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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

Undervalued and Hurt - Am I Being Unreasonable?

12 replies

MumCy1982 · 10/08/2025 13:00

I've been with my partner for 3 years. I have an 8-year-old daughter, who I have full custody of due to domestic abuse from my ex-husband, and my partner has a 10-year-old daughter, who lives with him part-time (5 nights in a 14-day period). I’m currently pregnant, and we’re planning to move in together soon.
Every summer, I go to Cyprus for a month to spend time with my mother, who lives there. I only see her 2–3 times a year for about 5–6 weeks total, so the time is precious to me — especially for my daughter, who adores her grandmother.
Since being with my partner, he’s joined us in Cyprus for about 10 days each year, bringing his daughter so we can have a family holiday together. We stay at my mum’s house, but during summer there's not enough room for everyone (my sister and nephew also stay), so my partner books a hotel when his daughter is also with him. We usually get a family room with a bunk bed so my daughter and I can spend a night or two there too, to have some time together as a family.
This year, the trip has left me feeling upset and hurt, and I need to know — am I being unreasonable?
His daughter was only in Cyprus for 6 nights, so the hotel wax booked for 6 nights in total. My partners daughter had already stayed at a hotel earlier this summer with her Mum during their holiday in Athens and upon her returning she has another hotel stay planned afterward in Croatia. The first hotel night, the bunk wasn’t made, so she slept in the main bed. The second night, she stayed at my mum’s so my partner and I could have a night alone at the hotel.
That left 4 nights of bunk bed use. When my daughter and I joined them on night 4, my daughter asked to sleep on the top bunk. My partner said it wasn’t fair — that since his daughter should have all 4 nights on the top bunk. I suggested they take turns, which i thought seemed completely fair. He refused and said his daughter should get to decide, and that if she didn’t want to share the top bunk, then that’s what goes.
I found this incredibly unfair. What kind of message does that send to both children? That one child gets to call the shots and the other has no say? He even tried to justify it by saying his daughter wouldn’t be able to sit up on the bottom bunk (we checked she could). Neverthelesd he said “It’s her choice.”
At that point, I told my daughter we’d just go back to my mum’s in the evening. My daughter, trying to make peace, said she’d sleep on the bottom bunk. I said no — it wasn’t about the bed anymore, it was about fairness. Then his daughter, clearly wanting us to stay, so she said she’d take the bottom bunk instead but she still thought it was unfair. I gave in, but I felt so hurt. It’s not the first time he’s acted this way espically on holiday. Other examples include: My mum only gets one day off a week (Sunday), and she wanted us all to go to the mountains as a family — beautiful food, forest adventure activities for the kids, something everyone could enjoy. But his daughter wanted to go to the waterpark. My partner expected us to leave my mum behind on her one day off so we could go to the waterpark instead. There were even occasions when dinner choice were based on what his daughter wants to eat. He’ll ask her what she wants, then expect the whole group to go along with that.
When I told him that I was upset and felt he hadn’t handled the bunk bed situation fairly, he said that this was his and his daughter’s holiday and that my daughter and I were “just guests.” I found that incredibly hurtful. I thought we were holidaying together. I thought this was our holiday, i didnt feel we were guests. We are suppose to be partners. That means shared adult decision-making.We are about to move in together and raise a baby — how can I be considered a “guest” in his life? What message does that send to my daughter, who is already coming from a background of trauma? I understand he carries a lot of guilt about not being with his daughter full time. But I’ve also carried so much trauma from my past, and I am working so hard to give my daughter a healthy, balanced life.
So I’m asking-Was he wrong to let his daughter have the final say on the bunk bed? Was I unreasonable to expect the children to share it equally? Is it fair for him to call it “his” and “his daughter’s” holiday when we are supposed to be a family? Am I overreacting?

OP posts:
Ineedpeaceandquiet · 10/08/2025 13:04

He put his child first. Time for you to do the same and leave this unkind man.

hmmnotreallysure · 10/08/2025 13:17

It's a shame you're pregnant by him as I don't think that this relationship is going work when you finally move in together. His daughter is a priority for him I think that when you do move in together your daughter will be the one to suffer

Knittedfairies2 · 10/08/2025 13:22

If your partner paid for the hotel room for him and his daughter by himself, then technically I suppose you were his guests, but it does seem an odd use of the term. Did you misunderstand him - did he call you a guest in this particular situation rather than in his life? You have some thinking to do OP.

