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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

I want him to move out but I'm paralysed to say it

59 replies

LutonAirportBabe · 18/07/2025 14:01

Hi everyone,
I’m in a relationship that’s been going foralmost a year (Its actually our anniversary tomorrow).
He moved in around 7 months ago—way sooner than I was ready for. I’d said I wanted to wait until spring, but he gave notice to his landlord in November without properly checking in, and by December he’d moved into my home. I didn’t push back—I’ve always struggled with confrontation and I’m such a pushover that I just went along with it, even though it didn’t sit right with me. I hate conflict and often avoid it at my own expense.

Almost immediately after he moved in, I felt the shift. The relationship started feeling heavy, draining, and suffocating. Since then, I’ve taken on almost all the housework, the mental load, managing my pets (i foster puppies and kittens), and working too. He’ll occasionally help—but only when I’ve reached breaking point or directly ask multiple times. When he promises to help it rarely happens, and if I follow up, he’ll either avoid the conversation or blame someone else.

One of the worst parts was the sleep deprivation. His snoring became unbearable. I asked him for several weeks to see a doctor, tried different solutions, and he didn’t act until I broke down crying. Only then did he offer to sleep on the sofa. This is the pattern with everything: he only responds when I’m in emotional crisis. By then, it’s already too late.

I’ve told him directly that I’m miserable. That my anxiety is through the roof. That my antidepressant dosage has gone up, my insomnia is back, and I’ve even been told I have high blood pressure—all of which I know are being caused by stress in this relationship. He knows all of that, yet avoids conversations about it. When I told him about the blood pressure, his only response was, “Try not to overdo it,” as if this is just me pushing myself too hard—instead of acknowledging that he’s the source of the stress.

At this point, I’ve emotionally checked out. I don’t feel safe, supported, or respected. I want to ask him to move out. I’m not scared of being the bad guy—I just feel paralysed. Like I can’t get the words out, and I don’t know how to hold that boundary once it’s set. I worry I’ll fold the second he gets emotional or starts negotiating. I know he knows I struggle with boundaries, and I do wonder if he’s banking on that.

If you’ve been in this situation—how did you get through the paralysis and follow through? How do you start that conversation when the emotional labour has already drained you dry?

OP posts:
Nowadaysmind · 26/07/2025 11:46

Sheesh! Reading posts like yours @LutonAirportBabe make me feel grateful for staying single He sounds like a proper headache. Well done you for making the right choice for you 👏

SweetnsourNZ · 18/09/2025 09:53

MrsTerryPratchett · 18/07/2025 15:04

OK there are two issues. One is immediate. Text as PP said and tell him. Everything he says, have a few stock phrases, ‘my mind is made up’ ‘the date is the date’ ‘I’m not changing my mind’ that you rotate when he tries to talk you out of it.

The second is WTAF? You moved him in insanely early, you got rid of all your stuff, you’re making your self ill. You cannot have another relationship unless you do some seriously work on yourself. Assertiveness, therapy and everything else. It’s urgent. Build yourself and your life up so there is eventually only space for a good man.

Sounds like he manipulated his way in by giving notice early. He knew exactly what he was doing.

SweetnsourNZ · 18/09/2025 09:59

Get rid of him now. He is using you and the longer he stays the worse it's going to get. He doesn't even sound like a partner, just a stranger that has moved in. If he stays much longer he will start working out ways to make a claim on your house, even if they wouldn't stand in court it will cause you stress.

SweetnsourNZ · 18/09/2025 10:01

LutonAirportBabe · 25/07/2025 19:22

I did it!! I actually had the conversation, on my own!

He's is outta here!

Thank you all so much for your words of encouragement x

Excellent news. Sorry about my last posts. I read the dates wrong and thought this was current. Tired scrolling.

PersephoneParlormaid · 18/09/2025 10:03

Well done, I wish I could be so brave.

Springtimehere · 18/09/2025 10:08

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Springtimehere · 18/09/2025 10:08

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sesquipedalian · 18/09/2025 10:12

“He's is outta here!”

That’s great news, OP - and don’t under any circumstances let him wheedle his way back. I hope you’ve changed the locks.

crappycrapcrap · 18/09/2025 10:14

It’s weak but start the conversation via text.
something like ‘look I’m so drained and exhausted, I think we need to talk as I don’t think this is going to work out’ …

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