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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:
dms1 · 06/01/2026 15:36

Do not return to this highly abusive man. He has harmed you emotionally, physically and financially. Btw, pulling hair, pushing and throwing water on you comes under the umbrella of ‘beating you’. Ignore your brother; he’s utterly minimising what you went through. I strongly suggest you engage with Women’s Aid and undertake their Journey to Freedom programme. Take care of yourself.

Bringemout · 06/01/2026 15:37

Oh no I’m from an asian background, DB would be helping me pack and would already have had a word with DH. Your brother is completely unreasonable, I’m actually disgusted with him.

fashionqueen0123 · 06/01/2026 15:43

Get a divorce and get a good solicitor who will get the assets sorted for you. You need to be rid of this man!

soddingspiderseason · 06/01/2026 15:47

Your husband’s behaviour is domestic abuse. He has been emotionally, psychologically, financially and physically abusive to you. Ignore your brother and get rid of your nasty, toxic husband. Good luck.

InWithPeaceOutWithStress · 06/01/2026 15:55

I’m guessing your brother likes your husband and doesn’t want to lose his pal or cause upset. He’s being very selfish. Perhaps to him it’s become normalised that you go to stay with your parents every so often - he doesn’t understand the extent of the hurt caused, ie he lacks empathy.

Blump2783 · 06/01/2026 15:57

This is abuse and my husband agrees should you want another man's opinion.
Of course you are being emotional and you have a right to be. You deserve so much better.

allthingsinmoderation · 06/01/2026 16:00

I am so sorry you have been physically,emotionally and financially abused by your husband.
Please divorce him.
If you brother thinks the things your husband has done to you are not abuse ....
he's abusing you too...

Summerhillsquare · 06/01/2026 16:03

First response nails it, as is so often the case.

Sassylovesbooks · 06/01/2026 16:10

Ignore your brother. Your STBXH has been abusing you for years. You do not have to tolerate being treated in this way and I'm disgusted with your brother for suggesting you should. A man who genuinely loves his wife doesn't treat her like your ex. I would be concerned for any woman who became involved with your brother, if this is his attitude towards his sister, imagine being married to him. Are you sure his wife cheated on him??? Or could this be a line he's spun to his family, to cover up for his poor behaviour towards his wife?! Continue with the divorce. Once it's finalised, and there being no children involved, you will no longer have to see your ex or have anything further to do with him.

Carlou · 07/01/2026 18:23

Doesn't sound "just a fight" to me. Sounds like a pattern of abusive behaviour from your soon to be ex husband. Forget what your brother said. He doesn't live with your soon to be ex... you have. What goes on behind closed doors some people have no idea unless they live it. You are doing the right thing getting a divorce. Stay strong.

Whowhenwhat · 07/01/2026 18:29

soddingspiderseason · 06/01/2026 15:47

Your husband’s behaviour is domestic abuse. He has been emotionally, psychologically, financially and physically abusive to you. Ignore your brother and get rid of your nasty, toxic husband. Good luck.

Absolutely this. I'm shocked by the level of abuse you have described, because the title of your post gives nothing away. Never ever go back to him. Your brother sounds like he has zero empathy, or decency, if he can condone this abuse from your husband.

Ladybird69 · 07/01/2026 18:35

when I finally escaped from my psychopathic abusive ex husband my ‘best friend’ turned up on my doorstep after 3 months and told me to get myself to a Christian retreat where I would be able to learn how to be a better wife! We’d been married for 25 years! Thankfully after the 3 months of happiness of not having to deal with day to day life with him, I didn’t listen to her(I had done in the past) and got her out of my life too. I wish you all the best for the rest of your life ❤️

LIZS · 08/01/2026 09:18

Please follow through with the divorce. You have done well to escape. He is abusive, has been over a prolonged period and will not change, and I wonder if the traditional dynamic of your background is reflected in your brother’s “advice”. If you go back he will continue to abuse you and , if you had children, use them against you and continue this pattern in them.

AttilaTheMeerkat · 08/01/2026 09:48

What did you learn about relationships when you were growing up?.
Ignore your brother (does your dad have this attitude as well) and press on with the divorce. Thankfully you are not wasting any more of your precious life on your soon to be ex H.

The only acceptable level of abuse in a relationship is none.

I would also look at and enrol yourself onto the Freedom Programme going forward as this is for those people who have been in abusive relationships. Your boundaries have been skewed by this person and you need to recognise red flags in relationships too.

Abusers can be quite plausible to those in the outside world and I think that is why you were targeted by him. He knew you and you were much younger than he (so in his head easier to control). Your marriage to him was really over a mere few months in when you write that he started punching walls (what you describe are all examples of domestic violence).

Skybluepinky · 08/01/2026 09:54

Ignore your brother he is thinking of family reputation. Press on with the divorce.

woolfibre100 · 08/01/2026 10:04

I'm so sorry that your brother has let you down so badly, as well as your husband. I think you are doing absolutely the right thing; your life can only be better away from that abusive, controlling and manipulative man. Sending you huge good luck for the future.

Potentia · 08/01/2026 10:15

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caramac04 · 08/01/2026 10:19

Just know that you are worth so much more than your abusive husband dealt you.
You are only doubting yourself because he has chipped away at your self esteem. He is a lowly, cowardly bully.
Stay strong and remove all ties with this horrible man.
Move forward and be happy.

OnlyAfterwards · 08/01/2026 10:25

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This has been deleted by MNHQ for breaking our Talk Guidelines.

Just before I report this, can I just point out that a powerful magician who claims to magically enable women to conceive really should think up a better magician name than 'chubygreat'. And a gmail address never says 'I am a powerful magician' to me either.

AtomHeartMotherOfGod · 08/01/2026 10:33

Please know that you absolutely suffered (from what I read on these threads, 'textbook') abuse and are justified in your divorce.

Please make sure you are safe; I've heard other posters say men abusing by threatening self-harm more often end up harming their partner.

socks1107 · 08/01/2026 10:39

There is no doubt he abusive and divorce is the right thing to do. Your brother minimising his behaviour is shocking too

Tammygirl12 · 08/01/2026 11:34

ignore the brother he has no idea

this is repeated abuse. It’s a pattern not a one off

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