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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

My long-term partner suddenly broke up with me and I am having conflicted opinions of how to move forward. How do I handle the next stages in my processing of this breakup?

109 replies

nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 06:30

My partner (I am reluctant to give up and refer to him as an ex yet) broke up with me a few days ago. We have been together continuously for almost 10 years. I'm quite conflicted about how to feel and my support network has been giving me validation, but no solid advice on how I should focus my priorities.

For the last several years, there has been an issue in our relationship regarding romance and intimacy. Namely, I don't have the same drive he does when it comes to intimacy, so I don't initiate. I wait for him, as I don't feel like I am a desireable or sexual being. Its been an ongoing issue with me that I admit makes it difficult. I have also felt that he hasn't been romantically or physically interested in me for quite some time. I'm not sure if its something that happens in long-term relationships or not, but I hadn't felt desireable in that time. The conversations happen, I try to do better, but my lack of confidence and the lack of encouragement from him has always led to a roadblock for me. I don't know if this is the reason for the aforementioned breakup, but I at least believe it is part of the reason.

In the summer of this year, we had a long talk about him being unhappy. That I didn't feel much like a girlfriend. For some background (remaining vague), my partner has a major health complication that has led to me feeling the need to take on a more caretaker-y role in our relationship. This health issue has also led to him being in quite a bit of pain and with a rapidly more fragile body over time. The stress of working to provide for us and my lack of alone time at home did admittedly made me quite eager to be left alone a lot more and I do admit that it made me less attentive to his romantic needs. At the same time, I voiced my frustration that I needed to ask for affection (kisses, hughs, etc). I had initially dismissed these frustrations as selfish on my part because he was focused on health and I would be less of a priority, but over time it led to me feeling like I didn't matter and that I wasn't desireable. I remember saying that I 'felt like he didn't love me.' He admitted that the romance was fading and that he would try to do better about being affectionate with me, as I told him I would feel more comfortable being physical if I felt assured that he did love me. That night, I had to ask him for a kiss goodnight. I never did get what I wanted, affection without always asking, so I struggled to keep my half of our agreement to try. In the next months, I tried. We seemed happy.

I came home a few days ago, blissfully unaware that he decided to end our relationship. He told me that he just didn't love me romantically anymore. That people and feelings change and that he couldn't see a future with me anymore. That he was trying to love me the way I loved him, but that he just didn't anymore. He said there was no changing his mind, no chance that being apart would change his mind. He was sorry it had to be like this, but it was something he had to do. He told me he was hurting too. He took bags of clothes with him and left our shared home the same night. He wants to remain friends, but that we need distance in order to achieve that. I have been in our home alone since then, agonizing, crying, and nearly incapable of taking care of myself out of the weight of my grief and heartbreak. Nearly 10 years of love, struggle, and togetherness, just gone in an instant with me, alone, to wallow in grief.

The friends in my life worry its a health crisis of some kind. Other friends think he's asking too much of me without returning the effort and that I did the best I could. One friend in particular is quite angry that I was left alone in our shared house while he got to be away from mementos of a long relationship. They think I need to give him space and try to see if he's willing to come home and resume our relationship. My sister is heartbroken, telling me he was supposed to be with me forever. All of them are quite blindsided by everything and, while affirming my emotions are valid and I'm right to be upset or hurt or angry or sad, but I have been flopping between desperately wanting him back or unwillingly letting him go and my support network is reluctant to advise me either way. Its either I am "too charitable" or "fiercely loyal" if I want him to come back to me or "he did hurt you" and "it makes sense" if I accept that our relationship is over. Its kind, but they seem unwilling to help me parse the constantly shifting feelings I have, so I've come here.

So with that background, I'm really struggling with what to do and how to process the conflicting emotions I'm feeling. On one hand, he said (and I agree) that I deserve someone who loved me the way I love them. I yearn for settling down, being comfortable in my life, and adverse to change, but he doesn't seem to want that with me anymore. On the other hand, I still very much love him. I don't want someone someday to love me the way I love them. I want him to love me. I don't know if my acceptance of that love is to my detriment, since I feel he didn't try and wanted me to be the only one trying. I don't know if I'm being insensitive to the situation for expecting him to try as much as I wanted him to. I don't know what I could have done differently, or if I'm being to harsh to myself. I know it isn't my decision to separate, but I'm scared that reaching out to him when he doesn't seem to want me to will lead to him deciding we can't remain friends. Am I being overly sensitive for being so upset that he left that night, leaving me to process everything in our shared home alone, with no ability to change his mind? I'm so upset that the decision was so final and I can't do anything to change his mind or convince him to try with me still.

How do you recommend I proceed? What are your recommendations or opinions? Please, any help would mean the world to me. I'm hoping to reign in the conflicting emotions and have an idea for how to handle this.

OP posts:
MumoftwoNC · 07/12/2025 06:46

It wasn't a happy relationship. Stay busy, get on with work and other stuff, and you'll come out the other side of these feelings and your life will be much better in the long run.

I'm relieved for you that he's gone after reading all that about him

Summerhillsquare · 07/12/2025 07:04

These things happen, if you didn't want to have sex with him and he didn't want to hug or kiss you you were at an impasse really, there's no other way to go.

Iocanepowder · 07/12/2025 07:12

Him saying he wants to remain friends is also not a good idea. You need him out of your lite fully in order to move on.

It really doesn’t sound like a happy relationship anyway

Next steps are:

-Focus on sorting whatever needs to be done about your shared home, with bills, moving etc.
-Get some therapy for your low self esteem
-After things with your home are sorted, block him on everything

Eviebeans · 07/12/2025 07:13

Sometimes romantic relationships cannot survive the care taking/nurse type element of it and it’s right to be honest about that
It doesn’t sound like a great relationship and it feels like you were doing a lot of the heavy lifting

Iocanepowder · 07/12/2025 07:14

If you’re able to pay for some private therapy, they can also help you process it probably better than your friends can.

Do you have any counselling benefits through work?

Lifestooshort71 · 07/12/2025 07:16

It's over, I'm sorry. He made his feelings quite clear and that he's not going to change so that's your starting point. Don't waste any head space on getting back with him but do look after yourself - I would suggest exercise of some sort (so you're tired enough to sleep); if you're a list maker, jot down practical stuff that needs sorting and end up with stuff you can get on with (and start now) and a list of stuff that will need his signature - park that until you've got your head in a better place. You are on your own now but are a survivor! As to being friends - that could have been a get-out phrase to help him feel better so I wouldn't bank on it until/unless you're ready. You can do this, good luck 💐

Pandorea · 07/12/2025 07:18

I’m so sorry this has happened to you. I had something quite similar happen when I was in my late twenties - a ten year relationship he ended abruptly. We had a messy year afterwards of him wavering and us sleeping together and we tried counseling but ultimately split. Both now married to other people with children.
It’s a terrible shock, especially if you’ve been a bit of a carer for someone. You’ve given them so much love and nurturing and then they’ve unilaterally made the decision to end it. I was left just not knowing what to do with the loving and caring instinct towards him - it doesn’t just go away overnight. Plus you’ve got to try and reframe your view of your future - while perhaps sort of hoping he might change his mind again about the relationship as suddenly as he did the first time.
I went to counselling just for me - which helped a bit. I tried to spend as much time as possible doing things with friends. Read some self help books. I took up new hobbies and tried to direct the energy I’d been spending on him towards me. I also slept with a couple of unsuitable men - which wasn’t a great idea but was part of the process.
Quite a lot of my energy was taken up by trying to cope with the pain - which was a lot to bear. I think you should tell yourself to believe him and that the relationship is over and use your energy to cope with the pain and to look after yourself. It’s really difficult
though and do be gentle with yourself.
Also keep talking to your friends and sister - I found I needed to go through it all a lot - to help process the shock.

Enrichetta · 07/12/2025 07:28

I realise you’re hurting, but surely you recognise that this relationship has run its course.

Start clearing out his stuff, get some new bedding and go out with friends.

Get counselling and read some books about self-esteem.

YellowCherry · 07/12/2025 07:29

This is so sad, OP. Of course it's normal to feel so upset and it's also normal to not know what you want and to flip flop between wanting him back and thinking maybe it's for the best. I think your friend who is angry about you being left with the memories is being a bit unreasonable tbh. It's normal for the person who finishes the relationship to be the one to move out, surely? It would be a bit mean for him to have kicked you out instead!

I think at this stage the only thing to do is cry and wallow for a while and accept your conflicting emotions. It's still very early days. It will get easier with time. Sending hugs OP.

UpDownAllAround1 · 07/12/2025 07:32

This is very sad for both of you. He has been very clear though on the future. Maybe initially no contact for 30 days?

