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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:
Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 14:34

Thanks for all the replies. Looking back, he kind of set the emotional intensity… was gushing about his feelings, told me he was falling for 7 weeks in, spoke about us going on holiday with our kids, wanted me to meet his mum very soon. I got carried away with it.

OP posts:
OneShyQuail · 11/03/2026 14:48

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.

There we have it.

This and all the things you wrote about him you are well rid.

Please take sometime to work on yourself before dating again (hugs)

OneShyQuail · 11/03/2026 14:51

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.

No. Thats not good.
You are looking for someone to love you.
But that doesnt make it real.

You cant love someone truly after 7 weeks.
Crikey you only saw him 10 times in fives months as it is

Endofyear · 11/03/2026 15:01

OP you've only been seeing each other 5 months, your relationship should be in the honeymoon getting to know you phase where everything is rosy! You sound a bit emotionally needy and insecure and he sounds defensive and grumpy. It doesn't sound like a good relationship at all and you don't sound like you're well suited for each other. A new relationship shouldn't be this much hard work! Notch it up to experience and move on - he's not the one for you.

Shitmonger · 11/03/2026 15:02

Therapy will really help you. He is completely shit, but you are also very emotionally unregulated. It sounds like you’re stuck in a cycle of needing highs and lows: find a small issue, blow it up into a problem, have a conflict, reconcile, repeat. It’s like a rollercoaster of emotions that you want to keep riding. The ups and downs are giving you dopamine hits and even now, you’re wallowing in the current low and hoping for the next high (reconciliation). Healthy people don’t do this because they can separate themselves from their emotions. More importantly, healthy people run a mile from people that cannot manage their emotions better than this. You will continue to attract shitty men and shitty relationships until you work through this in therapy and fix it, because healthy men will be gone at the first sign that you want to thrill seek via constant relational conflict. Once you free yourself from this pattern you will be able to find someone that you can have a real, stable relationship with.

Brightlittlecanary · 11/03/2026 15:13

I’m agog at these answers.

These were consistently about the same theme… me feeling taken for granted and not cherished

if I dated a bloke for five months and saw him every two weeks there is no way I’d put up with him complaining I didn’t make him feel cherished from early on . I’m afraid I’m wirh him, I’d be out.

Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 15:21

Ok, maybe I used the wrong word. What I meant was there was inequality in effort and attentiveness. As in, the work of planning, organising fell mostly on me and there were no sweet or romantic gestures from him.

OP posts:
Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 15:22

If I was going to be hosted at someone’s house week after week, I wouldn’t just rock up and expect to be catered for. At some point you’re not a guest anymore. And I’d reciprocate sweet gestures.

OP posts:
MrsJJ84 · 11/03/2026 15:26

I have this dynamic but in a 17 year marriage which came to an end last week . It’s called having an anxious attachment style and being attracted to those with avoidant attachment. The more you learn about this dynamic the easier future relationships will be . Xxx

Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 15:34

MrsJJ84 · 11/03/2026 15:26

I have this dynamic but in a 17 year marriage which came to an end last week . It’s called having an anxious attachment style and being attracted to those with avoidant attachment. The more you learn about this dynamic the easier future relationships will be . Xxx

But how can he be avoidant if he got married twice and declared his love for me in 7 weeks?

OP posts:
MrsJJ84 · 11/03/2026 15:38

Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 15:34

But how can he be avoidant if he got married twice and declared his love for me in 7 weeks?

thqys classic avoidant . Go in strong and as soon as things are reciprocated they become overwhelmed and pressured . They can’t handle big emotions , don’t do big romantic gestures . Claim you’re the problem in the relationship and they’re not because they just want ‘peace ‘ . Will avoid discussions as any issue you raise they will take as a personal attack rather than trying to work together …

pinkyredrose · 11/03/2026 15:42

Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 15:34

But how can he be avoidant if he got married twice and declared his love for me in 7 weeks?

Declaring love after 7 weeks and 4 meetings suggests he's fickle and disingenuous with his emotions.

Getting married to the same women twice who was a lot older than him may suggest he likes being looked after and is immature.

Let's not forget he helped himself to your vagina without a condom!

Is he sexist? Just thinking that he seems to act as though the onus is on the woman to provide food, sort out contraception etc.

Starlight1979 · 11/03/2026 15:42

Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 15:34

But how can he be avoidant if he got married twice and declared his love for me in 7 weeks?

OP why are you ignoring everyone telling you he's still married / living with his wife?

He's not an "avoidant". He's ended it because he's married. You were the other woman.

TwistedWonder · 11/03/2026 15:45

Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 15:22

If I was going to be hosted at someone’s house week after week, I wouldn’t just rock up and expect to be catered for. At some point you’re not a guest anymore. And I’d reciprocate sweet gestures.

Because he’s a freeloader who is taking you for a mug.

You say he’s in the police? Honestly it sounds like he’s either still with his ex or there’s another woman and he knows you’ll accept a few crumbs thrown your way so he gets fed and shagged.

Honestly OP read every post telling you this man didn’t even bother with the bare minimum and you still tied yourself in knots for him.

