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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

Gambling Husband / Trust Issues

4 replies

Random12345 · 16/03/2026 12:21

Hi everyone, I’d like some perspective.

Long story short: my husband and I have been together for 5 years. Since day one, he has had gambling problems, but I didn’t realize the full extent until I became a stay at home mum while he was the sole earner.

Due to him repeatedly missing bills and gambling all his wages, I had no choice but to take control of the household finances. He would send me his wages, and I would pay all the bills, allocate savings, and manage the budget. Despite this, he repeatedly pressured me to send him money to gamble with, which was out of budget and pushed us further into debt. Previously, he had also run up debt in my name, and I had to take out loans to cover bills when he gambled excessively. This ruined my credit rating, and approximately £8,000 of that debt still needs to be repaid.

Over the years, there have also been other issues, including disrespect towards me, lack of support, vaping indoors around the children, blaming me for his problems, angry outbursts at me and the children, pressuring me for sex, lying about his whereabouts, and other concerning behaviors.

Last November, I finally said enough is enough. He begged for another chance, and I said I don’t know, setting clear conditions for rebuilding trust, including separate finances, taking better care of his health, being better with the children, and quitting gambling. Since January, our finances have been separate, and he now pays all his own bills.

However, he has lied again since then. He told me he quit vaping, but I saw him vaping at work. He then said he would continue vaping but with 0 nicotine, yet I found an empty vape box while doing the washing containing 20mg nicotine; he blamed the shopkeeper, saying he didn’t know. He has also started drinking more, and becomes defensive when I point it out, he can easily finish a bottle of wine in a night. Recently, he was rude again, asking me why I hadn’t finished making his dinner, despite everything going on.
Regarding gambling, he promised not to gamble until May, but I have very low trust in him. I’ve asked to see his bank account to check if he’s keeping his promise and to help rebuild trust, but he has repeatedly refused, saying I’m being controlling.

I feel like I’ve put up with a lot and tried to give him chances, but he won’t be transparent or take responsibility.
My question: Given all this, am I being unreasonable in asking to see his bank account to rebuild trust and hold him accountable?

Right now, I feel like he is choosing secrecy over transparency.

Any comments appreciated 🩷

OP posts:
AttilaTheMeerkat · 16/03/2026 12:40

I would divorce him before you end up going bankrupt or having your home repossessed. What you’ve tried has not worked and the only way you will get peace is to separate from him altogether. Gambling is a powerful addiction and one he may never be able to get a grip on. He promised not to gamble until May?!. Sorry but yes he is taking you for a right idiot. He should not be gambling at all.

He is to blame for his problems, to accuse you of this is he being abusive. How many more lies are you supposed to swallow from him in terms of his addictions?. You probably went into this thinking his addiction would lessen upon marriage and or children when infact it has intensified. You propping him up and otherwise enabling him as you have done to date does not help you or he for that matter. It gives you a false sense of control and shields him from the consequences of his actions.

It is no point issuing an ultimatum if you are not prepared to see it through.

Where is your real life support?.

if there is no trust there is no relationship. Stop giving him yet more chances to bugger up and start to rebuild your life. What are your children going yo
remener the most about their childhoods, this is not the legacy to be leaving them. Your own recovery from his addictions had not even started yet.

Cosmicpickle · 16/03/2026 13:51

Once the trust is gone honestly it’s over. Do you really want to spend the rest of your life having to worry about this?

PaperMachePanda · 16/03/2026 13:56

Get rid of him.

He's an awful man and gambling will always take precedence.

Been there, done that. It took a long time to recover from the financial mess he got me in. Never again!

YourZanyGreyDuck · 16/03/2026 14:03

Only 5 years and had this issue since day 1?

Not just gambling but drinking AND vaping too?!

Imagine another 5/10/20 years with the same distrust

Dont do this to you or your kids. He won’t change……I’m so sorrry you’re going through this 🙏

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