Lurkingandlearning · 07/12/2025 07:35

He has said it is over and there is no future for your relationship. I think the first thing you can do to begin to ease your pain is accept that. You can’t really get over the break up and move forward until you do.

Look at it this way - how cruel it would have been for him to say that if it wasn’t true. If he has become the sort of person who lashes out and says that type of thing just to hurt you, then you should have no place for him in your life.

As much as you can, I think you need to try to relax and try to limit the amount of time you spend thinking about what has happened. I know that sounds ridiculous but I think when this happens so abruptly it can send people into something like shock and the constant thoughts and questions whirling around their minds can make them ill. Allow yourself x amount of time, set an alarm if need be, and then do something that you find absorbing. If you really can’t concentrate get some fresh air and go for a walk.

Again, I know it sounds ridiculous but with some practice, it will help you feel less fraught and then you will start getting a bit more clarity about what to do next.

knottywig · 07/12/2025 07:41

This may come across as quite brutal but he’s not coming back, he checked out way before he broke up with you. He will have been planning his next move, getting his ducks in a row for a while. Also I agree with pp, it does seem the relationship was over a while ago.
Keep busy with work and hobbies and stuff, get a routine sorted out and stick to it, this will help. Start sorting your finances out now. You’ve had enough time to wallow, now get busy going forward with your life. It’s fine to mourn your relationship, but you have to recognise it is over and start moving forward.
Him saying he wants to be friends, in my mind would be that he wants to keep you there in case the person he wants doesn’t want him or he gets ill again and needs a nurse maid. He really doesn’t want you as a friend.

Planetmuff · 07/12/2025 07:44

All that matters is that he doesn’t love you anymore. He doesn’t want to be in a relationship with you. Truthfully your relationship sounds pretty rubbish anyway. You are trying to intellectualise an emotional situation and you are trying to fix this. You can’t. This is a gift to you. You won’t believe it for a while but slugging away at a crap relationship is depressing. Let him go and believe him when he says he doesn’t love you anymore. I know from experience how much this hurts.

HollyChristmas · 07/12/2025 07:56

You don't mention it but I assume no kids ? Are you of an age where you want them in the future ? Is your home rented or owned by you both ?
Time to get practical , if rented can you get his name off the rental , or think about moving for a fresh start . If mortgages what are both your plans moving forward ?
Yes it sounds like you have been on caring duties with him. Has this stopped you from living your own life ?
If yes , try to get back to doing the things you enjoy . Great yourself to a spa day , take up running , go for coffees , anything that gets you back to being you .

nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 08:08

I'll do my best to stay busy. He and I had a lovely, long relationship but since right before his illness, everything shifted. Its devastating because I don't know what more I could have done to prevent it from sliding away from me.

OP posts:
nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 08:09

MumoftwoNC · 07/12/2025 06:46

It wasn't a happy relationship. Stay busy, get on with work and other stuff, and you'll come out the other side of these feelings and your life will be much better in the long run.

I'm relieved for you that he's gone after reading all that about him

I'll do my best to stay busy. Thank you

OP posts:
nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 08:10

Summerhillsquare · 07/12/2025 07:04

These things happen, if you didn't want to have sex with him and he didn't want to hug or kiss you you were at an impasse really, there's no other way to go.

It didnt help that I also have an illness that can trigger pain flares during sex. It made having sex very stressful for me and I felt guilty over it for years

OP posts:
nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 08:12

Iocanepowder · 07/12/2025 07:12

Him saying he wants to remain friends is also not a good idea. You need him out of your lite fully in order to move on.

It really doesn’t sound like a happy relationship anyway

Next steps are:

-Focus on sorting whatever needs to be done about your shared home, with bills, moving etc.
-Get some therapy for your low self esteem
-After things with your home are sorted, block him on everything

I'm just so reluctant to go scorched earth with him. Especially given how long our lives were intertwined and how much I've cared for him while he's been ill. I know being away for some time will help and I'm letting him decide when he wants to reestablish contact, but I'm admittedly feeling quite impatient

OP posts:
nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 08:13

Eviebeans · 07/12/2025 07:13

Sometimes romantic relationships cannot survive the care taking/nurse type element of it and it’s right to be honest about that
It doesn’t sound like a great relationship and it feels like you were doing a lot of the heavy lifting

It is nice to hear you think so. I've been racking my brain trying to justify why every compromise felt like I needed to change, but he never seemed to need to and I've been coming up empty-handed

OP posts:
nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 08:14

Iocanepowder · 07/12/2025 07:14

If you’re able to pay for some private therapy, they can also help you process it probably better than your friends can.

Do you have any counselling benefits through work?

I do. Its just difficult to find the time to properly find a counselor. With his illness, my stress from work, and my own issues, I know its necessary

OP posts:
nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 08:17

Lifestooshort71 · 07/12/2025 07:16

It's over, I'm sorry. He made his feelings quite clear and that he's not going to change so that's your starting point. Don't waste any head space on getting back with him but do look after yourself - I would suggest exercise of some sort (so you're tired enough to sleep); if you're a list maker, jot down practical stuff that needs sorting and end up with stuff you can get on with (and start now) and a list of stuff that will need his signature - park that until you've got your head in a better place. You are on your own now but are a survivor! As to being friends - that could have been a get-out phrase to help him feel better so I wouldn't bank on it until/unless you're ready. You can do this, good luck 💐

Edited

I hope he commits to the "staying friends" bit, as I've never had anyone in my life who knows me like he does. I will make a list and try to get out and moving around. Luckily, most of our bills I handle, so I should only need 1 account from him.

OP posts:
nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 08:18

Pandorea · 07/12/2025 07:18

I’m so sorry this has happened to you. I had something quite similar happen when I was in my late twenties - a ten year relationship he ended abruptly. We had a messy year afterwards of him wavering and us sleeping together and we tried counseling but ultimately split. Both now married to other people with children.
It’s a terrible shock, especially if you’ve been a bit of a carer for someone. You’ve given them so much love and nurturing and then they’ve unilaterally made the decision to end it. I was left just not knowing what to do with the loving and caring instinct towards him - it doesn’t just go away overnight. Plus you’ve got to try and reframe your view of your future - while perhaps sort of hoping he might change his mind again about the relationship as suddenly as he did the first time.
I went to counselling just for me - which helped a bit. I tried to spend as much time as possible doing things with friends. Read some self help books. I took up new hobbies and tried to direct the energy I’d been spending on him towards me. I also slept with a couple of unsuitable men - which wasn’t a great idea but was part of the process.
Quite a lot of my energy was taken up by trying to cope with the pain - which was a lot to bear. I think you should tell yourself to believe him and that the relationship is over and use your energy to cope with the pain and to look after yourself. It’s really difficult
though and do be gentle with yourself.
Also keep talking to your friends and sister - I found I needed to go through it all a lot - to help process the shock.

I'm so sorry to hear that you've gone through the same. Its so heartbreaking to dedicate yourself to someone so entirely and then be left behind. Do you have book recommendations?

OP posts:
nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 08:19

Enrichetta · 07/12/2025 07:28

I realise you’re hurting, but surely you recognise that this relationship has run its course.

Start clearing out his stuff, get some new bedding and go out with friends.

Get counselling and read some books about self-esteem.

I shall do so. Clearing out his stuff has been a taxing process, but day by day I've been trying

OP posts:
TheThingOnTheIce · 07/12/2025 08:19

nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 08:17

I hope he commits to the "staying friends" bit, as I've never had anyone in my life who knows me like he does. I will make a list and try to get out and moving around. Luckily, most of our bills I handle, so I should only need 1 account from him.

Staying friends is not a good idea. How will you feel if you stay friends and then one day he can’t meet for a coffee as he’s seeing his new girlfriend?

nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 08:21

YellowCherry · 07/12/2025 07:29

This is so sad, OP. Of course it's normal to feel so upset and it's also normal to not know what you want and to flip flop between wanting him back and thinking maybe it's for the best. I think your friend who is angry about you being left with the memories is being a bit unreasonable tbh. It's normal for the person who finishes the relationship to be the one to move out, surely? It would be a bit mean for him to have kicked you out instead!

I think at this stage the only thing to do is cry and wallow for a while and accept your conflicting emotions. It's still very early days. It will get easier with time. Sending hugs OP.

Thank you. I think my friend was just upset because, in his mind, leaving so quickly without being there for the fallout of this decision and keeping the blindsided party surrounded by mementos of him makes it harder to process and grieve. I know every inch of our home has something of his there and its overwhelming seeing it constantly while trying to move on

OP posts: