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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

He ended it and I’m blaming myself

173 replies

Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 10:46

My boyfriend of 5 months ended the relationship after a small disagreement at the weekend. He then immediately left in the middle of the night. He was incredibly cold and detached in that moment. I’m heartsick. He was the best person I’ve dated (I’m late 40’s and divorced) and had many lovely qualities. We had a final talk on the phone and he has basically listed the times I have reacted emotionally to situations and said that he feels he couldn’t make me happy. I’m kicking myself.

From my POV, it’s true there have been some occasions when I’ve become upset. There was no shouting, accusing, name calling or anything like that… a few occasions when we had both had a drink and feelings would come out that I may otherwise have suppressed. These were consistently about the same theme… me feeling taken for granted and not cherished. But now I question myself and wonder if I was expecting too much. He acknowledged I was very attentive to him ( hosting him at my house every fortnight.. that was the only time we could see each other due to child care and distance… I couldn’t go to his as his mother lives with him), paying attention to what he liked and surprising him with experiences I had booked for us to do or his favourite treats, offering him massages, little romantic gestures. He said I made him “feel important.” He felt that him driving 50 minutes to see me and brining a bottle of wine showed effort. It fell on me to do all the meal planning and getting the food in. Sometimes he would not respond to messages around things related to this or weekend plans. It was always me getting up to make him a cup of tea in bed and make breakfast. I just began to feel taken for granted. He also never showed much interest in my past where as I wanted to know all about him.

We had one massive arguement that blew up over Valentines. He gave me a card but no gift and I was disappointed as it felt like another example of being taken for granted. I wasn’t going to say anything though and just wanted to sit with the feeling of disappointment. He detected a change in my messaging style that afternoon (I still responded but more briefly and less frequently) so he directly asked me what was wrong. I gently explained that it was not his fault but obviously a misunderstanding about what we had agreed (I though we had said to get a little something) and that it had made me feel a bit uncared for. He got extremely defensive and, on the phone, talked over me, hung up on me twice and shouted that he felt he wasn’t good enough for me and that we could not keep having these highs and lows. I didn’t realise my disappointment and subsequent quieter messages constituted a dramatic reaction. He seems prone to defensiveness, possibly due to childhood trauma (violent father).

I will add that he told me that he was having the best sex of his life. I didn’t feel that (although I loved having that connection with someone I was really in love with) and the first time we had sex was awful as there was no foreplay and he just entered without a condom. He felt awful afterwards and explained he thought that, because we were naked and I pulled him close that that’s what I wanted. But we moved past that. I would stay he was still lacking in sensuality but it did improve . Lastly, he said he may be autistic and was going down the diagnosis route. Not sure if this is relevant.

He had some really lovely qualities too though… he was a good listener, funny, mostly consistent with messages, kind to his mum, invested father. Good job. Offered to visit my sick mum with me. He was also very much my physical type. And he did plan a future night away for my birthday gift that we will now not go on although on my actual birthday he let me pay for my own meal (we normally split the bill but that was my birthday)and for the cinema for both of us (I’d booked a film he really wanted to see and already paid for the tickets but he said it would be his treat then never paid).

I’ve got this sickening feeling that I messed up the best relationship I’ve had because I’m too anxiously attached or demanding. I feel like I should have looked at the bigger picture and all his qualities and not fixated on little things like romance or planning more day to day stuff. How do i forgive myself and move on?

OP posts:
Trusttheawesomeness · 11/03/2026 11:34

And maybe stop drinking. You got bad news about your mum, so started drinking and had “quite a bit to drink” before he’d even been there half an hour. Then you drunkenly propositioned him when he was in the middle of chatting after just arriving. it’s all a bit of a cry for help.

