Are your children’s vaccines up to date?

Set a reminder

Please or to access all these features

Step-parenting

Connect with other Mumsnetters here for step-parenting advice and support.

AIBU to think this is totally out of whack?

60 replies

monkeywithasuitcase · 10/08/2017 14:56

Fairly new relationship, about 1 year in.

We have DSS (11) 2 weeks out of each month full-time during school holidays, and for this 2 weeks, we're staying at my mum's place in France.

I've had my concerns about the dynamic between the three of us for a while, but on holiday... everything always gets clearer / magnified, and I'm just about at breaking point.

We've been here 4 days and I've not had more than 10 minutes with DP to have a conversation. I feel like the third wheel - like I'm gatecrashing their romantic getaway.

My mum set up a double mattress in her home office to add another 2 sleeping spaces in addition to the sofa. DP seems to assume that he and DSS will be sleeping together on the mattress, and says we can see if we can all squeeze in together. The past 2 nights I've been on the couch, because WTF...

DP showers with him. He dresses him. I've not seen DSS do up his own shoelaces or fetch himself so much as a glass of water. As soon as they're both awake they're glued at the hip. We walk down the street, they're dawdling behind me with their arms wrapped around one another. I try to join and walk with them, and somehow I end up behind or in front – not that they're talking to me anyway. We sit on the train – they're gazing into each other's eyes, DP is stroking his head, they're talking in hushed tones, and I'm sat there like a lemon.

We went to a theme park the other day. DP's standing in the line for rides with his arm around his son and the other one leaning on the fence, so he has his back to me and I'm literally blocked out of their space. Anyone looking would think we'd never met.

We went into town for a walk – again, I'm doing my best impression of a satellite while they're arm in arm, largely ignoring me.

Then DSS decides he needs to go to the bathroom. I point out a cafe to use, and then stand on my own in the street for 15 minutes while DP accompanies his 11 year old son to take a poo.

Sitting on the couch, DSS asks for a cushion. DP whips one out from under my arm without so much as making eye contact with me, and hands it to DSS.

DSS has no bedtime, or even "go and spend some time in your room even if you don't want to sleep yet" time, so whenever we get back from a trip out, DP and DSS snuggle up together for the evening watching video games on Youtube until DSS passes out, while I sit in the other room with my mother, who's totally confused about why my boyfriend is choosing to ignore the adults (his girlfriend and her mother, not a hotel manager) and be with his son (who he's been wrapped up in all day) instead.

I've been close to tears over and over for the past few days, needing to talk to DP about it, but DSS is always there - we've had ZERO time just the two of us. Last night I nearly lost it - I had about an hour's sleep after spinning circles in my brain all night.

Am I missing something? Am I being unreasonably jealous? Is it normal to be completely goo-goo 100% of the time over an almost-teenager?

Worth saying DSS is a LOVELY kid – I genuinely like him a lot.

But this is starting to feel like a deal breaker. As far as I'm aware, the adult couple is a unit of partners and the child, especially at 11, is learning to spread his/her wings and do things for themselves. Learn some independence and know that there's a safe space with people who love them to run back to.

This feels like they're the couple and I'm an afterthought.

I can't criticise DP's parenting - it's not my place, even though it's light years from how I'd raise my kids – but when it has an impact on me... AIBU to say what I'm feeling and expect a bit of attention every now and again?

OP posts:
Are your children’s vaccines up to date?
Slightlyperturbedowlagain · 10/08/2017 16:55

I must say though that obviously my DH didn't shower with his DD or go in to toilets with her.

biffyboom · 10/08/2017 16:55

Sleeping together? Showering him? Taking him to the toilet???
Time to move on, I can't believe you've tolerated this weirdness for a year Shock

MrsPringles · 10/08/2017 17:10

Op, this is really strange.

I have DSC and would be really concerned/weirded out if my husband were to act that way with them

DressedCrab · 10/08/2017 17:21

This is very weird.

talonofthehawk · 10/08/2017 17:22

I mean...too comfortable.
Do you get any other warning signs about DPs behaviour?

monkeywithasuitcase · 10/08/2017 17:22

talonofthehawk - what kind of warning signs do you mean?

OP posts:
meatup · 10/08/2017 17:26

Seriously strange.

talonofthehawk · 10/08/2017 17:28

Watching an 11 year old shit and showering with one isn't normal OP.

Could it be something more sinister?

Slightlyperturbedowlagain · 10/08/2017 17:50

Not necessarily- Presumably he wasn't actually in the toilet cubicle, and actually our 11 year old does need to be supervised in the shower from time to time because he sometimes still tries to avoid actually washing when he's in a rush to do something more interesting (And his friends parents have said similar about their sons)

talonofthehawk · 10/08/2017 17:52

I read it as the father and son shower together- did I misread? I apologise if so

Slightlyperturbedowlagain · 10/08/2017 17:56

You're right talon it does say 'showers with him' but does that just mean one showers while the other does teeth/dries? Most domestic shower cubicles would be hard pushed to fit an adult plus an 11year old in?

ProfessorBranestawm · 10/08/2017 17:59

Wow.

Is the sharing a bed just happening now? Could it be his way of keeping you away anyway i.e. He's not that into you anymore? Which might actually be a good thing given the other stuff

BackInTheRoom · 10/08/2017 18:12

What Professor said:

'Wow.

Is the sharing a bed just happening now? Could it be his way of keeping you away anyway i.e. He's not that into you anymore? Which might actually be a good thing given the other stuff '

On our last family holiday, my STBXH would hold our teen daughters (12) hand or link arms and I would be left trailing behind. I knew it felt wrong, that he didn't like/love me anymore but I wasn't sure at that point. A year later though, he dumped me after nearly 20 years...

HipsterAssassin · 10/08/2017 19:04

Ewww! Sounds terrible!

I ended it with a man over his guilt-induced über clingy limpet-like relationship to his spoiled 9yo dd. It was like she was the main relationship in his life. She called all the shots. Walked us to romantic dinners. Never lifted a finger. I think it began when his marriage had been in tatters. Totally at odds with my parenting.

I never looked back. How you can bear this I don't know. Time to fake an outbreak of Niro virus. If he doesn't leave I would just go. I think this relationship should end tbh.

Blazedandconfused · 10/08/2017 19:15

He's infantilising him, but I think I can see where he's coming from.

He spends so little time with him, he must miss his son terribly. And perhaps feels that the rate his son is growing up, does not match up with his own experience of his son growing up, because of all the time apart.

I know my DH and sons are incredibly close and I'm just thinking about how he would feel if he didn't see them every day.

It's a tough one. I think being close to his son is lovely, but he's 11 now, not 3, and the relationship needs to evolve.

talonofthehawk · 10/08/2017 19:31

OP are you okay?

talonofthehawk · 10/08/2017 19:35

Sounds like a romantic relationship. Very strange.
I hope you're ok OP.

Dustbunny1900 · 10/08/2017 20:04

I agree with talonofthehawk. This is concerning op, for your DSS. But you'll have to clarify what you mean by showering with and going into the bathroom with and sleeping next to

talonofthehawk · 10/08/2017 20:38

Very worrying that OP hasn't come back.

BubbleBed · 10/08/2017 20:46

I'd leave. Sorry. I dated someone like this. He wouldn't even answer a text whilst with his son. He calls him his best friend, and ignores all else when he's there. He's also 11.

It didn't last.

I agree with fathers parenting right, and not ignoring a child for a partner - but seriously, this is extreme to the other end. You will ALWAYS come last.

sweetbitter · 10/08/2017 22:35

I don't think it necessarily sounds that weird, it just sounds like your DP has been totally ineffective in putting some basic expectations in place, eg son sleeping alone, son going to toilet alone, son being able to shower himself.

My DSS is a similar age and I'm sure he'd love it if DP wanted to share a bed with him and always sit next to him and do everything together. He worships his dad, and loves spending time with him, as much as possible. Except that stuff like sleeping together and being totally absorbed in each other all of the time to he exclusion of an adult partner is crossing some "normal" lines at age 11, or even younger to be honest, and it has always been the case that me and DP are the adult couple and DSS is the child and normal boundaries are in place.

The only thing I can think is that DSS might be feeling insecure in another country, in an unknown house, on your territory etc. In which case I think his dad should definitely be helping him settle in, but not to the extent you describe where apparently all this is happening as if it's normal and expected. How different are things at home usually?

TitaniasCloset · 11/08/2017 00:20

This sounds really strange. Run away op, run far away.

WhiteCat1704 · 11/08/2017 09:34

Talk to your partner..See what he has to say...If it's anything other then "I'm so sorry, this is very new to me, I didn't realize I was excluding you" etc. leave.

Sleeping with a 11year old over you is wrong. No time for the 2 of you is wrong.
Who are you to this men? How dare he waste your time if he has no space/capability to have a relationship with anybody else but his son.

It's very disrespectful to your DM too.

Also..yes his son might be less interested in spending time with his dad as he grows or NOT! He might decide he wants to live with him..common for tennagers to change the resident parent if they can.

Cherrytart6 · 11/08/2017 09:43

Did you have a night alone to talk?

I think it's weird you've had no time together and have been shunned. Of course DS has to take priority but he's a child not a partner

SilverBirchTree · 11/08/2017 09:51

That doesn't seem normal to me. Maybe the son will end it when he hits his teens?