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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

Husband dropped a bombshell

303 replies

Sadandneedahug · 31/05/2026 21:38

Hi all. I need a hug and a handhold and any advice. I’ve been on MN for years but I’ve name changed for this.

Apologies if this ends up being really long, I’ll try to include everything.

In February of this year, my husband of 15 years told me we needed to work on things as he was feeling unhappy. We had a chat, both made a list of things we needed to do, and the lists were very similar. We were doing really well for a couple of weeks but then he had to go abroad for 3 weeks for work and when he came back he was quite poorly for a couple of weeks.

When he recovered (so about a month ago), told me he still wasn’t happy and wanted to leave.

We have two children aged 11 & 10.

He’s told me he hasn’t been happy for some time, and that he feels like we’ve grown apart. Says we live like co-parents and friends rather than a married couple. He says he doesn’t love me anymore, but still cares about me and will always love me as the kids mother.

He says he has tried for years to make an effort. However in my mind I’ve not seen this. We’ve had good times, great holidays and I think we’ve been happy. He’s been quiet and withdrawn over the last year - I asked if he was ok, and he always replied with ‘I’m fine’ or ‘stressed with work’. He has a stressful job so I believed him. I even said to him last year that I was worried I was losing him. He said absolutely not. After our chat in February this year, I asked if we were going to be ok - answer was yes. He acknowledged it would take hard work but would try his best.

I was quite poorly for 12-18 months in 2024/25 and the best I could do was to the bare minimum every day and no more. Due to this our sex life has dwindled. I also struggled when the kids were young with post natal depression, struggled with being a stay at home mum even though that’s what I wanted. I did end up going to work for a couple of days a week just to feel like me again.

Our house needs a fair bit of work and he says that gets him down. It frustrates me as well but I try to not nag him about it as I know how busy and stressed he is/was. We made a list of things that needed done and who would do them to break it down into easier chunks.

He wants to still be around, have a key for the house and come and go whenever if I’m ok with that. He’ll still help with kids, activities etc, DIY around the house and basically to let him know whenever I need some help. If I want him around to help with breakfasts/dinners/school runs he says he’ll do it. He also says we can still go on family holidays too.

He says he feels really guilty for doing this, but is feeling depressed, miserable, not himself and would rather put everyone through the pain now rather than waiting for years to come and do it then. He says doing it now will make our relationship better and his relationship with the kids better. He says he doesn’t hate me.

He is a fantastic dad.

I’m confused. Before he went on his work trip he told me he loved me. Loads of messages towards the end of last year saying he loved me. We had plans to move house in a few years, in March we booked a holiday for December. We had plans to start a new business together and the wheels were in motion for that - it’s easy enough to stop it though. It was all long term stuff.

I admit I’ve gotten pretty comfortable and just sailing through life, getting things done, going to work etc. Yes we probably have neglected each other. We’ve never had much alone time as we don’t have any childcare options. I have exploded at times with the lack of help around the house - cleaning, cooking, household chores etc. It got better for a week or so after each explosion and then went back to ‘normal’. However this past month I’ve never had so much help! He’s taking the bins out, making dinners, emptying the dishwasher, making the kids packed lunches. I don’t know if that’s just guilt. He’s also just redecorated our youngests bedroom - something he’s been saying he’d do since last year.

I know he’s had an individual counselling session. With all he has going on at work and at home she told him she’s surprised he hasn’t had a nervous breakdown. I’ve been seeing a solution based hypnotherapist to help with my confidence levels as I was struggling before all of this happened. I was beginning to get to a good place until this happened.

He has agreed to go to couples counselling to talk it through as we keep going over the same things and end up arguing. He says it won’t change anything but then says he’ll be honest and see what the counsellor says. I have no experience with this so I’m a bit worried about what will happen at these sessions. Do I say all of this to a counsellor?

I’m not blameless. I’m not trying to make excuses with my health problems and my issues when the kids were tiny. I could’ve given him more attention. I should’ve pushed it when he went quiet last year but I left him at his short answers.

I’ve asked him if there’s someone else, and he says no. I do believe him.

Thank you if anyone has read all of this, sorry it’s so long. I don’t even know what I’m asking for. I don’t want to split up. I still love him. I feel like a failure and I’m so embarrassed. I feel like an idiot. I cry every day. He says I need to talk to someone rather than keep torturing myself about it on my own. I’ve told very few people because of feeling like such a failure. I can’t even face his parents (who are furious with him) and they’re lovely people. I just don’t know how I can get othrough this. I can’t imagine my life without him - I feel like my whole future has gone.

OP posts:
rememberingthem · 31/05/2026 23:37

Another one here who thinks he has another woman. My ex was exactly the same to me, he’s being “ nice” because he feels guilty. The minute you play hard ball with him he will switch! Its awful at the moment but you will come out the other side of this happier and stronger.

Hankunamatata · 31/05/2026 23:45

Him being superhelpful the last month would have me ringing alarm bells

You need to make a clean break op. He cant come wandering into your house. Its isnt fair on you. How on earth are you going to get over him if he is dropping in

Loreleily · 31/05/2026 23:46

I’ve not read all the messages but, honestly, he’s fallen out of love. It happens. He’s tried. He’s feeling guilty. But that’s the way it is. You will be fine. I promise

oh and btw when a similar thing happened to me and my ex husband EVERYONE on here crowed on about ‘cherzez les femme’ and such bollocks. People got really angry at me that I was naive. Anyways, 7 yrs down the line he never had someone else. Didn’t even get a girlfriend until 4yrs after and that was fairly brief.

It’s allowed to end a relationship. He may just be doing it the right way if he’s being caring. Ignore others’ opinions on this, they’re often so bitter they can’t help themselves

ThatBlackCat · 31/05/2026 23:46

DreamyScroller · 31/05/2026 23:00

Calm down love.

Think the husband has found this thread...

echt · 31/05/2026 23:48

bumptybum · 31/05/2026 22:57

How is he a cunt. He is doing what everyone says a person should do. Leave before they have an affair. Leave when they know they are unhappy.

he said the key thing would be on her terms. He basically wants to still support the family but end the marriage because his relational needs are not being met. Fur either of them.

he’s no longer in love with the OP. How does this make him a cunt?

If he wanted to support her he would be proposing a 50/50 split on helping with the children raising his own fucking kids as he is so serious about the marriage having no future.

Oh wait.

Loreleily · 31/05/2026 23:50

echt · 31/05/2026 23:48

If he wanted to support her he would be proposing a 50/50 split on helping with the children raising his own fucking kids as he is so serious about the marriage having no future.

Oh wait.

If he suggested this from the get go everyone would bang on about how he wasn’t putting the kids first. To be honest many men can’t win.

ThatBlackCat · 31/05/2026 23:50

trythisforsize · 31/05/2026 23:21

he’s had an individual counselling session. With all he has going on at work and at home she told him she’s surprised he hasn’t had a nervous breakdown

Councillors just don't speak like this. He has made this up to gain some sort of sympathy from you for his tale of 'woe is me'.

Yep, no way would a counsellor say that.

He's not even going to a counsellor. He is going somewhere, but not to a 'counsellor'.

category12 · 31/05/2026 23:51

Sadandneedahug · 31/05/2026 22:02

Thank you all for reading and replying so quickly. I honestly honestly don’t think he has someone else.

I think I need support from him rather than the other way around. He is getting help from a counsellor and from friends whereas I’m bottling it up.

Don't look to him for support. Talk to someone, lean on friends and family - you need to shine a light on what's happening and have someone around you who has your back. I'm sorry, but he doesn't any more.

Don't put your faith in him to have your interests at heart, he's just pulled the rug out.

And don't make it easy for him to walk in and out of your lives, it'll bite you in the arse. People don't value doormats.

Let him feel what it's really like to be separated, let him feel what he's missing. It's your best hope.

mathanxiety · 31/05/2026 23:51

ServietteUnion · 31/05/2026 23:02

Cherchez l'homme imo. When there's another woman, the script usually involves more coldness and rewriting history. I think the guilt and kindness is saying something else. The pp are right either way though, OP. If he doesn't want to stay, you need a cleaner break than he's proposing or this will be agony for a long time to come. Very sorry this is happening to you.

There has been rewriting aplenty. He has had her jumping through all kinds of hoops. She's even apologetic here and beating herself up about PND.

The guilt and the hints of a 'nervous breakdown' make him the one the OP needs to look out for and take care of, and they throw her off the scent of the OW or OM. That's advanced level cunning.

Calliopespa · 31/05/2026 23:54

He needs to understand it isn't go to work the way he has proposed.

If he is leaving, he is leaving. He doesn't get a key, he can't do bedtime when he chooses or come on holiday as though he never left. You get to meet someone else if you choose.

His version is making it easy for him to leave.

He may still want to leave but he needs to know the hard reality of what he is choosing.

I understand the temptation of consenting to what he has suggested if you don't want him leaving, but the way he has presented it he has nothing whatsoever to lose.

Loreleily · 31/05/2026 23:54

category12 · 31/05/2026 23:51

Don't look to him for support. Talk to someone, lean on friends and family - you need to shine a light on what's happening and have someone around you who has your back. I'm sorry, but he doesn't any more.

Don't put your faith in him to have your interests at heart, he's just pulled the rug out.

And don't make it easy for him to walk in and out of your lives, it'll bite you in the arse. People don't value doormats.

Let him feel what it's really like to be separated, let him feel what he's missing. It's your best hope.

Her best hope is to make someone who’s fallen out of love with her panic and want her back?

no. She’s more than enough on her own. She doesn’t need him

YoBetty · 31/05/2026 23:56

Loreleily · 31/05/2026 23:50

If he suggested this from the get go everyone would bang on about how he wasn’t putting the kids first. To be honest many men can’t win.

Win at what? Wife and kids at home and a lovely bit on the side, and the women are happy because they don't know about each other, and he's happy because he's having his cake and eating it?

icybreeze · 31/05/2026 23:56

There's another woman
He's either shagging her already or desperately wanting to but needs to sort of vaguely but not fully separate with you first so he doesn't feel guilty

It's a script as old as time.

icybreeze · 31/05/2026 23:57

Also - do get an STD test

Loreleily · 31/05/2026 23:57

Calliopespa · 31/05/2026 23:54

He needs to understand it isn't go to work the way he has proposed.

If he is leaving, he is leaving. He doesn't get a key, he can't do bedtime when he chooses or come on holiday as though he never left. You get to meet someone else if you choose.

His version is making it easy for him to leave.

He may still want to leave but he needs to know the hard reality of what he is choosing.

I understand the temptation of consenting to what he has suggested if you don't want him leaving, but the way he has presented it he has nothing whatsoever to lose.

I would say when me and my husband split up we both decided we wanted these type of things. Of course, it didn’t happen because it’s not what either of you will want when you properly split up. But saying it doesn’t mean he’s evil. He probably thinks he’s being supportive. And he also loves her as a friend and as a co parent.

I co parent extremely well with my ex. We go out together with our child and spend birthdays and Christmas together. It’s not impossible if you’re both adult and want the best thing for your children. A lot of men don’t. So if he really does? Grab it and run with it.

tachetastic · 31/05/2026 23:57

@Sadandneedahug He wants to still be around, have a key for the house and come and go whenever if I’m ok with that. He’ll still help with kids, activities etc, DIY around the house and basically to let him know whenever I need some help. If I want him around to help with breakfasts/dinners/school runs he says he’ll do it. He also says we can still go on family holidays too.

That's all lovely but who does he think will look after the kids, get them up, help with their homework, deal with teachers, organise playdates, take them on playdates, change the sheets, do the food shopping, deal with them being teenagers and yelling at you for no reason, attend parent-teacher meetings, take them to the doctor, take them to buy clothes, do the laundry, take them to the dentist, clean the house, listen to their days, explain to them where dad is, take out the bins, listen to their worries, deal with school forms, give them a hug when they need it even if they don't want it?

Oh I see, that'll be you will it?

Telling you to let him know whenever something needs doing sounds really nice but it's still putting the mental load on you to come up with the jobs he needs to do. Parenting involves knowing what needs to be done and doing it without needing to be asked.

LarryStylinson · 31/05/2026 23:57

this.

get that key off him. he wants to go. let him. Don't blur boundaries for your children.

Loreleily · 31/05/2026 23:59

YoBetty · 31/05/2026 23:56

Win at what? Wife and kids at home and a lovely bit on the side, and the women are happy because they don't know about each other, and he's happy because he's having his cake and eating it?

This is in your head. It’s not reality as you or the op know it.

perhaps he just wants to split up. It’s allowed.

Loreleily · 01/06/2026 00:00

I don’t know what a man or a woman should do to end a relationship well according to the MN community.

Calliopespa · 01/06/2026 00:01

Loreleily · 31/05/2026 23:57

I would say when me and my husband split up we both decided we wanted these type of things. Of course, it didn’t happen because it’s not what either of you will want when you properly split up. But saying it doesn’t mean he’s evil. He probably thinks he’s being supportive. And he also loves her as a friend and as a co parent.

I co parent extremely well with my ex. We go out together with our child and spend birthdays and Christmas together. It’s not impossible if you’re both adult and want the best thing for your children. A lot of men don’t. So if he really does? Grab it and run with it.

Edited

I didn't say it meant he was evil: I said it meant he isn't facing the hard reality of what leaving will look like.

babyproblems · 01/06/2026 00:01

Agree he’s got somebody else or nearly has.
definitely do not let him have a key.

See a solicitor and ask him to give you space. Sending you a huge huge hug- he’s a shit and I suspect a lying one. Xxx

Calliopespa · 01/06/2026 00:02

Loreleily · 01/06/2026 00:00

I don’t know what a man or a woman should do to end a relationship well according to the MN community.

It is something you manage, not a CV brag.

I'm not sure there is a way to do it "well."

Mydoreston · 01/06/2026 00:03

It may not be another woman but based on how these things go and sadly how clueless the wife often is you must consider the possibility that it is an OW situation.

Either way say no to him having a key and coming in and out.

Make a clean break, divide up things and let him have the kids 50/50. I am sure he won’t be giving you a key to his new pad!

Alphyn · 01/06/2026 00:04

Sounds exactly like my exH. I posted something very similar to OP and everyone on Mumsnet said he had someone on the side but I didn’t believe it. And yes, it turns out the bastard was cheating even though he swore there was nobody else. Sorry OP.

Calliopespa · 01/06/2026 00:05

Mydoreston · 01/06/2026 00:03

It may not be another woman but based on how these things go and sadly how clueless the wife often is you must consider the possibility that it is an OW situation.

Either way say no to him having a key and coming in and out.

Make a clean break, divide up things and let him have the kids 50/50. I am sure he won’t be giving you a key to his new pad!

I am sure he won’t be giving you a key to his new pad.

And this sums it up op.

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