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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

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:
BarbarasRhabarberba · 07/12/2025 15:14

All this hurt and ruminating is completely natural after a breakup but I don’t think your friends are doing you any sort of kindness by painting him as a villain. Anyone can end a relationship at any time for any reason - that doesn’t make them wrong and cruel. You have to take him at face value, he doesn’t love you any more and doesn’t want to be in the relationship. Ignore people saying he’s lined up someone else, speculating on something there is zero evidence for won’t help.

I was dumped once by someone who simply didn’t want to be with me. I was desperate to try and change their mind and get them back. They said, “breaking up isn’t a democracy” and that has stuck with me ever since. They were absolutely right. Unfortunately the dumper has all the power and the only way to move on is accept it.

nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 15:15

Glowingup · 07/12/2025 09:31

I agree with those who say staying friends isn’t going to help you. He’s not your responsibility and he will have other people who can help with health issues. Tbf it sounds like it was a one-sided relationship. You gave up a lot to care for him, he told you all the things you did wrong and you needed to change but didn’t look at what he could do more of. I don’t think you should be friends with someone like that. It also sounds like he made you feel bad about the intimacy stuff but made zero effort himself to make you feel desirable. I think that despite the pain, he has done you a favour. I also wouldn’t be surprised if a new girlfriend pops up before long as he seems the sort of person who would have someone lined up. You sound lovely and kind by comparison which he exploited.

A lot of people on here think he's moved on to someone new, but I genuinely don't think that is the case. I think if he has found someone else, he wouldn't keep it from me. He also doesn't really have anyone else in his life. No friends, it's just been me for this whole time. I can't help but worry

OP posts:
nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 15:16

Uricon2 · 07/12/2025 09:41

It won't feel like it, especially as you are still in caregiver mode, but he has done you a favour. It takes a very strong relationship to survive serious/prolonged illness and disability and it doesn't sound like yours had that sort of background and bedrock. You have to try to think less about him and more about yourself. You say at the moment you'd have him back (which is understandable at this stage) but is it really what's best for you? Nothing would be any different, you would be returning to the situation that made you unhappy. Familiar isn't always the best choice.

Thank you for the bluntness. You're right, that it wouldn't be good for me. Not without large changes he seems unwilling to make

OP posts:
nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 15:18

Bubblecakes · 07/12/2025 10:09

It's healthier for you to accept it rather than hanging on in limbo waiting and hoping for him to change his mind. Being in a similar relationship where I'd tried but they hadn't I then made the decision for us to end it but it totally broke my heart as I still loved him.

Sometimes you just have to come to terms with it. I know it's hard and mine was a reverse except for I couldn't change him to be what he was before. Someone at the time asked me what if that was his best effort? Which it may have been but it wasn't enough.

The dynamics of your roles have changed if you've been his carer too. That alone can't have been easy for either of you.
Once he's collected his things, change things where you live, redecorate, move the furniture around etc, put your stamp on it and move on.
Yes wallow a bit if it helps then take a deep breath and get busy, go out a lot, for walks round the block even just to energise you, even in the grotty weather we're having now! Once you get Christmas and New Year out of the way which is only a couple of days in reality then it'll be Spring and you'll start to feel so much better. Keep going to work. Try to keep to your routines as well but also treat yourself to a new haircut, look after you.

I really feel for you but although you cant see it now you will come out of the other side and all of this will just be a distant memory.

Thank you for the advice. I'll take some walks and cut my hair. I really like it short, but I've kept it long for him for a while now

OP posts:
nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 15:19

Cadenza12 · 07/12/2025 10:17

It seems that he's checked out very quickly. Where has he actually gone?

He's gone to a hotel to look for a place to live

OP posts:
nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 15:20

Ejvd · 07/12/2025 10:18

He's done you a favour! Sounds like you were in a dead relationship. But you cant handle being friends with him. Youre already desperately waiting for the day he gets back in touch. Don't let your friends tell you how to proceed - i doubt you told them the details about your sex life and that stuff is very important. I don't think we can help you anyway. You sound too desperate. Get therapy!

