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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

How can I possibly get through this *[Content warning: concerns domestic abuse]

66 replies

TattedBarley · 10/06/2026 00:21

Trigger warning - domestic abuse

Yesterday myself, my (now ex) partner, his son and my daughter returned from our first (and last) holiday as a family. We’d just moved into a new house together and were all so happy and excited for the future, talking about getting married and ex eventually adopting my daughter as his own.

For background, my daughter’s father was physically and mentally abusive as well as an alcoholic and we split during the first trimester, he has never and will never meet my daughter. I went through a lot following that relationship, it changed me as a person and left me navigating PTSD as a lone parent.
When I met my (now ex) partner and we started our relationship, he seemed like such a wonderful person. No red flags whatsoever, very loving and supportive and helpful. A few months ago after a death of a very close relative, he became depressed and began drinking more than usual. I was as patient and supportive as possible, but had to pull him up on the amount he was drinking several times.
We were all looking forward to our holiday, his son especially as it was his first time abroad. It started out amazing but quickly became marred by ex’s drinking. The last full day and night of our holiday, he had drank excessively and calls to stop earlier on fell on deaf ears. The last time that night I asked him to stop so that we could get back to the room to settle the kids to bed, something switched in him. He turned into someone I didn’t recognise, clenching his teeth at me and calling me names. Long story short, he then physically assaulted me, twice, very publicly. His poor son witnessed the abuse and was terrified, but a small blessing is that my daughter was asleep.
The journey home the next afternoon was awful. He cried and cried and tried to be as helpful as possible in the airport. Apologising over and over.
The fallout has been immense. Our life together is over. The kids and I travelled home together without him. I have removed all of his belongings from the house today, there is no trace that he was ever here. His son has gone home to his mum. Ex has begged and pleaded for forgiveness and another chance, bombarded me with texts full of remorse and promises to change. I have now blocked and removed his number and social media. My daughter has cried her little heart out. She has lost the man she considered her dad, and the boy she loved as a brother. It’s not fair.

I am barely holding it together.

Now my daughter is asleep and I am alone for the first time in a long time.
The house is so quiet. My bed feels so empty. I dare not let my emotions out to the surface for fear I won’t be able to cope. I feel sick. How on earth do I navigate this anger, sadness, anxiety, confusion and grief. It feels like someone has died. I suppose the illusion of the man I thought he was has died. I don’t think I could ever fully trust again. I know my daughter and I will get through this, but right now I feel like I’m drowning.

OP posts:
Gettingbysomehow · 10/06/2026 07:05

Is it your house OP or does he have claim over it?

IStillHearTheWaves · 10/06/2026 07:08

That sounds awful - thank goodness you're standing your ground.

You must be so, so careful who you introduce into your child's life and start building a family unit with - especially when they have an absent parent. It's a gaping vulnerability and the new people become so much more to them than when the other parent is involved.

You'll both get over this, though. Better to teach your daughter boundaries and standards than allowing abusive behavior.

MurunBuchstansangursCousinRossiter · 10/06/2026 07:11

JillyComeLately · 10/06/2026 01:10

Like others have said, I am so sorry your life has come crashing down so suddenly, please stay safe, you and your daughter will get over this.

I want to say, will this man get help? If he did, could you ever envisage resuming life with him in time?

What? Are you mad?

ScaredButUnavoidable · 10/06/2026 07:53

OP, you are an inspiration and a true role model to your daughter.

I can’t see if you’ve said how old the children are (sorry if I have missed it), but all you can give her is an age-appropriate explanation. His poor son having to witness that.

You are obviously going to feel devastated because he’s not the man you thought he was, and the impact this will have on both you and your daughter, but you have 100% done the right thing by walking away.

Keeping you and your daughter safe is the priority x

HarrietTrying · 10/06/2026 07:56

You get through it day by day, hour by hour on the bad days. You don’t get through by going back to him. I’ve been there and now three years free.

BEAchDays2 · 10/06/2026 08:03

Your strength is incredible, you have done the right thing.

Onwards.

SweatySpider321 · 10/06/2026 08:03

JillyComeLately · 10/06/2026 01:10

Like others have said, I am so sorry your life has come crashing down so suddenly, please stay safe, you and your daughter will get over this.

I want to say, will this man get help? If he did, could you ever envisage resuming life with him in time?

