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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

Should I reach put after ex broke up with me?

34 replies

ThatGoldDuck · 17/03/2026 15:54

Hello.

I was hoping for some non-biased advice on my current situation. I was with my ex-partner for just over two years. Within a few months of being together we moved in together, and not long after we relocated away from family and friends for his career. We rented a house together and I moved my job, so my life became largely centred around the relationship and the move.

Overall, the relationship felt loving and stable for a long time. We didn’t argue often, we enjoyed spending time together, and we made plans for the future. I trusted him and felt committed to building a life together.

One dynamic that developed over time but was also pretty present early on, was that much of the domestic responsibility fell to me. I worked full-time, but I was also doing most of the cooking, cleaning, laundry and general household organisation. My partner rarely contributed to those tasks. I didn’t initially mind doing more, particularly during periods when my work was quieter, but over time it became draining and sometimes felt like I had fallen into more of a caretaker role than an equal partnership. However he would pay for dates and dinners and things like that. I just genuinely wanted to make him happy and make his life peaceful.

Another recurring source of tension was his past. Before we met he had been single for quite some time and had slept with many women. I wouldn’t say he’d ever really had a serious relationship like ours. Whereas I had. Occasionally some of these women would message or follow me on social media, or stalk me. While I trusted him and he never gave me a direct reason to doubt him, it sometimes felt like his past life was bleeding into our present. When I raised this, he often became frustrated that I was bringing it up, which sometimes made it difficult to resolve those feelings properly. At the beginning he was more understanding but over time he didn’t understand why I was still bringing up the issues. However I didn’t understand why these girls were so bothered about me. It wasn’t so much of an insecurity issue. It was that some of the women he still had on his social media platforms, and I just wanted the past, to be the past. I never looked for issues. It was more so the women finding me and orbiting my space on socials.

Towards the end of the relationship I went through a period where I was emotionally struggling and more withdrawn than usual. At the time I didn’t fully understand what was happening with me emotionally. My partner found this difficult, and there were a few moments of tension during that period.

Not long after, he blew up one evening; said he needed some space and left for a few days. Then he told me he wanted to end the relationship. The breakup felt quite sudden to me because shortly beforehand we had still been spending time together and making plans. Life was pretty normal. Although I was a little up and down, and he was a bit snappy at times, I assumed it was normal relationship tension. We had other external pressures at the time so I just assumed it was a bit of a tough period for us, but we were still very much normal day to day.

Following the breakup he ended the tenancy on the house, which meant I had to leave the area, temporarily move in with family, and also leave my job. It was quite a significant disruption to my life and all happened within a couple of weeks.

We haven’t really spoken afterwards, only briefly and again he got angry. He was firm on his decision and made it out like I was a terrible moody partner and the relationship was too much and he was unhappy and wasn’t in love anymore. I wasn’t perfect, but we had way more good than bad.

I do still miss him. I’ve spent the last few months reflecting, going to therapy, and trying to understand the relationship dynamics and my own behaviour. I can see where things weren’t perfect, but I also remember how good the relationship was and the connection we had.

Part of me still wonders whether I should reach out to him, or whether it’s better to leave things as they are. He is quite a stubborn person, so I don’t know if he would ever reach out himself.

I’d really appreciate any outside perspective.

OP posts:
BollyMolly · 17/03/2026 15:55

No. Why on Earth would you?

toodleoothen · 17/03/2026 15:58

No! The relationship does not sound healthy, neither does your attachment to him. Continue to work on yourself in therapy and get yourself to a place where you can see that you deserve better than this man offered you, and treated you!

INeedAnotherName · 17/03/2026 16:03

No. It is over and the fact you can't seem to accept that is quite worrying. Your therapy seems to have kept you in the past and not brought you into the present.

ARunByFruiting · 17/03/2026 16:10

Never go back, it rarely works. I feel for you that you had to endure messages and stalking on social media from women in his past and the fact he didn't see that as a major issue makes him a twat and almost like he enjoyed seeing you feel a bit insecure.

Don't message him, just create the life where you are happiest and someone else will come along one day.

begonefoulclutter · 17/03/2026 16:12

Good grief no. Don't go back there.

Holdmybeermoment · 17/03/2026 16:13

No. Obviously. You were a skivvy. You moved in with a man you barely knew, then uprooted your whole life to follow him to a new area, then became his live in maid.

You need to stay in therapy and stay away from men until you have a strong sense of self, because you clearly let your entire self disappear so you could fit into the perfect wife mode for whatever he wanted.

Holdmybeermoment · 17/03/2026 16:14

And why would he reach out? He ended it. It is over. Thank goodness because you were not a good match.

wantmorenow · 17/03/2026 16:15

He shat all over your life by unilaterally ending the tenancy agreement and made you both homeless and unemployed. Whilst you were together he took advantage of your kindness nature to avoid sharing domestic tasks. You'd be mad to give him the time of day let alone another chance.

aBuffetofunreasonableness · 17/03/2026 16:19

A boyfriend is for enhancing every aspect of your life, making everything easier and fun. Otherwise there's zero reason to be in a relationship.

This man was tedious and then actively made you unemployed and homeless, don't give him a second of thought.

Ilovelurchers · 17/03/2026 16:20

It can be possible to reconnect with an ex and have more positive relationship - I am in this situation now! However, I think a few things need to be in place:

A) have you BOTH done therapeutic work to fix the problems? It's no good if only one of you (you) has done the work - in fact that potentially creates a massive imbalance.

B) have you had sufficient time apart? We took a year, and that is the minimum I would say, for meaningful change to happen.

C) is anything going to be significantly different going forwards? We have stopped cohabiting - didn't work for us - and that has led to a big improvement and much more "fun" in the relationship, and a lot less angst over housework, finances etc, all the shit that comes with living together....

D) do you BOTH want to make it work? If the desire is all on one side, or even mostly on one side, it can't. You both have to essentially want it, even if you do have (entirely reasonable) reservations.....

In brief - reconciling CAN work, but I am not sure your situation, as you describe it, offers the ideal situation for it.

Perhaps take more time apart? Then see how you feel.....

category12 · 17/03/2026 16:23

So he broke up with you in such a way that you became homeless and jobless ... and you think you should try and get back with him?

Does he have to kill your puppy too?

Hellohelga · 17/03/2026 16:26

God no, you’ve dodged a bullet

Therescathairinmybath · 17/03/2026 16:32

He sounds like an absolute bastard, @ThatGoldDuck. You deserve so much better.

MeganM3 · 17/03/2026 16:33

Definitely don’t. He doesn’t want to get back together with you and neither of you need a conversation about it.

There’s no ‘closure’ and no reconciliation to be had here. Speaking would just prolong your distress.

When people feel rejected they dwell on it and want a chance to be chosen and for the feeling of rejection to disappear. It is completely natural.
But don’t reach out.
Give it lots and lots of time.

Endofyear · 17/03/2026 18:13

Reach out for what? He's ended the relationship, he obviously doesn't want to stay in touch. Rightly or wrongly, his experience of the relationship is different to yours and he didn't want to continue. It's hurtful, it's difficult but it is what it is.

It sounds like you moved in together without actually knowing each other very well and ultimately were incompatible. You took on all the domestic chores instead of starting out on an equal level and after a while, probably felt resentful that you were doing it all. Look at it as a learning curve and don't make that mistake again!

FloydPink · 17/03/2026 18:14

There is one good reason to reconnect - and that is closure.

While I hear the comments above, if you dont connect, you will always be wondering what if? That 'itch' will not go away. Either you need to connect (and hopefully he is happy where he is and rejects you) or have counselling to get to the root of all this.

AlmostAJillSandwich · 17/03/2026 18:19

He made it pretty clear he doesn't want contact with you, respect that.

Comtesse · 17/03/2026 18:19

Nooooo don’t lower yourself - you already moved, changed your life and then lost your job for the benefit of this clown. Never mind the skivvying. He doesn’t sound like a good option at all.

ThatGoldDuck · 17/03/2026 22:32

Holdmybeermoment · 17/03/2026 16:14

And why would he reach out? He ended it. It is over. Thank goodness because you were not a good match.

He ended it very abruptly when we were absolutely fine so I’d hoped he may reach out at some point following everything. He was keen for us to live together. He pushed for the relationship and for us to move together, we got on in all areas of life so ot never felt like we weren’t a good match. Yes we had arguments and issues like most couples but we were very much on the same page. It just felt like small issues were much larger to him and the ending came out of nowhere. He didn’t tell me he was unhappy prior to leaving.

OP posts:
Abadan · 17/03/2026 22:38

ThatGoldDuck · 17/03/2026 22:32

He ended it very abruptly when we were absolutely fine so I’d hoped he may reach out at some point following everything. He was keen for us to live together. He pushed for the relationship and for us to move together, we got on in all areas of life so ot never felt like we weren’t a good match. Yes we had arguments and issues like most couples but we were very much on the same page. It just felt like small issues were much larger to him and the ending came out of nowhere. He didn’t tell me he was unhappy prior to leaving.

Edited

He didn’t think things were absolutely fine though. He decided to end things. you said yourself you were emotionally withdrawing from him - it does sound like it wasn’t working.

Breakups are tough, but they are usually the right decision in the long term.

I went back to an ex who ended things after 3 years. He held all the cards and it was just awful. You need to move on

Holdmybeermoment · 17/03/2026 22:41

ThatGoldDuck · 17/03/2026 22:32

He ended it very abruptly when we were absolutely fine so I’d hoped he may reach out at some point following everything. He was keen for us to live together. He pushed for the relationship and for us to move together, we got on in all areas of life so ot never felt like we weren’t a good match. Yes we had arguments and issues like most couples but we were very much on the same page. It just felt like small issues were much larger to him and the ending came out of nowhere. He didn’t tell me he was unhappy prior to leaving.

Edited

You honestly need to move on.

Neveranynamesleft · 17/03/2026 22:42

Let go of the past and move on. You deserve more than what you had there.

Applecup · 17/03/2026 22:42

I think you need to accept the relationship is over and he has moved on. I think you are kidding yourself that things were happy. You said yourself you were dissatisfied and felt you did more than your fair share of the chores. You admit you were moody and jealous of his past relationships. It all sounds a bit exhausting and that’s probably how he felt. Time to move on.

INeedAnotherName · 17/03/2026 23:12

He ended it very abruptly when we were absolutely fine.

You weren't absolutely fine though. You might have thought you were but that doesn't mean you (plural) actually were. I think you need further counselling on how to let go (or why you can't).

I am intrigued as to who instigated or drove each stage of your relationship although it doesn't really matter. I see you making yourself small to fit in around him and the life HE has chosen and when he swats you away in irritation you can't understand why your smallness, your appeasement, wasn't good enough.

portvfs · 17/03/2026 23:15

Oh honey you found a labour digger. Keep him blocked and binned. You can and will find better

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