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OH thinks I should be doing more

372 replies

KhakiGoose · 13/01/2025 23:11

Throwaway account. I actually posted this on another step-parenting forum recently but wanted to get some more perspective as after yet another conversation with my OH about it, I feel like I’m going around in circles. This is going to be long, sorry.

I’ve been with my partner for a year now, we don’t live together and I have no plans to. I have DS13 and DS10 and he has one DS who is 4, and we both have 50/50. Our Sundays with our respective kids fall on opposite weekends so I spend my free ones with OH and his son.

I'll admit that when I met his son (very early on in the relationship which with hindsight I wasn't 100% comfortable with) I did put maximum effort in to everything the whole time we were together. Obviously I wanted it to go well and my OH was also super keen for us to start to 'bond’. His son is sweet enough but I find him very 'full on' and quite demanding of time and attention. For example he doesn't seem to be able to play by himself for even very short periods of time (he will start sobbing and saying he can't and doesn't know how to etc when suggested to him). When we are playing, all his games involve being very physical, pretending to be things (pirates, aliens etc), hide and seek, the floor is lava, that kind of thing. Even when we sit down and watch a movie or show, it's a constant running commentary on everything and just doesn't feel like a remotely relaxing experience. He's only recently in the last couple of weeks starting sleeping in his own bed consistently (after I pretty much insisted on it) and will still wake up needing OH a few times a night. I do also find him quite baby-ish in other ways, such as still having a dummy, having a bottle of juice at bedtime, using a buggy etc, but I try to keep my parenting preferences to myself if it's not directly affecting me (like the sleep issue was).

Anyway, for various reasons I haven't been sleeping well at all for the past 3 months or so, have been dealing with a few chronic health issue flare ups, and struggling a bit with anxiety. As a result I've been pretty exhausted. I work a fairly mentally demanding job, and as mentioned have two boys of my own who also have busy schedules. I've found myself starting to put some boundaries in place with my OH's son in terms of taking more regular breaks from playtime, taking myself off to the bedroom for some time to rest and decompress (between 15-30 mins for example), going to bed earlier if they’re having a late movie night or where possible having a lie in on a Sunday.

During a discussion about all sorts of life/parenting things, it's come to light that my OH isn't too happy that I've taken this step back. He feels I should be making more effort to play whenever his DS wants, and should be getting up with them when it's his Sunday as the kid is excited to spend time with me and it's unfair of me to 'lie in bed for hours' ignoring them downstairs. Aside from the fact that I'm particularly exhausted right now, l'm up by 6am five days a week and often take my DS's to football matches of a weekend or am facilitating their social lives and sleepovers etc, even when it’s not technically my weekend, (which I absolutely don’t mind). I feel like I'm entitled to spend the odd Sunday l actually have off, resting and recharging a little. For context I can only think of one occasion where I did stay in bed for a few hours when I was having a truly shitty day, more often than not l'll be up and about with them within an hour or so and will then spend the whole day with them. OH says he feels disappointed that I don't want to maximise my time with his DS, that he's tired too but just has to get on with it, and that he finds it hard not to be sad when DS is excited to spend time with me but l 'choose to sit on my phone ignoring him’ instead.

I've told him that I'm giving everything I have right now. It's not that I don't care, don't like him or his son, or want the relationship to go backwards. But I'm not a bottomless pit, I'm a human being with my own needs and wants and I'm struggling to give everyone and everything in my life 100% or even 80% right now because I'm so run down. He says he understands to a degree but has essentially told me that unless I can be all in, I should just stay at home when he has his son as he can't cope with the disappointment. My stance is that it shouldn't need to be so black and white, all or nothing. We should be able to compromise, he should be able to trust me that I'm not just being lazy and I will give as much effort as I possibly can (which yes may look different on any given day), and that it might perhaps be a valuable lesson for his son to learn that people aren't robots here to cater to his every whim every waking minute of the day.

Am I being selfish?

OP posts:
Are your children’s vaccines up to date?
KhakiGoose · 14/01/2025 09:12

Sorry that wasn’t meant to be a reply to your comment @Namechangedforgoodreasons! But probably still relevant to your points!