You honestly shouldn’t be dating until you raise your bar significantly because you’re leaving yourself so vulnerable to be completely fucked over

This man waving more red flags than the Russian army and you ignored every single one

Trusttheawesomeness · 11/03/2026 15:47

Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 15:34

But how can he be avoidant if he got married twice and declared his love for me in 7 weeks?

Oh fgs, give it up. You need to move on. You two were not in love. You barely knew him, he made you unhappy, you never got into sync. Move on.

DoesthislookgoodOnMe · 11/03/2026 15:55

Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 15:22

If I was going to be hosted at someone’s house week after week, I wouldn’t just rock up and expect to be catered for. At some point you’re not a guest anymore. And I’d reciprocate sweet gestures.

My partner and I spend every other weekend at beach others house and some weeknights. My partner will always come with flowers or a thoughtful small gift, will pick up a bit of food for the weekend and help with chores when her here. I do the same but as I don’t get him flowers I’ll pick up some nice chocolate or make him something he loves when I visit. So we both usually feel appreciated and it’s balanced.

Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 16:08

DoesthislookgoodOnMe · 11/03/2026 15:55

My partner and I spend every other weekend at beach others house and some weeknights. My partner will always come with flowers or a thoughtful small gift, will pick up a bit of food for the weekend and help with chores when her here. I do the same but as I don’t get him flowers I’ll pick up some nice chocolate or make him something he loves when I visit. So we both usually feel appreciated and it’s balanced.

Was it like that from the early days? This was the sort of thing I meant!

OP posts:
category12 · 11/03/2026 16:12

Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 15:34

But how can he be avoidant if he got married twice and declared his love for me in 7 weeks?

He got divorced twice for becoming like a male relative instead of a partner.

Declaring his love at 7 weeks sounds more like lovebombing than genuine connection.

Enrichetta · 11/03/2026 16:20

Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 15:34

But how can he be avoidant if he got married twice and declared his love for me in 7 weeks?

Because he wanted a regular supply of pussy… And you were so besotted with him that you tied yourself in all kinds of knots in order to turn yourself into his doormat.

He is selfish, calculating, avoidant and emotionally stunted - and you are overly emotional and way too accommodating. You actually allowed him to rape you! You clearly said no and yet you somehow acquiesced; he heard you and yet he went ahead and forced himself on you. Let that sink in.

Not only were you incompatible, but he is a total piece of sh!t and you should be glad that he’s gone as this would only have got worse, and you would have ended up with your already underdeveloped self esteem entirely trashed. Not to mention the depletion of your bank balance due to his stinginess and freeloading.

You need to do some serious work on yourself to strengthen your self esteem and your boundaries. Therapy would be good, but as a first step read these:

  • Women Wo Love Too Much
  • The Six Pillars of Self Esteem
Sorry to be harsh but sugar coating this would not be helpful.
Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 16:23

Enrichetta · 11/03/2026 16:20

Because he wanted a regular supply of pussy… And you were so besotted with him that you tied yourself in all kinds of knots in order to turn yourself into his doormat.

He is selfish, calculating, avoidant and emotionally stunted - and you are overly emotional and way too accommodating. You actually allowed him to rape you! You clearly said no and yet you somehow acquiesced; he heard you and yet he went ahead and forced himself on you. Let that sink in.

Not only were you incompatible, but he is a total piece of sh!t and you should be glad that he’s gone as this would only have got worse, and you would have ended up with your already underdeveloped self esteem entirely trashed. Not to mention the depletion of your bank balance due to his stinginess and freeloading.

You need to do some serious work on yourself to strengthen your self esteem and your boundaries. Therapy would be good, but as a first step read these:

  • Women Wo Love Too Much
  • The Six Pillars of Self Esteem
Sorry to be harsh but sugar coating this would not be helpful.

He stopped as soon as I told him to. He didn’t carry on with sex after I said that. But yes, wasn’t expecting him to just “enter” like that.

OP posts:
Crushed23 · 11/03/2026 16:29

You sound spectacularly incompatible and the relationship was a dumpster fire. Be grateful it only wasted 5 months of your life and that it’s over.

Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 16:47

category12 · 11/03/2026 16:12

He got divorced twice for becoming like a male relative instead of a partner.

Declaring his love at 7 weeks sounds more like lovebombing than genuine connection.

He also had a child with someone in between the marriages and that ended because they were like brother and sister too. Or so he said.

OP posts:
begonefoulclutter · 11/03/2026 17:19

Are you the reason he ended it? Yes. But don't blame yourself.

You asserted your boundaries, and he didn't like it. All he wanted was to be able to turn up every couple of weeks for a lovely shag and that was that. He didn't want a loving relationship, he didn't want to have to put in any effort other than to drive to you and bring a bottle of wine, half of which he would presumably drink himself. Most men would be more than happy to do that for some guaranteed sex.

You did the right thing.

DoesthislookgoodOnMe · 11/03/2026 17:26

I think his past relayships ended up as “brother and sister” as he sounds completely shit in bed. Not to mention to knowing boundaries when it comes to first time sex and that’s putting it politely.

Blamingmyself · 11/03/2026 17:53

@DoesthislookgoodOnMe the way you described your relationship sounds lovely. Was it like this from the early days with him bringing things when he came to yours?

OP posts: