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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:
Starlight1979 · 11/03/2026 12:11

Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 12:09

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, he's still married.

He doesn't live with his mum at all.

AttilaTheMeerkat · 11/03/2026 12:12

Not quite divorced means he is still married.

So he was deceitful from the start to his wife and to you because he’s still married.

gostickyourheadinapig · 11/03/2026 12:15

Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 12:09

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.

Oh this gets worse. He's a toxic weirdo. A married toxic weirdo.

TwistedWonder · 11/03/2026 12:16

So a married man you see once a fortnight who raped you at the start is your best relationship ever? JFC OP please stay away from men and get some serious therapy because right now your bar is soo low there are submarines floating above it.

honeylulu · 11/03/2026 12:16

Hmm divorced wife as she felt like his mum.
But remarried her when he decided he liked being looked as if by a mum.
She got fed up and dumped him. Now he lives with his actual mum and wanted you to do the looking after stuff his mum can't.
Bit of a pattern there, no?

FacingtheSun · 11/03/2026 12:17

Oh, OP, I admit I started to laugh when you described him as living with his mum and 'not quite divorced', having married the same woman twice and been dumped by her twice. But more seriously, you have spectacularly low standards in relationships, perhaps because of your upbringing. This relationship was short and crap, and you're better off out of it. It just wasn't working for you.

I'd suggest staying single for a while, working on your self-esteem and approaching dating and new relationships via the sole question 'Is this working for me?'

category12 · 11/03/2026 12:20

First time she ended it as she felt like his mum. Second time she ended it as they were like brother and sister.

And what are you getting from this information?

For me, it says he has a pattern of not being interested in the romantic and sexual side of a relationship, but a real interest in the domestic and companionship side.

Do you want to be his mum or sister?

TwistedWonder · 11/03/2026 12:20

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 🙄

It felt awful because it’s rape - if a married rapist is a great relationship- JFC

thetinsoldier · 11/03/2026 12:33

And all this in five months?? Far too much drama. This should be the honeymoon period, when you are both showing your best side to your partner.

You sound very emotional - too much drinking then crying and getting emotional. Maybe you should look at your relationship with alcohol.

He sounds terrible, though. If this is your ‘best relationship’, then I’d stop dating for a bit and have some counselling so you can work out what a healthy relationship looks and feels like. Work on yourself. What do you want from a relationship?

Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 12:35

I thought that he can’t be bad if someone was willing to marry him twice!

OP posts:
Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 12:37

Yes, I am emotional. I’ve always been sensitive but add in menopause, coming of anti depressants, mum with dementia and family estrangement and I’ve been in a vulnerable place. He came along and seemed amazing… he told me he loved after about 7 weeks. It felt good.

OP posts:
Sashya · 11/03/2026 12:37

@Blamingmyself

This all looks like so much drama for a 5mo relationship. Maybe you and him don't fit. But your description of how you are in a relationship makes you sound highly strung and difficult to be around, tbh.

You were at 4mo into your relationship when you had your argument over Valentines. Sounds so teenage to be silking over not having a gift. And certainly having a full blown argument over it is a red flag.

And talk about "being cherished". You barely even know each other - you see each other every couple of weeks - so in 5 months it'll be 10 times in total. Yes?
It's way too early to be having all these expectations and putting so much pressure on it all. It also is way too early to be talking about love and deep feelings for someone you really only just met.

I don't blame him from running for the hills - it'll probably be too much for most.

In your setup - where he comes to your place - of course it's normal that you do the meal planning. Especially if you are also cooking. I'd not be offering to take it over in the early days for the fear of overstepping, as many people are particular about their homes and kitchens. I'd offer to contribute to food, etc - as appropriate.
As to getting up to make his breakfast and coffee.... Sounds like you did it with expectations? Or did he ask you to make him those and then was ungrateful?

I think your issues of "being taken for granted" are rooted in your other relationship(s) - and you brought it all into this. But he is not your ex. He did not take you for granted - you just met and were getting to know each other.
You do seem overly sensitive and very anxious and on guard. You also seem to expect "cherishing" - which is a weird concept to me. In a relationship - there should be mutual respect, and being nice to each other. But people are different and value different things. Your acts of service are your expression of being nice - which is typical of women. Men, in my experience - don't necessarily think of it that way, and don't act/reciprocate in the same way. Maybe we are built differently, maybe it's conditioning.

In your place - I'd do a bit of self-reflection and see what makes you this anxious and expecting so much so early in a relationship. So you can avoid making the same mistakes in your next relationship.

category12 · 11/03/2026 12:37

Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 12:35

I thought that he can’t be bad if someone was willing to marry him twice!

Bad enough to divorce him twice too 😂

stealthsquirrelnutkin · 11/03/2026 12:38

He was training you to accept crumbs and be grateful for any little scrap of attention he felt inclined to offer.

Your having enough self worth to notice being taken for granted and even take the time to explain your feelings made him decide he could find a more easy to train female elsewhere.
You ought to be celebrating your escape, and rewarding yourself.

Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 12:38

And I have decided to quit alcohol. I was nervous on dates so that’s why I drank. Also, I’ve booked counselling.

OP posts:
TwistedWonder · 11/03/2026 12:39

He raped you the first time you didn’t the night with him OP - do you not get that? How does a man like that make you feel good?

Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 12:42

TwistedWonder · 11/03/2026 12:39

He raped you the first time you didn’t the night with him OP - do you not get that? How does a man like that make you feel good?

I guess I could see how maybe he was confused as he was lying on top of me naked and I pulled him close. I did stop it and said we should have discussed protection. He then seemed really upset, and actually mentioned that he was beating himself up that it was rape. He is in the police btw. I actually felt bad for him. The next time was about better with a bit more effort from him. But no, it’s not great sex…. but it is the only sex I’ve handled with someone I felt I was in love with so it felt special.

OP posts:
pinkyredrose · 11/03/2026 12:52

Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 12:42

I guess I could see how maybe he was confused as he was lying on top of me naked and I pulled him close. I did stop it and said we should have discussed protection. He then seemed really upset, and actually mentioned that he was beating himself up that it was rape. He is in the police btw. I actually felt bad for him. The next time was about better with a bit more effort from him. But no, it’s not great sex…. but it is the only sex I’ve handled with someone I felt I was in love with so it felt special.

You really need to raise your bar. Can't believe you saw him again after the first time.

You sound quite needy but you also have a lot on your plate. You might benefit from counselling.

Whosthetabbynow · 11/03/2026 12:53

Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 12:08

How do you know?

Before I met my husband in my 30s I did exactly the same. Forgiving unsuitable men because anyone would do (within reason). I look back now and cringe. I know how you feel OP

EverythingGolden · 11/03/2026 13:09

Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 12:38

And I have decided to quit alcohol. I was nervous on dates so that’s why I drank. Also, I’ve booked counselling.

Good First step OP.

I also think he’s quite possibly still in the relationship with his wife and doesn’t actually live with his mum. I think you’ve actually dodged a bullet. Do not let him back into your life.

ThisJadeBear · 11/03/2026 13:09

This gets worse the more the drips are fed.

Trusttheawesomeness · 11/03/2026 13:15

Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 12:42

I guess I could see how maybe he was confused as he was lying on top of me naked and I pulled him close. I did stop it and said we should have discussed protection. He then seemed really upset, and actually mentioned that he was beating himself up that it was rape. He is in the police btw. I actually felt bad for him. The next time was about better with a bit more effort from him. But no, it’s not great sex…. but it is the only sex I’ve handled with someone I felt I was in love with so it felt special.

So, next time you’re dating someone, discuss condoms before getting naked. Trust me - I did only one dating for a few years before meeting my long term partner and you really need to be strict on the condoms as so many men really will try to get away with not using them. Usually, you’d dump the guy for that but I’m not sure you will so have the discussion first.

DoesthislookgoodOnMe · 11/03/2026 13:21

I’ve read most of your post and I would say he wasn’t putting effort in and also that they need to lay off the alcohol as it heightens emotions in a negative way for you.

Trusttheawesomeness · 11/03/2026 13:23

Trusttheawesomeness · 11/03/2026 13:15

So, next time you’re dating someone, discuss condoms before getting naked. Trust me - I did only one dating for a few years before meeting my long term partner and you really need to be strict on the condoms as so many men really will try to get away with not using them. Usually, you’d dump the guy for that but I’m not sure you will so have the discussion first.

*online dating

PeppyAmberHedgehog · 11/03/2026 13:24

Every post from you he sounds worse. He sounds controlling, as every time you have asked for something or mildly criticised, he's been defensive or left.

She may have married him twice but she left him twice.

You are so much better off out of this.