,but perhaps something to consider as an option. But make sure passport, paperwork etc are somewhere safe in advance of your move

BoredZelda · 20/05/2025 13:45

TwinklingPotato · 20/05/2025 13:09

Thank you, both.

My plan is not to say anything until the day I go. As in, the moment I plan to leave. It's going to be so hard, I know walking out of the door will kill me emotionally, but I need to understand where those emotions are coming from and what they're built on.

I'm scared, not of him, but of me failing and not doing it.

How will this work? You say bye and just walk out the door? What about all your stuff? Or will you be slowly decanting it so he doesn’t notice you have two t-shirts and pair of pants left?

I‘m not sure you’ve thought this through, a lot seems to have happened in 24 hours. You need to make sure there is someone with you when you are leaving and preferably have all of your stuff moved whilst he is out. Telling him nicely before you go and expecting him to just accept that, is how women die.

TwinklingPotato · 20/05/2025 13:56

Thanks All.

I appreciate this post has moved quickly but believe me, it has been more than 24 hours of my life, thoughts, emotions.

The place is between work and my current home, so I will bring bits and pieces to work and drop them off on the way home. I will arrange furniture (just the basics) to be delivered during working hours and take time off. All i have at the house are a few trinkets and my clothes. Everything will fit in my car in one trip. Everything small and special I will move before I move, if that makes sense. If it takes me two weeks, I'll do it so that it makes Day Zero as quick as it can be.

He doesn't leave the house unless I am with him, so I have no other way of doing it.

OP posts:
SugarPlumpFairyCakes · 20/05/2025 14:40

TwinklingPotato · 20/05/2025 12:52

I've done it... I've signed the tenancy agreement!

It starts on 1 June, so I will plan to start moving things in from day one..

Oh god, it's the right thing, isn't it? I deserve more don't I? I'm not imagining how bad things are..

You are amazing. All power to you.

BeNiceWhenItsFinished · 20/05/2025 15:09

Marvellous. Ruddy marvellous, well done you for taking such a daunting step. You have the power of the MN posse behind you, cheering you on.
Flowers Wine

candycane222 · 20/05/2025 15:18

👍👍👍👍👍

Pbjsand · 20/05/2025 15:20

Sounds like a good plan and Congratulations! 🙌

Noshadelamp · 20/05/2025 15:32

Ok op here's a summary in case you ever question yourself again:

  • Financial Exploitation: He has provided minimal to no income for a decade, relying entirely on your salary for all household expenses, food, and purchases, including his own personal items and hobby equipment.

  • Lack of Contribution: He failed to complete promised home renovations and prioritises his personal "hobby" (at your expense) over seeking paid employment.

  • Controlling Behaviour: He restricts your social life, isolates you from friends and family, controls your spending, and demands constant praise while dismissing your achievements.

  • Emotional Manipulation: He uses threats (e.g., "that would mean the end of the relationship") and feigned emotional vulnerability to maintain control and prevent you from leaving or asking him to contribute.

  • Unfulfilling Relationship: He has failed to deliver on promises of marriage and children

  • Disregard for Your Well-being: He prioritises his "vision" for the house over your comfort and basic living necessities, effectively making you a rent-paying caretaker of his inherited property.

  • Paranoia and Accusations: He falsely accused you of trying to poison him.

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