⬆️ ignore this. DO NOT give him another chance. He will do it again

PetulaGordeno · 10/06/2026 08:13

What a strong woman you are. What a terrible trauma you’ve been through.
It is really important to stay strong as no doubt he will try to ‘win’ you back.
Many women do go back, and it gets worse.
Is the house a rental? Bought? How is he involved because you need to ensure it all gets sorted.
My heart goes out to you.

TheThingOnTheIce · 10/06/2026 08:19

Sorry op. He’s a shit . What is your relationship like with his ex? Do you know why they split up? The excuse is bullshit and I bet he’s done this kind of thing before.

OneThreadOnlybyN · 10/06/2026 09:04

JillyComeLately · 10/06/2026 01:10

Like others have said, I am so sorry your life has come crashing down so suddenly, please stay safe, you and your daughter will get over this.

I want to say, will this man get help? If he did, could you ever envisage resuming life with him in time?

Nope. A clean break is what she needs. Safety for her & her daughter, not a life living on egg shells, never knowing if he'll 'lose it' again.

I want more for her than thst, you should too. Hopefully she does.

OneThreadOnlybyN · 10/06/2026 09:05

SweatySpider321 · 10/06/2026 08:03

⬆️ ignore this. DO NOT give him another chance. He will do it again

Exactly!

OneThreadOnlybyN · 10/06/2026 09:18

You're being so strong, well done. I'm sorry pleased to read that you are fine & nothing will make you ket him back into your lives.

yes DD will be sad, but that's better than growing up being fearful, or worse.

💕

TattedBarley · 10/06/2026 09:36

To answer some questions without being too outing (although it probably will be)
My daughter is due to start school this September, his son is early teens. I am late twenties, ex is mid thirties.
The house is association rented and soley in my name, as are all the bills. I have a physical disability (but was denied PIP as in their eyes I am physically capable) so I work part time, but ex paid for all bills and rent as we were not eligible for UC (which I have now applied for). I will look for further work when my daughter starts school as there are no nursery provisions with enough hours so that I could work more now. I also can’t drive and live in a rural area so it’s slim pickings for new jobs.
Ex’s son’s mum spoke to me on the phone the night it happened and said she was really sorry and that she should have said something before about previous behaviour from him when they were together. They’ve been separated for 10 years and the relationship ended for similar reasons. SSon then confessed to me later in the night it wasn’t the first time a relationship of his dads had ended badly. His family and ex thought he had finally changed and grown up, that being with me had somehow ‘fixed him’. Clearly not.
Writing it all down is helping. I am of course deeply sad about it all but starting to find my anger. How dare he come into our lives, disguised as the perfect partner and father. And how dare he beg me to take him back knowing it’s not the first time he’s done this to someone. How little must he think of me to imagine I’d even consider it. And how could he do it, put his own son through this mess, multiple times. That poor boy. And my daughter has been clinging to me, asking so many questions, some I don’t have the answers to.

OP posts:
BuckChuckets · 10/06/2026 09:39

I'm so sorry this has happened, what a nightmare 😥But I wanted to say you're so strong and you'll get through this, and while it's currently heartbreaking for you daughter, what an amazing example you're setting her 💐

PetulaGordeno · 10/06/2026 09:53

When I read your original post you have been through so much I thought you were possibly a fair bit older.
Gosh you have been through a lot but look at all you have achieved.
And look at all he’s already destroyed. A long relationship with this ex and others ruined.
His poor son (who is not your responsibility) must have thought things were on the up and now this. Thank goodness he has his own mum.
About PIP - it’s a very contentious subject on here right now but don’t give up. Get some advice - the CAB helped me help a relative and we had to be dogged as it went to a tribunal.
Things will get easier.
This man is clearly either an alcoholic or approaching being one and they are the most selfish people in drink. Your safety will not have mattered, he did not care that his son saw it all.
The tears mean nothing. Even if by miracle he got sober the damage is done.
Take some time for yourself and your little girl just the two of you.

FloydPink · 10/06/2026 13:55

I normally am of the view that we all make mistakes and deserve a 2nd chance especially if it's the first mistake. But for me getting physical like that is a step too far. Even when I argued like hell with my ex wife and was full of rage, nothing would have led me to physically assault her. You would be worried every time in the future you have an argument, or he drinks.

But the telling thing for me is your last post when you say that he had form with other women. That to me is a huge red flag. Yeah, it could have been a one-off, but I think had you stayed you would have faced this again.

Stay strong and you sound like you have done all the right things

AlmostAJillSandwich · 10/06/2026 14:55

Reading your last post and knowing you have a young daughter, his ex or family really should have told you he's done this before.

DoesthislookgoodOnMe · 10/06/2026 15:36

You’ve had a lucky escape! You must certainly now feel relief more than anything else? Feel sorry for his son, he sounds lovely and kind.

JillyComeLately · 10/06/2026 23:41

For TattedBarley ·
Thanks for the updates, I am so sorry for the way you have been treated.
I asked if you would consider going back, because so many women do. If some thought I was advocating this, they were wrong.
You answered, and I appreciate that, and also admire your courage and strength, both for yourself and your daughter.
Your ex is a serial abuser, thankfully you have found this out quite early in the relationship, men like him don't change, it's embedded within.
It sounds like you have had some tough times, you got through them then, and you will get through them now.
If you have family and friends, I'm sure they will want to help, so confide in the people you trust, dont go through this alone.
I wish you the best of luck.

notatinydancer · 11/06/2026 08:43

JillyComeLately · 10/06/2026 01:10

Like others have said, I am so sorry your life has come crashing down so suddenly, please stay safe, you and your daughter will get over this.

I want to say, will this man get help? If he did, could you ever envisage resuming life with him in time?

No , if a man is capable of hitting you , he will do it again one day (. I know this for a fact) You’ve made a tough decision @TattedBarleybut the right one.

Tina46 · 11/06/2026 08:56

JillyComeLately · 10/06/2026 01:10

Like others have said, I am so sorry your life has come crashing down so suddenly, please stay safe, you and your daughter will get over this.

I want to say, will this man get help? If he did, could you ever envisage resuming life with him in time?

What? Really? Men who abuse their partners don't get second chances. He is an abuser with an alcohol problem. Why oh why would this ever be a good idea?

YourOliveBalonz · 11/06/2026 09:04

I think it’s totally normal to grieve what you had, or rather what you thought you had, so yes this is going to feel shit but it won’t forever, heartache never does.

You should be so proud of yourself for ending it and knowing that there is no way back from this. I think you should report the assault. It may not go anywhere but it could become a crucial detail in a future Clare’s Law request that could keep someone else safe.

TattedBarley · 11/06/2026 13:45

Hi all,
Have since found out more about him and his previous behaviour towards not only other women, but also his son. He truly is a vile, horrid man.
I’m really considering reporting him, not to bring any charges (as I know it’s unrealistic) but to put it on file for any women in the future via Clare’s law. I’m struggling with this decision, any time I’ve had to go to the police it’s been incredibly draining, frustrating and comes to nothing.
I’m still grieving, but my daughter I have a lot of support and there will be brighter days ahead.

OP posts:
LouiseMadetheBestBroccoliPasta · 11/06/2026 14:18

TattedBarley · 11/06/2026 13:45

Hi all,
Have since found out more about him and his previous behaviour towards not only other women, but also his son. He truly is a vile, horrid man.
I’m really considering reporting him, not to bring any charges (as I know it’s unrealistic) but to put it on file for any women in the future via Clare’s law. I’m struggling with this decision, any time I’ve had to go to the police it’s been incredibly draining, frustrating and comes to nothing.
I’m still grieving, but my daughter I have a lot of support and there will be brighter days ahead.

I'm so sorry. His poor son. And poor you and your little DD.

It would be such a kind act to other women to report his attack on you. These men are serial destroyers: after they've wrecked one woman's life, they immediately slide onto the next victim they can trick and consume, rather than getting therapy so that they never harm anyone again.

OneThreadOnlybyN · 11/06/2026 14:25

(((HUG)))

I can totally understand your mixed feelings about reporting it, but if you coukd find the strength to do it, it coukd save another woman or child's life.

Will his Ex report him?

his poor poor son 🥲. I hope his mum is getting him help.

You & DD will get through this because you're strong enough to help her. There are people tgst will help you if you're struggling to kniw what to say to her.

Plan some nice things this weekend! It should be a lively weekend for a picnic somewhere lovely! 💕 team Mum £ DD gave thus!!

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