OP posts:
EvangelicalAboutButteredToast · 14/01/2025 09:14

I’ve read all your posts OP. I think you need to make an action and watch the fallout. Then decide what future the relationship has.

For example I think you should call his bluff and agree that his time with his son should be his time and you should remain at home to rewind. Personally I would choose to have Saturday and Saturday night/Sunday morning to myself and then perhaps see them for Sunday lunch into the early evening. The reason I say this is that if you see them Saturday he will convince you to stay the night.

If you go that route you need to stick to it and see if your relationship crumbles off the back of it. I have my suspicions alongside other posters that you were very convenient as a mother substitute. If you resign that position would he still be interested in you as a girlfriend? Time would tell on that.

PullTheBricksDown · 14/01/2025 09:15

KhakiGoose · 14/01/2025 08:49

What does your OH do when the child says these things? Does he attempt to distract him or tell him that they can play together?

He does sometimes step in and take over, but only after he’s finished having his bit of time out and I don’t know if I’m being over sensitive but I feel like there’s a lot of huffing and puffing and big dramatic sighs when he does. A lot of the time though he seems to pretend he can’t hear it.

I hope you're not going to be there in future on these weekends, but if this happens again, I would be saying loudly 'Daddy will play with you now. Come on Dad, it's your turn!' and blanking all and any huffing and sighing. Don't allow him to opt out. Just think, if you weren't there it wouldn't even be an option.

KhakiGoose · 14/01/2025 09:17

Everything is always the women's fault with him, isn't it?

He has claimed to me in the past that almost every woman he’s ever been with has been abusive in some way to him. 🤔

OP posts:
PullTheBricksDown · 14/01/2025 09:21

KhakiGoose · 14/01/2025 09:17

Everything is always the women's fault with him, isn't it?

He has claimed to me in the past that almost every woman he’s ever been with has been abusive in some way to him. 🤔

He'll be saying this about you in due course.

Noshowlomo · 14/01/2025 09:21

KhakiGoose · 14/01/2025 09:17

Everything is always the women's fault with him, isn't it?

He has claimed to me in the past that almost every woman he’s ever been with has been abusive in some way to him. 🤔

This speaks volumes

FriendsDrinkBook · 14/01/2025 09:26

This is worse than I thought op. Initially it read as him being a little lazy and that he might pull his socks up if you pull back. Now it's clear that he manipulates others into doing as much as possible for him and calls them names when they say no.

EverybodyLTB · 14/01/2025 09:30

He sounds like a manipulative bullshitter, who has made you a stepmum by stealth. I’d be reconsidering the point of continuing this relationship. You seem to have a lot of suspicions around his motives, believe he has lied and can’t cope with his child on his own. What redeeming qualities does this man have?

MostlyHappyMummy · 14/01/2025 09:32

I can't work out what's more amazing, the fact that men are so good at recruiting unpaid Nannies or that women are so happy to take up this role.
there are hundreds of threads describing exactly the same situation

ManyATrueWord · 14/01/2025 09:38

KhakiGoose · 14/01/2025 09:17

Everything is always the women's fault with him, isn't it?

He has claimed to me in the past that almost every woman he’s ever been with has been abusive in some way to him. 🤔

🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩🚩

Twaddlepip · 14/01/2025 09:43

KhakiGoose · 14/01/2025 09:17

Everything is always the women's fault with him, isn't it?

He has claimed to me in the past that almost every woman he’s ever been with has been abusive in some way to him. 🤔

If you were to ask my OH, he’d tell you his ex did absolutely sod all for their child once she finished breastfeeding.

Bullshit.

You’ve got a dud here, unfortunately. He wants a childminder/cleaner/cook/nanny/shagpiece.

The bit about him vaping and playing Pokémon while you play with his son, before saying you don’t do enough with his son (wtf?) is infuriating.

Namerequired · 14/01/2025 09:46

He wants you to take on the hard work with his son while he rests, and is using emotional manipulation to do so. It would be different if he was playing with you both or taking turns at it.
Of course the child loves you, you are probably the only one putting the effort in. There’s no way he’s doing what you do, no one could keep that up consistently with no rest. He’s using you.
Stay at home when he has his child and as a pp said maybe go for tea one evening with them to keep the relationship with his child.

