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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

Am I overreacting to what I thought was “abuse” from my husband?

72 replies

Lamsji8372 · 06/01/2026 14:04

I come from an ethnic background and got married five years ago. We don’t have children. There is a 10-year age gap, with me being younger. Because of cultural reasons, we didn’t live together before marriage, although we knew each other for three years beforehand.

A few months after getting married, I noticed my husband began nitpicking. Over time, the marriage became emotionally abusive. He frequently swore at me, screamed at me, squared up to me, accused me of things, belittled me, compared me to his exes, insulted my appearance, and tried to control me. He would punch walls, break things around me, and deliberately destroy my belongings. Early in the marriage, he also pushed me, pulled my hair, and threw water on me, although he later stopped. In his mind, he didn’t physically harm me because he never “beat” me.

Financially, I worked more hours than him, paid equally the household expenses, and still did around 90% of the chores. Despite this, he remained unhappy. Within six months of marriage, I discovered he had accumulated £10,000 in credit card debt and spent over £15,000 of his savings on materialistic items like designer clothes. He lied to me for months, saying we were financially fine. Although we didn’t have a joint account, I ended up clearing his debt. After that, I kept our finances separate and took a more proactive role in money management. To be fair, he eventually improved and became more responsible with finances.

Three years into the marriage, he developed a pattern of throwing me out of the house during arguments. The house is in his name. During these episodes, he would empty my wardrobe, throw my belongings outside, and force me to leave. After days or weeks, he would beg me to come back, promise to change, and if I resisted, threaten to harm himself. This cycle happened five or six times. Each time, I stayed at my mum’s and lived out of a suitcase. I became emotionally exhausted.

At the start of last year, he threw me out again. This time, I stayed away for months. He promised to start therapy and never throw me out again. After four months of separation, I agreed to return on the condition that I saw consistent change through actions, and that if he ever kicked me out again, I would file for divorce.

Things improved for a few months. Then, five months ago, he threw me out again. A week later, he tried to repeat the same cycle. I told him I would involve the police if he threatened self-harm again, as it was beyond my capacity to manage. He backed off and became apologetic, promising change and trying for weeks to persuade me to return. I stayed firm and said I wanted a divorce.

After two months of attempting to convince me, he reverted to his abusive behaviour and said he would not discuss divorce at all. That confirmed to me that leaving was the right decision.

I am now going through a solicitor to finalise the divorce. Because there are assets involved and he is being difficult, the process is complicated.
Recently, my brother visited and asked about my situation. I found his response upsetting. He told me to think carefully about whether I truly want a divorce, suggesting I might regret it and that my decision could be emotional. He said that when he divorced, it was different because his ex-wife cheated, which was a clear point of no return. He described my situation as “just a fight” between couples and suggested I take another six months to think things through.

This has left me doubting myself. I wonder if I overreacted or if what I experienced really counts as abuse. Is being repeatedly made homeless not a point of no return? I feel like my experience was minimised, yet part of me questions whether I’m the problem.

Despite these doubts, I am still proceeding with the divorce, as my heart is no longer in the marriage.

OP posts:
hollyandribbon · 06/01/2026 14:27

If that’s your brother’s attitude it’s no wonder his ex left. if he doesn’t think being repeatedly threatened, thrown out, physically, financially and emotionally abused is a “point of no return” then tell him you cheated on your husband and he’ll think it’s fine 🙄

Please, divorce this awful man and get some therapy if you aren’t already having some, it takes a lot to recover from years of systematic abuse and it sounds like you don’t have much family support.

comealongdobbeh · 06/01/2026 14:28

All the things you have listed are not ‘just a fight’ and your brother is a knob if he thinks it is.

You are absolutely doing the right thing. Throw that half-man back in the bin and live life on YOUR terms.

Blueyrocks · 06/01/2026 14:28

I'm also from quite a conservative/ patriarchal family and culture. And maybe even see some of that in a better light (not saying I endorse it!) than many posters here - so I mean I might be someone more likely to see where your brother is coming from. And I think he's completely absolutely 100% wrong.

One of my brothers at least would definitely encourage me to stay in a sub-optimal marriage, for the children, for the security, for the "marriage". But the sort of abuse you're enduring? Absolutely not. My conservative, domineering, pro-marriage, anti-divorce brother would definitely want me to leave that.

I hope you can find some real life support. You're not overreacting at all.

TwoTuesday · 06/01/2026 14:29

Your marriage is definitely abusive, physically and emotionally.
He threw you out of the house.
You didn't leave voluntarily. He ended things by throwing you out, over and over again.
Your brother is not relevant really, he's not the one going through it.

Vroomfondleswaistcoat · 06/01/2026 14:29

Lamsji8372 · 06/01/2026 14:27

He’s aware of the background and that it’s happened many times over years.

Then your brother is an utter dick who has no idea of how relationships are supposed to work. Either that or he is ALSO an abusive tosser and thinks that this kind of behaviour is perfectly normal.

Cantlivelikethisanymoree · 06/01/2026 14:30

You should be so proud of yourself OP to have the strength to get yourself out of that massively abusive marriage.
Ignore your brother, he is just a misogynist twat

LadyDanburysHat · 06/01/2026 14:44

I'm going to assume your ethnic background is quite a misogynistic one, and that is why your brother is being like this. He probably thinks that some amount of shouting and pushing to a woman is okay. It is not, your STBXH is horribly abusive and always has been.

comoatoupeira · 06/01/2026 14:47

I was once in a related situation, got talked over by someone who didn’t know what they were talking about. Very embarrassing for them later when they actually took the time to learn the full extent of what was going on. Some people are really bad at listening and just live their life on assumptions and grand theories. Ignore.

M103 · 06/01/2026 14:51

Your husband is definitely abusive. Please divorce him and don't listen to your brother or anyone else.

WalkingThroughTreacle · 06/01/2026 14:51

One of the consequences of abuse is that it wears away at your self-confidence. It's because of your husband's persistent, long-term abuse that you are even giving your twat of a brother's opinion any headspace at all. Your brother is a disgrace and the fact he is siding with your POS husband would have me strongly suspecting he is an abuser himself.

Please do not doubt yourself, what you've described in your OP is horrific, sustained abuse. Get that divorce and set yourself free.

TheCosyViewer · 06/01/2026 14:55

Please, do not take your brother’s advice. You have been treated dreadfully by your husband, he has been physically and emotionally abusive. No person should treat their partner like this, there is absolutely no excusing or condoning his behaviour.

You’ve shown great strength of character to be divorcing him. Keep going until you finally are divorced and never have to see or hear from him again.

PrizedPickledPopcorn · 06/01/2026 14:56

people sometimes want the easy option. Your brother is afraid you’ll need support or something from your mum or him, and he’s trying to keep you in your place. He is seeing what is convenient not the truth.

Ignore him.

Endofyear · 06/01/2026 14:58

Your brother is wrong and it's extremely worrying that he would want you to stay in a marriage where you've been continually abused. You're doing absolutely the right thing divorcing him and anyone who thinks otherwise has very questionable judgement indeed.

deeahgwitch · 06/01/2026 15:02

BillieWiper · 06/01/2026 14:09

Ignore your brother. Your stbx is appalling, abusive and controlling.

You're doing the right thing. Do not listen to anyone telling you otherwise. They do not have your best interests at heart.

💯this

ManyPigeons · 06/01/2026 15:03

Your brother is being sexist and trying to shame you into returning to an abusive man who makes you repeatedly homeless. Your brother is a man and men in overtly patriarchal cultures will always back another man… even when they pretend they’re trying to help a female relative. They’re not. He believes you being abused isn’t as bad as him being cheated on and you should put up with being abused because you are a female.

MyMilchick · 06/01/2026 15:06

Lamsji8372 · 06/01/2026 14:27

He’s aware of the background and that it’s happened many times over years.

Then he must behave in a similar way when he's in relationships to brush it off so easily.

FancyCatSlave · 06/01/2026 15:08

Your brother is a classic misogynistic twat. It’s ok for him to divorce his wife because of her failings. It absolutely isn’t ok in his mind for a woman to divorce a man-you should put up with abuse because you deserve it.

He might not be aware that he believes this, but he does.

Take absolutely no notice and crack on. Good luck.

Bobiverse · 06/01/2026 15:08

Your brother isn’t a good guy. Sorry, but he isn’t. He doesn’t see anything wrong with abuse so he ain’t a good guy.

Go through with the divorce and never go back to your husband.

Bobiverse · 06/01/2026 15:10

PrizedPickledPopcorn · 06/01/2026 14:56

people sometimes want the easy option. Your brother is afraid you’ll need support or something from your mum or him, and he’s trying to keep you in your place. He is seeing what is convenient not the truth.

Ignore him.

No, gems just sexist. This so isn’t about him worrying she might need support. He thinks it’s ok for a man to divorce a woman when she fails but it is absolutely not ok for a woman to divorce a man, because abuse is “just a fight”.

He’s just a patriarchal sexist man.

SalmonOnFinnCrisp · 06/01/2026 15:16

Lamsji8372 · 06/01/2026 14:21

How awful. Sorry to hear about that and hope you are all doing much better now.

Thanks - lifes good now and in part it probably gave me the drive to improve my life/ circs.
And there are other people had it worse growing up im sure....

Back to you....
Dont doubt yourself.

I'm not sure what it is about men though!!!
My uncle was also divorced himself!!! Just bizarre....
He's legit a nice guy i have no clue what he thought he was doing trying to talk my mum out of it.

bombastix · 06/01/2026 15:17

Carry on with your divorce. I assume this came up because your brother has become fed up in supporting you or discussing it.

What you have described is abuse. A lot of men really just think hitting women counts and if you don’t do that, the woman is overreacting. This is your life. You don’t have to tolerate what is clearly domestic abuse, and your brother is wrong. Sometimes the reasons men are not supportive (most are imo) is that you describe something that they themselves have done to their partners and it cuts across their entitlement.

Press on. And don’t validate any decisions via your brother. If you feel like you are asking him what to do, he’s given you his answer.

whyohwhyisitalwayswet · 06/01/2026 15:22

This is classic misogyny at play - this time from your brother rather than your ex-husband. Belittling your experience (of abuse) and bigging up his experience (of being cheated on). As a woman, you should expect such behaviour from your husband and forgive it, but as a man, he can't possibly accept such boundary-breaching behaviour from his wife, can he now? I am cheering on his ex-wife at this point. Divorce, divorce, divorce.

RescueMeFromThisSilliness · 06/01/2026 15:24

Lamsji8372 · 06/01/2026 14:27

He’s aware of the background and that it’s happened many times over years.

Well then he is also one of the many horrible men who think male dominance over a woman is normal, and that abuse can be justified.

saywhatdidhesay · 06/01/2026 15:31

If your daughter, sister or friend was treated like this by their husband would you say it was an overreaction?

it isn’t. You owe it to yourself to get away from this relationship

WearyAuldWumman · 06/01/2026 15:33

OnlyAfterwards · 06/01/2026 14:05

Your brother is a tool. Press ahead with the divorce.

This.

Would the OP's brother stay in a relationship where he was being physically abused, I wonder?