I did divulge that with a couple of friends Both were pretty upset at the thought that he put all of the expectation on me to fix it. I will try therapy though, thank you

OP posts:
nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 15:21

DelphiniumBlue · 07/12/2025 10:38

It’s a horrible thing to have happened, but it’s good that he’s been honest and clear about the relationship being over.
It’s early days, but now is the time to put your own convenience and preferences first..for example, don’t keep the cats unless you actually want to. Consider moving to a cheaper flat where you won’t be reminded of him, and where you’ll have a fresh start whilst saving yourself some money. Tell him to take all his stuff, not just what he wants for now. You don’t have to be kind or helpful or reasonable, and you don’t have to inconvenience yourself to help him out ( by storing his stuff).
Don’t keep torturing yourself with what you might have done differently, you can’t change the past.It sounds as if you did contribute a lot to the relationship,but that in fact it wasn’t working for either of you.
Be prepared to hear that he has in fact met someone else and is in a new relationship with them.

I don't know how to get that question of"what could I have changed" or if my head. To be honest, I can only speculate...

OP posts:
nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 15:23

PinkSkies2026 · 07/12/2025 10:59

Firstly remaining friends at a distance isn't possible. I am a decent person and I've accepted that you can't move on emotionally if you have a background ex that you are friends with. No contact is the only option. I don't mean it has to be a block thing, I'm just telling you it never works. It always has a slight power imbalance.

If you do remain friends, it's not an end, it's a break. You could have a 3 - 6 month break and then decide if you really are prepared to accept each other or not. People don't change. Asking people to make an effort in a particular way that they don't naturally do it isn't sustainable.

There's no easy way of getting over heart break. Counselling can help. It's natural to feel conflicted.

My outsider opinion is that it sounds like the care taker element killed the relationship. My gut feeling is you need a clean break.

I feared taking on taking care of him would lead to this... Do you really think that it was that?

OP posts:
nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 15:24

Drowningincokezero · 07/12/2025 11:12

I think with a bit of distance you might come to see that it was his lack of affection that started the course of events that has lead you here. The part that stood out was the lack of a goodnight kiss the very same day you had explained your feelings.
I'm hoping you will come to see how this, and what followed, did nothing but ruin any sense of desirability you had in yourself. It was not a place for your self esteem to flourish.
If you can come to realise this to be true then you can find ways of moving on and regaining your self esteem. Put yourself first, as a project if it helps. Just small things that will give you a sense of satisfaction. They don't have to be productive, even - the more frivolous the better!
I understand that you'll have no headspace for such activities just yet, but it can be an aim for the coming year? Start small for now. Take a long bath, use a body lotion, take some exercise. This is a new chapter of your life and you can make whatever you want of it. That's kind of exciting, isn't it?
Sending all my best for these days, though. They are hard but it does get better🌻

Thank you for the kind words and advice. I've been feeling so down that the idea of self care feels wrong. But I know it's necessary

OP posts:
nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 15:27

Wowcha · 07/12/2025 11:24

Firstly, it’s very refreshing to hear about 2 people who openly communicated things with each other - so often on here people just seem not to communicate with their partners.

It is obvious that you have both tried hard to keep this relationship going but it is time for it to be over now.

You can love someone and want the best for them but just not be in love with them and compatible enough for a relationship.

Life is going to pass you by.
Don’t waste it on a relationship that doesn’t work.

It’s harder for you because you’re in the family home.
The only thing you can do is keep yourself as busy as possible and talk it through on here or on ChatGPT.

I think your friends and family are being a bit unfair. I understand that they want to support you but he shouldn’t sacrifice his happiness just to keep you happy.
You both deserve to focus on yourselves and find your happiness as individuals.

Our relationship was sorry it built on that open communication of our feelings. Sometimes it felt like pulling teeth for him to open up, but being upfront with how we're doing I think is how we had lasted so long. That's why I can't help but feel a little blindsided. Its hard to accept it, but I suppose i have no choice but to

OP posts:
nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 15:29

Bonden · 07/12/2025 11:26

So you’re the bigger earner, you’ve worked to support him during illness, you’ve felt unattractive and unloved, you get pain during sex, he got two cats he’s dumped on you, you cared for him when he was ill.
Get counselling! I imagine your self esteem is in the gutter after living with him this way. He really doesn’t sound like a good man. Sounds to me like once he got well again - using your kindness and care - he’s decided he can “do better” aka get more sex elsewhere.