Diomi · 14/01/2025 09:47

Why does a 4yr old without any disabilities have a buggy? That alone would probably irritate me enough to dump him! 😂

RancidRuby · 14/01/2025 09:48

Red flags all over the shop with this bloke, OP. I'd be moving on from this relationship if I were you.

FriendsDrinkBook · 14/01/2025 09:50

@KhakiGoose if/when you break up with him , you'll be the woman that broke his and his son's heart. You'll be used as the reason he wants full commitment to 'family time' from future partners , they must be all in from the beginning! For he can't suffer that disappointment again , it wouldn't be fair on his child , his world.

Now where's that tiny violin?

Beamur · 14/01/2025 09:53

You are wise not to move in.
I have to agree with many posters - he is manoeuvring you into a significant caring role for his son (to reduce his load) by guilt and manipulation.
Set your boundaries, call his bluff and don't go at the weekend when he has his son.
It will show fairly quickly if your primary role to him is girlfriend or childcare.
Although his framing every relationship he's had as abusive would be an absolutely massive red flag for me.

Treesinthewind · 14/01/2025 09:55

KhakiGoose · 13/01/2025 23:46

He sees you as a nanny. One thing that men finding themselves single tend to do is look for a woman to do all the domestic stuff.

That’s the other thing, it’s very recently come to light that him and his ex only officially split a few weeks before I started talking to him on a dating site. Specific dates were never discussed but it was heavily implied it was closer to a year earlier than it actually was. He now says they were separated during this time but still living together, which I know does happen while people are figuring out the logistics of splitting up. But it has made me question if he was looking for a replacement mother figure for his DS as much as a girlfriend.

Run run run! My most recent ex did this too. Talked about his "ex-wife" when they hadn't actually divorced. Said he'd been single 18 months but the dates just didn't make sense and she's only actually moved out less than a year before we met and he'd had two "relationships" since. He absolutely hasn't processed the end of his marriage and was trying to distract himself/replace what he'd lost with a new partner. Needless to say I ended up heartbroken.

TicTac80 · 14/01/2025 09:56

He sounds like a nightmare (your OH, not the 4yr old!). Really manipulative and sneaky. Thing is, OP, you've done your time with looking after young DCs. He seems to be expecting you to be Mary Poppins 24/7 when you're over there (whilst he takes time out for R+R, sneaky vaping and doom scrolling)....and it appears that he's manoeuvred you into that role pretty damned quickly, whilst giving you the sob story of him being abused and screwed over by all the women he's ever been with. Sure, interact with the little one but I think you're doing more than enough.

I don't think you're being selfish at all. You've done more than enough. He just wants more. I'd be ending things with him and focussing on good R+R and self care for yourself. Otherwise, call his bluff and DON'T stay there! Just meet up with him and LO for an afternoon: a PP mentioned Sunday afternoon - great idea: you get most of the weekend to yourself, and just a short time to play Mary Poppins, without it wiping out your entire weekend...

napody · 14/01/2025 09:57

Haven't rtft but is there any way you can align your weekends with your respective children so you each spend that weekend parenting your own? Then you have the other weekend with each other?

Obviously he is BU- you could occasionally do something with all 5 of you like a day out or lunch, but the grunt work of getting up with his kid is his job!

Treesinthewind · 14/01/2025 09:58

Just seen that he complains about his ex as a mother too. That's a huge red flag to me. It's called triangulation and I'm guessing he might have initially compared you positively to her, so you now feel pressure to not be like her? Even if you don't, I wonder if that's his intention.

friendlycat · 14/01/2025 09:59

There are just too many red flags with this entire situation.

WhatNoRaisins · 14/01/2025 10:07

The claiming that every ex has been an abuser or "crazy" is a massive red flag in of itself. Everyone needs to be aware of that.

Loopytiles · 14/01/2025 10:10

wise up, OP, being single and open to other potential nicer people would be so much better than this man.

Lovelysummerdays · 14/01/2025 10:15

One of the reasons I broke up with my ex was I was supposed to be constantly on with the children whilst he benevolently supervised from the background.

Vroomfondleswaistcoat · 14/01/2025 10:16

"he misses you" = "I can't be bothered to entertain him."

Why should your DP have downtime, but not you? You're a busy woman not a ride on device.