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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 would this comment from your partner have made you feel?

115 replies

TotallyLostWhoIAm · 29/06/2026 11:57

I have been with my partner for 5+ years. We are both older (50s).

For a few reasons, I don't have huge self confidence or particularly high self esteem. I don't really share these thoughts irl.

I live with a lot of insecurities that I'm not 'good enough' and, whilst I use all the skills I've developed to challenge this, I'm not immune to experiences that knock my confidence.

I'm posting about a specific incident but I'm happy to clarify and add detail if necessary. It's not the only thing of this nature that has happened but the comments seem to be ill considered rather than intentionally malicious.

I recently went to a local event with my partner and some friends. It was a really big deal and there were a lot of people there. As part of the event, there was a bit of karaoke.

My friend suggested we did something together for old times' sake as we used to do a lot of singing etc together for fun when we were younger. She is a professional musician/singer now. I am not. And, whilst I can carry a tune fairly well, no one is ever going to pay me to hear me sing!

I've been struggling a lot with my confidence recently for a few reasons and, as such, as I wanted to do it for a laugh and for old times sake but also so as not to let my insecurities win. I was really nervous about it and wasn't really looking forward to it at all. But I wasn't going to back out either.

As it was our turn, I stood up thinking it's OK, this'll be over in 3 mins and its not that big a deal, just have fun. It'll be fun... and my partner leant over to me and whispered, "You're up! Just make sure you take the microphone. She doesn't need any help to be heard!"

And just like that, i was floored. All I heard as I walked the 20 feet to stage was, you're just a bit shit really. She's so much better than you. And, whilst she is and I know that, I didn't need to be reminded of it by him just as I was about to put myself out there.

Instead of enjoying it, I just stood there for 3 mins thinking he's looking at me and thinking I'm shit, too quiet, too far from the microphone. Am I even in tune? When those thoughts wouldn't have entered my head otherwise. We all know what karaoke is like and we were supposed to he having a light hearted moment of silliness.

This was over a month ago and I haven't been able to bring myself to sing in front of him since. I normally sing around the house like most people do. I haven't even engaged in any conversation about the event in general in case he says something about it.

I just feel like a tiny piece of the "I'm ok" narrative I feed myself has just died. It's just chipped away another flake of confidence.

I know that won't have been his intention. I haven't spoken to him about it because I've felt too ashamed. He'd say he was just trying to be supportive. He wouldn't see (until I explained) that being supportive doesn't look like reminding someone they're a bit shit at something just as they're about to do it in feont of other people. He is often well intentioned but a bit of an emotional/verbal bull in a china shop.

I don't know whether I should speak to him.

And I don't know if it's something that sounded bad to me coming through the Not Good Enough filter or whether it was actually a dick thing thing say. Or whether it was fairly normal comment and most people would have had a different reaction/internal voice. I know it doesn't matter what other people would think/feel but it's important for me to understand other perspectives.

I just really wanted to know whether a comment like this from your partner, when you were already feeling a bit vulnerable/nervous, would have bothered you?

Is it something they'd have said?

I know it wasnt done to be malicious but it does reflect how he sees me.

OP posts:
Bonkers1966 · 29/06/2026 12:25

You friend is noisy and you are quiet. Also somewhat lacking in understanding.

chirrupybird · 29/06/2026 12:30

He wanted to hear you and was worried your professional singer friend would drown you out, he was just being supportive and helpful. In no way was it a criticism, quite the reverse.

C152 · 29/06/2026 12:36

It doesn't sound like it was a dick comment. If my partner had said it to me, I would have snickered and gone on stage. I would take it that he meant your friend is naturally very loud and that's it.

ginislife · 29/06/2026 12:36

I agree with everyone else but I can’t help thinking you’d really benefit from some sort of counselling as from what you’ve said your mum did a great job on destroying any self confidence you may have had.

wanderingwillows · 29/06/2026 12:37

Yes he is saying she’s too loud and doesn’t need the mic. It wasn’t a slight on you at all

operationplaytime · 29/06/2026 12:41

See I would have taken the ‘she doesn’t need any help to be heard’ to mean she perhaps likes the limelight a bit too much or she might have a tendency to steal the limelight.

I really don’t think that was about you at all and I think you’ve really misunderstood on this occasion!

OMGDidYouSayThat · 29/06/2026 12:44

Malinia · 29/06/2026 11:59

I think you completely misunderstood the comment. I took it as him saying your friend is loud and might overshadow you and he wanted to be sure you were heard.

I would have thought exactly the same thing, i think if he was trying to make you feel crap he would have said, make sure she takes the mic.

Sherararara · 29/06/2026 12:44

Same as everything else I can’t anything wrong with what he said.
And if that comment has affected you so badly to result in this post then I would highly recommend you see someone.

OMGDidYouSayThat · 29/06/2026 12:45

TotallyLostWhoIAm · 29/06/2026 11:57

I have been with my partner for 5+ years. We are both older (50s).

For a few reasons, I don't have huge self confidence or particularly high self esteem. I don't really share these thoughts irl.

I live with a lot of insecurities that I'm not 'good enough' and, whilst I use all the skills I've developed to challenge this, I'm not immune to experiences that knock my confidence.

I'm posting about a specific incident but I'm happy to clarify and add detail if necessary. It's not the only thing of this nature that has happened but the comments seem to be ill considered rather than intentionally malicious.

I recently went to a local event with my partner and some friends. It was a really big deal and there were a lot of people there. As part of the event, there was a bit of karaoke.

My friend suggested we did something together for old times' sake as we used to do a lot of singing etc together for fun when we were younger. She is a professional musician/singer now. I am not. And, whilst I can carry a tune fairly well, no one is ever going to pay me to hear me sing!

I've been struggling a lot with my confidence recently for a few reasons and, as such, as I wanted to do it for a laugh and for old times sake but also so as not to let my insecurities win. I was really nervous about it and wasn't really looking forward to it at all. But I wasn't going to back out either.

As it was our turn, I stood up thinking it's OK, this'll be over in 3 mins and its not that big a deal, just have fun. It'll be fun... and my partner leant over to me and whispered, "You're up! Just make sure you take the microphone. She doesn't need any help to be heard!"

And just like that, i was floored. All I heard as I walked the 20 feet to stage was, you're just a bit shit really. She's so much better than you. And, whilst she is and I know that, I didn't need to be reminded of it by him just as I was about to put myself out there.

Instead of enjoying it, I just stood there for 3 mins thinking he's looking at me and thinking I'm shit, too quiet, too far from the microphone. Am I even in tune? When those thoughts wouldn't have entered my head otherwise. We all know what karaoke is like and we were supposed to he having a light hearted moment of silliness.

This was over a month ago and I haven't been able to bring myself to sing in front of him since. I normally sing around the house like most people do. I haven't even engaged in any conversation about the event in general in case he says something about it.

I just feel like a tiny piece of the "I'm ok" narrative I feed myself has just died. It's just chipped away another flake of confidence.

I know that won't have been his intention. I haven't spoken to him about it because I've felt too ashamed. He'd say he was just trying to be supportive. He wouldn't see (until I explained) that being supportive doesn't look like reminding someone they're a bit shit at something just as they're about to do it in feont of other people. He is often well intentioned but a bit of an emotional/verbal bull in a china shop.

I don't know whether I should speak to him.

And I don't know if it's something that sounded bad to me coming through the Not Good Enough filter or whether it was actually a dick thing thing say. Or whether it was fairly normal comment and most people would have had a different reaction/internal voice. I know it doesn't matter what other people would think/feel but it's important for me to understand other perspectives.

I just really wanted to know whether a comment like this from your partner, when you were already feeling a bit vulnerable/nervous, would have bothered you?

Is it something they'd have said?

I know it wasnt done to be malicious but it does reflect how he sees me.

What did he say afterwards? Did he compliment you? Or say christ your friend has a big gob?

VickyEadie · 29/06/2026 12:48

I'm with all the others saying he meant he WANTED to be able to hear you and you not be overshadowed by your "loud" friend.

1985goingbackagain · 29/06/2026 12:49

Surely he wanted to make sure people could hear you, not just her, which is the complete opposite of him thinking you are crap or belittling you.

I’m the last person to give other people tips on confidence & positivity but even i am struggling to understand how you have managed to turn this into a negative OP!

ThatLilacTiger · 29/06/2026 12:50

TotallyLostWhoIAm · 29/06/2026 12:24

You didn't read it properly either.

Because I didn't ask what he meant 👍🏻

What? Yes you did. You said:

And I don't know if it's something that sounded bad to me coming through the Not Good Enough filter or whether it was actually a dick thing thing say. Or whether it was fairly normal comment and most people would have had a different reaction/internal voice.

So to answer the question you did in fact ask, yes this is something that just sounded bad to you because you're excruciatingly self-absorbed. It wasn't a dick thing to say, it was an attempt to bolster you that you found a way to take badly. It was a completely normal comment that most people would have reacted to differently because they would have understood it. Sorry to sound harsh but your post is one of the most navel gazing sad sack things I've read in a while but then you're getting all defensive at people pointing out you were mistaken. You seem determined to wallow.

Apileofballyhoo · 29/06/2026 12:54

Oddly before I started hrt I was misreading people's comments all the time. A lovely friend suggested I take a bit of time off work as I was overwhelmed, and I took this to mean I was crap at my job. When you're starting from a low anxious place it's easy to interpret things with the worst possible meaning. I think your partner wanted to hear you. Flowers

TotallyLostWhoIAm · 29/06/2026 12:54

OMGDidYouSayThat · 29/06/2026 12:45

What did he say afterwards? Did he compliment you? Or say christ your friend has a big gob?

He didn't say anything.

I went and got a drink and sat down. I couldn't even look at him because I felt he'd just been looking at me thinking how crap and how much of an embarrassment I was. It hasn't been mentioned again.

The fact I was so nervous and felt so ashamed meant I didn't even enjoy it and probably looked really awkward.

He put the same song on at home a couple of weeks later. It's one I often sing around the house but haven't sung it once since.

It was just a daft song she and I used to sing all the time when we were a lot, lot younger.

OP posts:
OMGDidYouSayThat · 29/06/2026 12:58

TotallyLostWhoIAm · 29/06/2026 12:54

He didn't say anything.

I went and got a drink and sat down. I couldn't even look at him because I felt he'd just been looking at me thinking how crap and how much of an embarrassment I was. It hasn't been mentioned again.

The fact I was so nervous and felt so ashamed meant I didn't even enjoy it and probably looked really awkward.

He put the same song on at home a couple of weeks later. It's one I often sing around the house but haven't sung it once since.

It was just a daft song she and I used to sing all the time when we were a lot, lot younger.

You are both mature adults sharing life together, you know what, why not just ask him outright, by the way, you never said but what did you think about my karaoke performance, make it lighthearted, i know i'm no Aretha Franklin but i didn't bomb it did i? Prepare your response accordingly depending on what he says...

What do you have to lose, you might be worrying yourself over nothing...be happy.

Iwanttobeafraser · 29/06/2026 12:58

OP, have you had any therapy? I ask becuase like everyone else, I read that comment as hugely supportive of you and/or slightly negative towards your friend - ie he wants YOU to be heard and thinks your friend might have over shadowed you.

Let's look at this logically - if he thought you were bad, why on earth would be encourage you to make yourself louder and more audible? Objectively, that simply makes no sense. Which means your anxiety and insecurity are so in control that you are starting to border on disordered thinking.

It sounds like you are very aware of your challenge and have really worked hard at it, but I'd recommend that you consider some talking therapy if you haven't already, or restart it if you have.

TotallyLostWhoIAm · 29/06/2026 13:01

ThatLilacTiger · 29/06/2026 12:50

What? Yes you did. You said:

And I don't know if it's something that sounded bad to me coming through the Not Good Enough filter or whether it was actually a dick thing thing say. Or whether it was fairly normal comment and most people would have had a different reaction/internal voice.

So to answer the question you did in fact ask, yes this is something that just sounded bad to you because you're excruciatingly self-absorbed. It wasn't a dick thing to say, it was an attempt to bolster you that you found a way to take badly. It was a completely normal comment that most people would have reacted to differently because they would have understood it. Sorry to sound harsh but your post is one of the most navel gazing sad sack things I've read in a while but then you're getting all defensive at people pointing out you were mistaken. You seem determined to wallow.

I was explaining my thought process and reason for posting so that people who did actually read the post would have a context

What I actually asked was how other people would interpret the comment if it were made to them (it was literally the title), which, thankfully, most people seem to.have understood. I didn't at any point ask what other people thought he meant.

OP posts:
Crudd99 · 29/06/2026 13:04

Malinia · 29/06/2026 11:59

I think you completely misunderstood the comment. I took it as him saying your friend is loud and might overshadow you and he wanted to be sure you were heard.

Agree.

anotherdaytosmile · 29/06/2026 13:05

You’re way overthinking this and getting it wrong I’m afraid. Have you tried CBT to help you challenge these thoughts, or meditation to reduce anxiety? It’s worked wonders for me tbh

whippersnapper55 · 29/06/2026 13:05

I think this is your insecurity colouring your view. Objectively, it sounds like he was giving you encouragement, not thinking you're a bit shit at all!

Iwanttobeafraser · 29/06/2026 13:05

What I actually asked was how other people would interpret the comment if it were made to them (it was literally the title), which, thankfully, most people seem to.haveunderstood. I didn't at any point ask what other people thought he meant.

To be fair OP, I would suggest that my definition, most of us would interpret the comment based on what we thought it meant. So no, we wouldn't get upset or interpret it badly becuase we would see the comment as one that was being supportive.

Mindtheagp · 29/06/2026 13:06

This is totally on you. Your husband made an encouraging comment at the right time and you have chosen to become depressed about it. You would be far better off considering why this has happened

Crudd99 · 29/06/2026 13:08

ThatLilacTiger · 29/06/2026 12:50

What? Yes you did. You said:

And I don't know if it's something that sounded bad to me coming through the Not Good Enough filter or whether it was actually a dick thing thing say. Or whether it was fairly normal comment and most people would have had a different reaction/internal voice.

So to answer the question you did in fact ask, yes this is something that just sounded bad to you because you're excruciatingly self-absorbed. It wasn't a dick thing to say, it was an attempt to bolster you that you found a way to take badly. It was a completely normal comment that most people would have reacted to differently because they would have understood it. Sorry to sound harsh but your post is one of the most navel gazing sad sack things I've read in a while but then you're getting all defensive at people pointing out you were mistaken. You seem determined to wallow.

Completely. Agree.

OutOfApricots · 29/06/2026 13:08

TotallyLostWhoIAm · 29/06/2026 13:01

I was explaining my thought process and reason for posting so that people who did actually read the post would have a context

What I actually asked was how other people would interpret the comment if it were made to them (it was literally the title), which, thankfully, most people seem to.have understood. I didn't at any point ask what other people thought he meant.

My interpretation would have been "Your friend has a voice like a foghorn".

SalmonOnFinnCrisp · 29/06/2026 13:08

Malinia · 29/06/2026 11:59

I think you completely misunderstood the comment. I took it as him saying your friend is loud and might overshadow you and he wanted to be sure you were heard.

This.

Is she a massive extrovert sounds like he was throwing shade on her tbh.

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