find your anger. He’s used you - and now he’s decided he doesn’t need you anymore. Give him his bloody cats back, find a new place to rent which you can make your own home, don’t ever step in and help him when he asks or when he gets ill (and he will). Work on that sense that you’re unattractive. Say yes to fun, doing stuff, take up new hobbies, start a diary, and def find a counsellor

I do feel my self esteem has tanked entirely. Its hard because I also love these cats and they deserve a good home. If they're with me, they will always be loved. I'll try to regain my sense of fun. Thank you

OP posts:
nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 15:30

pomers · 07/12/2025 11:29

The way to proceed has been decided by him. You don’t have a decision to make, he has ended the relationship and is not interested in reconciling with you. He is not your partner, as you refer to him in your original post. He is your Ex, do not stay ‘friends’. Concentrate in your own life and enjoy not being his ‘caretaker’

It's so difficult to do when you've been doing it for so long

OP posts:
nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 15:32

PashaMinaMio · 07/12/2025 11:32

Many of us on MN could write a similar story to yours.

Speaking from experience, you just have to power through it. Shut down, shut him off, keep really busy, seek therapy if you think it will help.

It’ll be best to block him on everything. Go total No Contact. If you don’t and he pops up on social media wrapped around his new supply, the pain will be searing, devastating and totally destructive. Don’t take the risk of coming across anything about him.

Meanwhile box up everything belonging to him or items you were chuffed to buy together. Put the boxes in the attic. Re-decorate your bedroom & buy new bed linen.

Join the gym or a walking group or something offering exercise, distractions and social interaction.

You will get through this. Trust the process and whatever you do, dont take him back when he finds the grass ain’t greener. Just don’t because he’ll probably do it again.

I'll do my best to follow this advice. I've always been a homebody, so going out is quite intimidating but I know being social will help. Thank you

OP posts:
nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 15:32

ittakes2 · 07/12/2025 11:49

someone once gave me some advice - its better to make a decision that you will not make a decision until X date ... rather than leave things undecided.

The dust has not settled yet - I would just take the pressure off yourself and not make any big decisions for the next month.

I'll try to take things slower, thank you

OP posts:
TheBroonOneAndTheWhiteOne · 07/12/2025 15:33

nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 15:24

Thank you for the kind words and advice. I've been feeling so down that the idea of self care feels wrong. But I know it's necessary

Yes. Self care is essential.

@nervouslyanonymous my husband walked out on me twelve weeks ago. Just left.
He also has some serious health issues.

Anyway. All I feel is rage. How fucking dare he.

I have looked after myself since he left, big time. I've given him all his clothes, I've given everything else to the charity shop and I've tidied the whole house up. Not that it was ever untidy, but his stuff tended to clutter things up.

I don't want him back. He's moved to a new flat. Good riddance to him.

Find your anger @nervouslyanonymous and stop worrying about your ex's health. I assure you that he doesn't give a toss about yours.

nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 15:35

BarbarasRhabarberba · 07/12/2025 15:14

All this hurt and ruminating is completely natural after a breakup but I don’t think your friends are doing you any sort of kindness by painting him as a villain. Anyone can end a relationship at any time for any reason - that doesn’t make them wrong and cruel. You have to take him at face value, he doesn’t love you any more and doesn’t want to be in the relationship. Ignore people saying he’s lined up someone else, speculating on something there is zero evidence for won’t help.

I was dumped once by someone who simply didn’t want to be with me. I was desperate to try and change their mind and get them back. They said, “breaking up isn’t a democracy” and that has stuck with me ever since. They were absolutely right. Unfortunately the dumper has all the power and the only way to move on is accept it.

It hurts so much to be so powerless. I'm sorry you've been through this as well. I still see light in him and it's painful to know that he sees a life without me when I've tried so hard to keep our lives together. I'll try to remember your words, thank you

OP posts:
kittywittyandpretty · 07/12/2025 15:35

He’s met somebody else

knottywig · 07/12/2025 15:35

nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 14:58

I appreciate your frustration. Its given me a little perspective. I think outside of the relationship, he was a very good friend and I'm reluctant to lose that. I know it seems crazy

He doesn’t give 2 poops about you. He doesn’t see you as his friend. I bet it’s you who always contacts him. Stop it, don’t contact him until he contacts you, my guess is it’ll be a while. If he does contact you first, it’ll be because he thought you would be fawning over him, or because he needs something. Ignore all messages or give the briefest of vague answer, do not answer phone calls, go cold turkey from this person who has you exactly where he wants you. Stop being so weak. Your relationship was over weeks if not months before he left you. Again, grow a pair, get some confidence in yourself, and ignore him.
Ive read your thread and I find you infuriating, he lived with you. Please move on with your life, chalk being his carer as a life lesson to not let people walk all over you.

nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 15:38

TheBroonOneAndTheWhiteOne · 07/12/2025 15:33

Yes. Self care is essential.

@nervouslyanonymous my husband walked out on me twelve weeks ago. Just left.
He also has some serious health issues.

Anyway. All I feel is rage. How fucking dare he.

I have looked after myself since he left, big time. I've given him all his clothes, I've given everything else to the charity shop and I've tidied the whole house up. Not that it was ever untidy, but his stuff tended to clutter things up.

I don't want him back. He's moved to a new flat. Good riddance to him.

Find your anger @nervouslyanonymous and stop worrying about your ex's health. I assure you that he doesn't give a toss about yours.

I'll try to find my anger, thank you. I know that he's reached out to mutual contacts to check in on me and make sure I'm eating, since my depression tends to make me unwilling to eat. Its what makes this hard, I think he does still care about me, just not in the way I want him to

OP posts:
Glowingup · 07/12/2025 15:38

OP you’re giving him way too much credit. I don’t think he cares about you and didn’t for a long time and probably just took advantage of your kind nature. Go no contact with him and stop being so understanding of his decision to treat you like crap.

nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 15:41

knottywig · 07/12/2025 15:35

He doesn’t give 2 poops about you. He doesn’t see you as his friend. I bet it’s you who always contacts him. Stop it, don’t contact him until he contacts you, my guess is it’ll be a while. If he does contact you first, it’ll be because he thought you would be fawning over him, or because he needs something. Ignore all messages or give the briefest of vague answer, do not answer phone calls, go cold turkey from this person who has you exactly where he wants you. Stop being so weak. Your relationship was over weeks if not months before he left you. Again, grow a pair, get some confidence in yourself, and ignore him.
Ive read your thread and I find you infuriating, he lived with you. Please move on with your life, chalk being his carer as a life lesson to not let people walk all over you.

I'll do my best to. Thank you

OP posts:
nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 15:43

Glowingup · 07/12/2025 15:38

OP you’re giving him way too much credit. I don’t think he cares about you and didn’t for a long time and probably just took advantage of your kind nature. Go no contact with him and stop being so understanding of his decision to treat you like crap.

My friend say the same. One was horrified when I told him about the whole "always asking for affection" thing. Being so caught up in being overly forgiving hadn't been that good for me

OP posts:
Sodthesystem · 07/12/2025 16:06

I mean it's a tale as old as time really: man treats you like servant and in unaffectionate and makes you feel unloved and exhausted, you start to feel like shit about yourself, he still wants sex but you're too drained so he makes out you are the bad guy in all of this.

To his small defence, he was ill not just lazy.
And he is right to leave. He's done you a massive favour because I think you were too downtrodden by the state of things to realise this relationship...wasn't working.

Your next steps, sort out the split and then focus on YOU. Its time to rediscover your self love.
Stop talking it through with everyone. Pick the one supportive person sure but you really need to start learning to listen to yourself again.

For too long your needs have been treated as optional. Stop doing it to yourself.

BarbarasRhabarberba · 07/12/2025 16:25

nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 15:35

It hurts so much to be so powerless. I'm sorry you've been through this as well. I still see light in him and it's painful to know that he sees a life without me when I've tried so hard to keep our lives together. I'll try to remember your words, thank you

It sounds like you were giving way too much trying to keep it together, it doesn’t sound like it was a fulfilling relationship for either of you for a long time before the split. You can “see light” in him and care about him as a person while still detaching and focusing on yourself. I agree with others that no contact is the way to go. It never works trying to stay in touch and be friends.

Enrichetta · 07/12/2025 17:00

nervouslyanonymous · 07/12/2025 15:29

I do feel my self esteem has tanked entirely. Its hard because I also love these cats and they deserve a good home. If they're with me, they will always be loved. I'll try to regain my sense of fun. Thank you

Keep the cats if you want to.

Read Women Who Love Too Much.

And The Six Pillars of Self Esteem.

Above all, prioritise yourself and what’s in YOUR best interests.