Now, he sounds like a crappy boyfriend. He didn’t put any effort in, the way he handled birthday dinner and cinema was really selfish. He isn’t the guy for you and he behaved badly, but you can’t do anything about that and need to let him go. You can’t do something about yourself, which means really look at your drinking and how intense you are with people. And don’t let people walk all over you. This guy wasn’t treating you well, but you took it and worse, claim to love him for it. That’s an issue…

ThisJadeBear · 11/03/2026 11:35

OP you are being very tough on yourself. Just because he’s kind to his mum doesn’t make him a decent partner. The Kray twins were lovely to their old mum….
I have been where you are now and felt like you do. It’s over a decade ago now and I cringe at my lack of self esteem, and what I’d put up with.
This man, even if he was the loveliest man ever, is awful in bed. Absolutely horrific. That alone says a lot and the condom thing is pathetic.
You have a desperate need to show love and be loved and you’ve projected it all onto this selfish man who basically was quite pleasant company when the mood took him.
You are hanging around for breadcrumbs and this relationship was driving you into the ground.
When you’ve got over that sick feeling you need to take a long hard look at yourself.
Give up alcohol. It’s not your friend. Best thing I ever did and I was only an occasional drinker, but it clouded my thinking.
Get some counselling.
Work on yourself.
And get yourself out of the ‘poor me, nobody else will want me’ mindset because you will just attract more arseholes.
Taking time out from everything was the BEST thing I ever did and after quite some time I did meet someone else. But the most important thing was no longer allowing myself to be so low in my opinion of myself.

AttilaTheMeerkat · 11/03/2026 11:36

If you do have anxious attachment work out how and where that all started with you starting with childhood. Get therapy to unlearn all the crap along with rebuilding your self worth from the ground up. Currently you are easy prey for predators like this man was to mistreat and or otherwise use you. Realise you are worth more and love your own self for a change.

AttilaTheMeerkat · 11/03/2026 11:39

Were your own parents unloving and or otherwise emotionally absent?

DameOfThrones · 11/03/2026 11:39

As soon as I read the phrase 'heartsick' it made me think you're probably a very emotional person.

And now you've said you have 'anxious attachment style'.

There's nothing wrong with this and it's part of who you are, but you're not right for him that's all.

You'll find someone who you align with better and look back and thank him for ending this.

But of course it will take time.

Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 11:40

@Trusttheawesomeness I had about 3 units of alcohol. I didn’t drunkenly proposition him. In the past it had been ok to get straight to intimacy as we hadn’t seen each other in a while. I thought he would be keen. Surely that’s not a relationship ending issue.

OP posts:
Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 11:42

AttilaTheMeerkat · 11/03/2026 11:39

Were your own parents unloving and or otherwise emotionally absent?

Distant father and volatile mother

OP posts:
Trusttheawesomeness · 11/03/2026 11:43

Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 11:40

@Trusttheawesomeness I had about 3 units of alcohol. I didn’t drunkenly proposition him. In the past it had been ok to get straight to intimacy as we hadn’t seen each other in a while. I thought he would be keen. Surely that’s not a relationship ending issue.

It’s telling that that is the only part you pay attention to, and it clearly isn’t the reason for your relationship ending. I, and others; have said a lot of other stuff about what’s gone on which really is the parts you need to focus on.

TwistedWonder · 11/03/2026 11:43

Wishimaywishimight · 11/03/2026 11:11

If this was your "best relationship" then you have a very very low bar, he sounds dreadful.

Agree with this. OP - He sounds like a lazy low effort freeloader who threw you a few crumbs while you twisted yourself into a pretzel trying to keep him happy.

Honestly you’ve had a lucky escape as he’s a cocklodger in waiting.

Please stay away from men and do the freedom programme. If this is your idea of a good relationship then you’re not in the headspace for dating - he was dreadful

AttilaTheMeerkat · 11/03/2026 11:50

thought so sadly re your parents.

That explains a hell of a lot OP. Please seek out therapy re your parents and undo the vast amount of emotional damage they both inflicted on you.

category12 · 11/03/2026 11:53

Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 11:42

Distant father and volatile mother

Sounds like a dynamic you're recreating here. Don't you think?

Find someone emotionally intelligent who matches your energy, not try to force yourself into a box where you're afraid to ask for what you need.

AttilaTheMeerkat · 11/03/2026 11:54

You were likely taught by them from an early age that neither could be bothered with you so you started people pleasing behaviour in some vain attempt to get them to notice, love you or otherwise pay attention to you. They have harmed you markedly and this seeps into all aspects of your life.

gamerchick · 11/03/2026 11:58

He's done a proper number on hou hasn't he?

When he comes back to see if you learned your lesson yet, please tell us that you're going to tell him to piss off?

