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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 being too much please help

70 replies

slighlyoverit · 01/03/2026 09:40

Hi everyone, sorry for the long post . I’m really struggling and would really appreciate some outside perspective because I feel completely stuck and emotionally exhausted.

I’ve been married many years and we have children together. On the surface my husband is a good provider, helps a lot with the house, cleans, and is very hands-on with the kids. But emotionally the relationship has felt very difficult and lonely for a long time.

Since being married I’ve tried to show him love and care in many ways. I supported him through very low periods in his life, stood by him when he had nothing, helped with his work and responsibilities, and handled a lot of things to keep life stable. Over the years I’ve repeatedly tried to talk about needing more emotional connection — spending time together, affection, feeling valued — but those conversations were usually dismissed or not really taken seriously.

He often says he had a very difficult upbringing and doesn’t know how to show love except through practical things like providing and helping at home.i also had a difficult upbringing but tried to change things for my own family.

Another issue is that most physical affection from him has usually led to sex. Even a hug rarely felt like just a hug — it would turn into something sexual, which over time made me feel like emotional closeness wasn’t really there.

There has also been physical aggression in the past (not in recent years), but it coincided with times when I tried to express my feelings more. Now when I do try to talk, he often says I’m “being extra,” “living in the past,” or he gets angry and will smash doors and express anger in other ways rather than communicate calmly.

Over the years there have also been trust issues. I caught him watching porn several times during the marriage, including while I was pregnant, and each time he denied it or made excuses and promised it wouldn’t happen again. He also commented on other women’s photos online in the past and lashed out when I confronted him.

At the same time, during a very lonely period, I did end up having an emotional connection with someone else, which I deeply regret. Since then he has repeatedly attacked my character over this, while minimising his own behaviour and saying his was “not as bad.” He acted like he has never done anything wrong and kept throwing dogs at me for a mistake from before being married attacking my character making me feel dirty and making out like he is perfect.

One thing that has really affected me is that after being intimate with me, he would sometimes watch porn soon after. It made me feel very rejected and not good enough. Some aspects of our sex life also made me feel uncomfortable, like name-calling or behaviours that felt influenced by porn, but when I’ve raised this he says I’m imagining things and blaming everything on that.

When I talk about separation, he often says “fine” or that there’s nothing to work on. I’ve gone to him many times asking if he wants to try to fix the marriage, and he has said there is nothing wrong — yet afterwards he will try to act normal and the same cycle repeats.

I have gone to therapy myself to try to understand and improve things, but he refuses any kind of help or marriage counselling.

Recently I feel constantly on edge around him. I can’t relax, I can’t be “normal,” and conversations often go in circles. I’ve found myself crying a lot and feeling emotionally drained.

I feel very torn because:
• He is a good father and very helpful practically
• But emotionally I feel unsafe, unheard, and exhausted
• I don’t know if I’m being unreasonable or expecting too much
• I don’t know if trust can really be rebuilt after years of this cycle

I guess what I’m asking is:
– Is this something that can realistically improve?
– Has anyone stayed in a situation like this and found genuine emotional peace?
– Or is feeling constantly anxious, guarded, and drained a sign that the relationship may no longer be healthy?

Sorry this is so long, and thank you if you read this far. I’d really appreciate kind, honest perspectives from people who’ve experienced something similar.

OP posts:
perfectcolourfound · 01/03/2026 16:23

What do you mean you are religeously married but not legally? If you got married in a church then you are legally married, surely?

AttilaTheMeerkat · 01/03/2026 16:24

Stop with talking to your h about how you feel or how trauma bonded you are. He does not care and your unhappiness is fuel for him.

Why do you care what your family think?. They have not lived the reality of your day to day life and in addition your parents also taught you very damaging lessons about relationships. Never forget you are an adult yourself with agency.

Was this a nikah ceremony?

You can still break a religious blessing/marriage. I think it was a deliberate decision on his part not to marry you in a registry office.

slighlyoverit · 01/03/2026 16:26

AttilaTheMeerkat · 01/03/2026 16:24

Stop with talking to your h about how you feel or how trauma bonded you are. He does not care and your unhappiness is fuel for him.

Why do you care what your family think?. They have not lived the reality of your day to day life and in addition your parents also taught you very damaging lessons about relationships. Never forget you are an adult yourself with agency.

Was this a nikah ceremony?

You can still break a religious blessing/marriage. I think it was a deliberate decision on his part not to marry you in a registry office.

Yes it was a Nikkah ceremony and I did say to him that we should register it but he made excuses all the time and put it off and said next year I promise we will. Apparently now he hates word wedding because he is sick of all the problems.

OP posts:
slighlyoverit · 01/03/2026 16:54

perfectcolourfound · 01/03/2026 16:23

What do you mean you are religeously married but not legally? If you got married in a church then you are legally married, surely?

It was a Muslim marriage (Nikkah) not legally registered

OP posts:
Vroomfondleswaistcoat · 01/03/2026 17:03

So he uses the 'you made me do it' defence.

Which is the defence used by every bullying abuser ever. Making it your fault that he's vile because you... want a loving husband?

He could overcome his upbringing if he wanted to. He just doesn't want to, because everything is going his way. You are entitled to your own happiness, OP.

EarthSight · 01/03/2026 17:04

Oh OP.

There's just so much to write.

but he refuses any kind of help or marriage counselling

That's because he doesn't think think there's anything wrong with him.

The answer is no. There is no hope. You can't pull the cart by yourself. He has to be doing it too, but he won't.

One thing that has really affected me is that after being intimate with me, he would sometimes watch porn soon after. It made me feel very rejected and not good enough. Some aspects of our sex life also made me feel uncomfortable, like name-calling or behaviours that felt influenced by porn, but when I’ve raised this he says I’m imagining things and blaming everything on that

On top of everything else, there's also sexual abuse going on here.

He is not on your side OP. He's your opponent. Just because he does a few practical things, doesn't mean he isn't one. Understand this now.

The smirk? That's a sign of disrespect and disgust.
Those comments he's making on women's pictures? That's him secretly hoping that one of them will notice him and start chatting to him.
The gaslighting after he does what he does during sex? That's him teaching you to doubt your own mind and sanity.

I think you should have a look at the Women's Aid website. You might need it.

AttilaTheMeerkat · 01/03/2026 17:12

I sincerely hope you can find the determination within yourself to leave your abuser.

slighlyoverit · 01/03/2026 17:44

EarthSight · 01/03/2026 17:04

Oh OP.

There's just so much to write.

but he refuses any kind of help or marriage counselling

That's because he doesn't think think there's anything wrong with him.

The answer is no. There is no hope. You can't pull the cart by yourself. He has to be doing it too, but he won't.

One thing that has really affected me is that after being intimate with me, he would sometimes watch porn soon after. It made me feel very rejected and not good enough. Some aspects of our sex life also made me feel uncomfortable, like name-calling or behaviours that felt influenced by porn, but when I’ve raised this he says I’m imagining things and blaming everything on that

On top of everything else, there's also sexual abuse going on here.

He is not on your side OP. He's your opponent. Just because he does a few practical things, doesn't mean he isn't one. Understand this now.

The smirk? That's a sign of disrespect and disgust.
Those comments he's making on women's pictures? That's him secretly hoping that one of them will notice him and start chatting to him.
The gaslighting after he does what he does during sex? That's him teaching you to doubt your own mind and sanity.

I think you should have a look at the Women's Aid website. You might need it.

Edited

Thank you for your reply , the comments were when I was pregnant before Covid I have caught anything after that apart from porn which when confronted tries to excuse his behaviour by all sorts of silly excuses. Double standards because he woudnt like it if I was lusting over naked men

OP posts:
EarthSight · 01/03/2026 17:57

There's a very good chance he's still doing it, but under a different account. The men who do this just don't respect their partners, and it's even worse that he was doing it when you were pregnant. What a loser.

slighlyoverit · 01/03/2026 18:09

EarthSight · 01/03/2026 17:57

There's a very good chance he's still doing it, but under a different account. The men who do this just don't respect their partners, and it's even worse that he was doing it when you were pregnant. What a loser.

He thinks there was nothing wrong and that I’m keeping evidence on him and I was much worse because I spoke to a real person a few months ago

OP posts:
slighlyoverit · 01/03/2026 19:02

Do you guys think watching porn is acceptable or do all guys do it

OP posts:
40withoutacat · 01/03/2026 20:36

slighlyoverit · 01/03/2026 19:02

Do you guys think watching porn is acceptable or do all guys do it

Another reason why I dislike men a lot of the time
Yet to meet that doesn’t

ThisJadeBear · 01/03/2026 20:42

slighlyoverit · 01/03/2026 19:02

Do you guys think watching porn is acceptable or do all guys do it

All guys do not do it.
A lot do.
It was one of the reasons that people of all ages are having relationships ruined by it.

slighlyoverit · 01/03/2026 20:48

ThisJadeBear · 01/03/2026 20:42

All guys do not do it.
A lot do.
It was one of the reasons that people of all ages are having relationships ruined by it.

more than the watching it’s the lying about it and making silly excuses to make it sound likes it’s educational that I thought was the problem. Felt abit degrading too

OP posts:
slighlyoverit · 01/03/2026 20:50

40withoutacat · 01/03/2026 20:36

Another reason why I dislike men a lot of the time
Yet to meet that doesn’t

I didn’t think it was still on going but thinking back I can connect the dots with a all the strange sex acts and fetishes and constantly talking about sex like it’s the only thing on this world

OP posts:
EarthSight · 01/03/2026 21:04

I think the stats are about 70% or higher, in terms of watching porn. However, that doesn't mean you have to be ok with it.

Also, even women who feel ambivalent about porn watching draw the line when it comes to liking or commenting on photos on social media specifically, due to the potential of an interaction there.

slighlyoverit · 01/03/2026 21:05

EarthSight · 01/03/2026 21:04

I think the stats are about 70% or higher, in terms of watching porn. However, that doesn't mean you have to be ok with it.

Also, even women who feel ambivalent about porn watching draw the line when it comes to liking or commenting on photos on social media specifically, due to the potential of an interaction there.

Edited

He says that what I did was much worse because I actually interacted woth a human and I accepted my mistake too.

OP posts:
EarthSight · 01/03/2026 21:07

Which may be so, in some ways, but he's still fishing for that kind of interaction.

That doesn't take away from the fact that you have a dysfunctional relationship at best with someone who doesn't like you and who sounds like he's mistreating you sexually as well.

slighlyoverit · 01/03/2026 21:12

EarthSight · 01/03/2026 21:07

Which may be so, in some ways, but he's still fishing for that kind of interaction.

That doesn't take away from the fact that you have a dysfunctional relationship at best with someone who doesn't like you and who sounds like he's mistreating you sexually as well.

Apparently he loves me so much that he has built everything for me and the kids and I’m ungrateful

OP posts:
whatwouldlilacerullodo · 01/03/2026 21:25

As a PP said, he's not in your team. He's the enemy. Once you accept that, everything will make sense. (I've been there, I've had the same questions as you, I've been through the whole process, separated 6 years ago and life is SO much better).

DaisyChain505 · 01/03/2026 21:28

He can still be a good father if you separate.

If you want someone who’s helpful, hire a cleaner.

There are no positives to staying in this relationship.

You’ve asked him to go to therapy and he’s said no. He doesn’t want to work on this or make changes.

slighlyoverit · 01/03/2026 21:53

whatwouldlilacerullodo · 01/03/2026 21:25

As a PP said, he's not in your team. He's the enemy. Once you accept that, everything will make sense. (I've been there, I've had the same questions as you, I've been through the whole process, separated 6 years ago and life is SO much better).

When I’ve told him to leave
he says he’s currently stuck because he trusted me and bought the house in joint name calling me snake.
I’m mentally so disturbed right now

OP posts:
whatwouldlilacerullodo · 02/03/2026 01:19

slighlyoverit · 01/03/2026 21:53

When I’ve told him to leave
he says he’s currently stuck because he trusted me and bought the house in joint name calling me snake.
I’m mentally so disturbed right now

My XH didn't go easily when I decided to separate. They rarely do, and usually try to make your life hell. You won't be able to leave until you understand he doesn't have your best interests at heart and he doesn't care if you're happy or miserable. You don't need his approval, and you don't have to placate him. He will probably be angry with you. So what? You will have to live with that if you want to have a happy life.

slighlyoverit · 02/03/2026 01:22

DaisyChain505 · 01/03/2026 21:28

He can still be a good father if you separate.

If you want someone who’s helpful, hire a cleaner.

There are no positives to staying in this relationship.

You’ve asked him to go to therapy and he’s said no. He doesn’t want to work on this or make changes.

Talking to him I go around in circles . I was doing well I thought and I’m assuming it’s because I learnt how to suppress my emotions but now I’m noticing I come to breaking point to the point I want to hurt my self because it feels suffocating when the other person doesn’t want to communicate like an adult without saying toxic things to you

OP posts:
RudolphRNR · 02/03/2026 01:30

Time and time again I see posts like this. Paragraph after paragraph describing truly awful behaviour. And then dropped in at the end “but he’s a good father”
He’s not a good father is he. A good father doesn’t treat his wife, the mother of his children, like this. A good father doesn’t create an awful atmosphere in the home, to the point where his wife feels constantly on edge.
You've talked of separation and he has said “fine”. He’s already checked out, this is a really unhealthy relationship, it doesn’t seem like either of you want to be in it.
Slightlyoverit, you can and deserve to have a much happier and healthier life than this. Muster up the strength to end this, continue with your therapy, start looking forward to a better life.