Chiconbelge · 10/08/2025 13:30

i think the holiday arrangements you describe are very specific - that’s not bad of course - and the situation is a bit ambiguous.

They are the ones for whom there is not space at your mums and who are expected to stay in and pay for the hotel. You are not joining them on the hotel holiday as a family of four while the rest of the family stays with your mum you are camping out with them some of the time. I don’t think the fact the daughter has other holidays with her mum should count against the sense that this is her holiday with her dad and she’s already being moved about quite a bit. Honest question - how is she treated at your mum’s and is she made to feel like a second class member of the family compared with your daughter and her cousins?

I think that the argument sounds pretty awful for both girls and not like adult partners but I’m not sure that the fault is all on his side unless there’s more to this than you’ve told us …

Icedlatteplease · 10/08/2025 13:31

Am I understanding it right?

You can chose to stay at your mums or at the hotel?

Your partner and his daughter only stay in the hotel?

Then yes I wouldn't really expect his daughter to move for the nights you choose to stay there. I would expect her to have first choice.

However where you both dug your heels justifying your case, you both did huge amount of damage to your relationship. Totally disproportionate to the original problem

I also don't think it really would have been the end of the world for you to have done the mountains with your mum and him to have done the Waterpark. (As long as they were happy to do it a second time if your daughter wanted to go)

Blending families is so hard, is whose on the top bunk the hill you want to die on?

Icedlatteplease · 10/08/2025 13:35

Oh both of you go on the day off absolutely not!

Cedrabbage · 10/08/2025 13:38

The top bunk was her bed for the week. Of course she should get to keep to the one bed if that's what she wants.

As for the day out, if it was the one and only time for you to do this Sunday mountain trip with everyone then he should've told his daughter the water park was for another day.

Fair enough to go with his daughter's choice for dinner on a couple of nights if they're only there for six days and you're there for longer.

The rest is noise.

IPM · 10/08/2025 13:41

She shouldn't have to give up the top bunk because your daughter has turned up at the hotel room.

He shouldn't expect you to not go out with your mum on her only day off.

I think I'd stop trying to force the blended family holiday thing as it's clearly not working and sounds stressful for the kids too.

WhenYouSayNothingAtAll · 10/08/2025 13:43

Did he pay fully for the hotel for himself and his daughter?
Is this his only holiday with his daughter this year?
Did he insist you had to join them to the waterpark or did he just say that’s what his daughter wants , so that’s what they’re doing and you had a choice?

Walker1178 · 10/08/2025 14:02

YABU If his DD arrived on holiday and chose a bed she gets to keep it for the time she is there. Why on earth would you expect them to play musical beds?

If you’re there for a month you have plenty of time to spend with your mum, I completely understand DP wanting to pack in the things his DD wanted to do in the short time they are there

DaisyDoodler · 10/08/2025 15:16

Icedlatteplease · 10/08/2025 13:31

Am I understanding it right?

You can chose to stay at your mums or at the hotel?

Your partner and his daughter only stay in the hotel?

Then yes I wouldn't really expect his daughter to move for the nights you choose to stay there. I would expect her to have first choice.

However where you both dug your heels justifying your case, you both did huge amount of damage to your relationship. Totally disproportionate to the original problem

I also don't think it really would have been the end of the world for you to have done the mountains with your mum and him to have done the Waterpark. (As long as they were happy to do it a second time if your daughter wanted to go)

Blending families is so hard, is whose on the top bunk the hill you want to die on?

Absolutely this. You’re ruining your relationship over a bunk bed.

Diarygirlqueen · 10/08/2025 15:24

So there's no room at the inn for him and his daughter so he pays for a hotel. You and your daughter come to their hotel room and expect his daughter to move beds for the sake of your daughter?
This is ridiculous. I would not be moving my daughter where she has been sleeping just to make things fair.
You say you want to make decisions fairly and blend the family but what message does it give out that his daughter can't be accommodated at your mums? Why go on the same dates as your sister? You are excluding them deliberately to spend time with your sister and mum.
There is no need to bring up his daughters holidays with her mum, you are deliberately being spiteful to reinforce your view that his daughter is acting spoilt and gets lots of attention. His daughter is also dealing with split parents, not just your daughter.
If yous do not deal with this maturely, I fear for the future of this relationship.

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