BauhausOfEliott · 11/03/2026 11:58

You were only seeing each other for five months and you were constantly in conflict, from the sound of it. You’ve listed a million things that you felt were wrong with him. You must realise it’s not normal for an extremely brief relationship to be so full of issues and arguments and upset??

You were completely unsuited to one another and he was right to end the relationship on that basis. To me, you sound pretty intense and needy, but he also sounds like a rubbish boyfriend and you were vastly incompatible.

This was a very short relationship, OP. You need to keep a sense of proportion here. I find it very hard to believe that five months of arguing and crap sex could really be ‘the best relationship you’ve ever had’.

Starlight1979 · 11/03/2026 12:00

He's probably married. They always claim to live with their mum / parent.

honeylulu · 11/03/2026 12:01

It isn't your reactions. He just didn't like being called out for his thoughtlessness.

He doesn't sound right for you. Your statement that this was your best relationship suggests you are lacking in confidence from worse treatment previously than this sort of selfish/defensive behaviour. You can do better.

I dont want to sound critical but I think you didn't set yourself off on the right foot in terms of boundaries and expectations. A lot of women are very "giving" and love the idea of looking after a man and making him happy. A lot of people (especially men) are quite self centred and if someone is giving they are happy to keep taking and worse still once it's an ingrained pattern it is taken for granted and not even appreciated, let alone reciprocated.

One of my best friends is like that. When she falls in love she constantly attends to and serves the new man. Then a few months down the line is upset because she "does everything". When she voiced this she either got a defensive response or an astonished face and exclamation - "I thought you did all that because you wanted to" . Admittedly she has got better at communicating early on that she likes to make people happy but not to the extent of being reduced to a skivvy and emotional support animal.

Boundaries rarely drive men away, you will be surprised at the higher level of respect that results. And if he just wants a skivvy/bangmaid then you'll find out and waste no time getting rid.

TragicMuse · 11/03/2026 12:03

The best relationship you’ve ever had? Good grief, the others must have been shockingly bad.

Look, I’ve had some terrible relationships, but I haven’t since mistaken ‘slightly better’ as ‘OMG TOTES AMAZE’.

He sounds objectively awful. And you’re not even getting decent sex from it.

My guess is you are now supposed to beg for another chance, put your own wants and feelings aside and keep the peace by being compliant. This is a massive red flag and it’s being waved right in your face.

You’ve dodged a bullet.

Let him go. You don’t need a manipulative twat who only gives you crap sex.

Whosthetabbynow · 11/03/2026 12:04

The drinking. The desperation. That’s not a criticism. Ask me how I know. He’s just a ship that passed in the night.

Pearlstillsinging · 11/03/2026 12:06

I'm sorry, I just don't see how you could love someone you have seen for one weekend every fortnight over a period of 5 months. You barely knew him!
I must admit that you sound quite needy (all that fuss about Valentine's) but really he has done you a favour. For whatever reason, you are not compatible. It's time to move on.

pinkyredrose · 11/03/2026 12:06

He sounds hideous. The sex sounds revolting! Why didn't you say anything when he shoved his dick in without a condom? Yeah of course he 'felt awful' afterwards 🙄

nopiesleftinthisvehicle · 11/03/2026 12:07

What is he claiming was the reason his last relationship ended?

Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 12:08

Whosthetabbynow · 11/03/2026 12:04

The drinking. The desperation. That’s not a criticism. Ask me how I know. He’s just a ship that passed in the night.

How do you know?

OP posts:
ValidPistachio · 11/03/2026 12:08

Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 11:01

The first few weeks he did plan some dates for us but that seems to drop off. But then I am a planner so maybe I didn’t give him space to show up.

"Space to show up"? What kind of drivel is this?

gostickyourheadinapig · 11/03/2026 12:08

Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 11:00

No, he moved his mum in with him (although she did contribute to deposit) when he got divorced as she has arthritis and neEd’s support.

That alone is a good reason to steer clear, unless you want to end up as a carer.

Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 12:09

nopiesleftinthisvehicle · 11/03/2026 12:07

What is he claiming was the reason his last relationship ended?

He is not quite divorced. He married the same woman twice. She is 11 years older. Married her when he was early twenties and again 5 years ago. First time she ended it as she felt like his mum. Second time she ended it as they were like brother and sister.

OP posts: