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Teenagers

Parenting teenagers has its ups and downs. Get advice from Mumsnetters here.

15yo son has moved in with Dad & Nana after years of undermining, boundary issues, and constant conflict. I’m heartbroken and questioning everything.

107 replies

EmirateReign · 06/01/2026 02:53

TLDR: Single mum to a 15yo. Dad and Nana have consistently undermined my parenting for years. Son has grown increasingly disrespectful and selfish, refuses basic boundaries, and sees me as the “problem”. A fight over attending a rare family meal (vs football) was the final straw. He’s now chosen to live with Dad and Nana unless I apologise. I’m exhausted, ill, heartbroken, and questioning whether I did the right thing.

There’s a lot to cover in the post so it is going to be so long. If you stick around and read it all, thank you.

Background
• My son is 15.
• His dad and I split when he was under 1.
• We’ve had a roughly 50/50 arrangement, but always built around his dad’s shift pattern, meaning:
• Dad never has him while working only on his days off.
• I’ve always carried the day-to-day responsibility.
• Dad moved back in with his parents after we split.
• Nana (his dads mum) has been heavily involved since day one:
• Doing GP, dentist, school stuff on the days my sons with them.
• Essentially a third parent doing the things Dad should’ve done but didn’t.

I’ve always been grateful for her help, especially when I’ve been seriously ill. But that gratitude has also made it very hard to stand my ground when boundaries were ignored.

Ongoing Issues With Dad & Nana

This has been happening for years, not months.

Undermining from the start
• Dummies, potty training, routines — undone every time he stayed there.
• Nana openly ignores rules and justifies it as “that’s what grandparents do”.
• But this isn’t occasional babysitting. She’s effectively co-parenting.

Food & health
• I tried hard to encourage a balanced diet.
• Dad and Nana accused me of “forcing” food if I added veg or lettuce. I shouldn’t feed him stuff he doesn’t like (he’s a kid of course fruit and veg isn’t gonna be his first choice!)
• Son then repeated their words back to me.

Discipline never sticks
• If I removed phone/Xbox or grounded him:
• Dad would agree… briefly.
• Within days, rules vanished.
• He’d be back on his phone behind my back.

School & money
• Poor school reports — I made plans, Dad said he’d help, then didn’t.
• Son is awful with money.
• We agreed on a card limit. Dad & Nana ignored it within a month.
• I eventually stopped pocket money unless it’s earned.

Girlfriend & Boundaries
• Girlfriend stays over constantly.
• I had open, responsible conversations about sex and contraception.
• But I was repeatedly woken up hearing them having sex.
• After the fourth time, I put my foot down and said no more sleepovers.
• Grounded him and told Dad & Nana exactly why.

It didn’t last. Nothing ever does.

My Health & Stress Context (Important)

In the last 18 months:
• 4 months in hospital in 2024.
• Major surgery July 2025, ended up in ITU.
• Long-term illness (including lupus).
• Relationship eith my ex BF (not his Dad) ended while I was still hospitalised.
• Client went insolvent owing me thousands.
• Took on two extra jobs to recover financially.
• Still tried my absolute best to give my son a good Christmas.

I’m not parenting from a place of ease or support. I’m surviving.

The Argument That Broke Everything

I asked my son if he was free on a certain date because:
• My aunt and extended family (who live far away) were visiting.
• We were booking a family meal.

He said he could “70% come” unless football fixtures came out and there was a home game.

I explained:
• If I say to them he’s coming, he’s coming not oh he can maybe come 70%.
• I can’t mess people around with bookings.

He replied:
• He “doesn’t really know these people”.
• Why miss football for people he doesn’t know. This was said about 4 times by this next point.

I said, out of frustration:

They’re fucking family, not random people.

Things escalated even further. He accused me of being unreasonable and was so condescending and rude saying things like ‘you’ve got the audacity to speak to your son like that, I don’t know any parent that would do that’ this is in relation to me saying ‘they’re fucking family’ after he was repeatedly dismissing me acting like these people were nobodies. I didn’t swear directly at him but I did call him out for being selfish.
I said asking him to miss one football match for rare family time wasn’t unreasonable.

He refused outright and demanded an apology.

His Perspective (According to Him)
• He never clashes with Dad or Nana, so I must be the problem.
• I “create issues out of nowhere”.
• Other parents would just “leave it”.
• Swearing (context or not) is unacceptable. Even though we both swear in normal chatty conversations so it’s not remotely like we’re a family who doesn’t swear.
• He believes I am the reason the relationship isn’t sustainable.

My Reality
• We clash because I have boundaries.
• Dad & Nana don’t say no.
• He’s learned that if he waits long enough, rules disappear.
• He is increasingly selfish and dismissive.
• He speaks to me in ways people around me find shocking.
• Yet when things are calm, we’re genuinely close and affectionate and actually have a closer relationship than what he has with Dad. My son can be his true self around me, doing his funny impressions and cracking jokes etc, he would never be like that around Dad.

The Decision

After talking to friends and family, I realised I couldn’t keep doing this weekly.

For my health and sanity, I suggested:
• He stay with Dad & Nana until exams are over.
• We still see each other Saturdays.
• Remove the constant friction.

He agreed — but said he will only see me on Saturdays if I apologise for the argument.

In the heat of our argument when he demanded the apology I said I’m not apologising for asking you to come to a family meal, we’ll talk about it again when we’re both calm.

Then once the new arrangement was spoken about he demanded an apology again to allow me to see him on Saturdays. I actually ignored that part of the message and just kept calm answering the logistical stuff. When he needed to come for some of his stuff I said I can leave it by the door or he can come in for a chat and that I’d leave it up to him. He said he can only come in if I apologise. Then proceeded to add a list of things he wanted me to bag up for him and actually then asked for his gaming monitor saying ‘it’s mine anyway and at least I’d be getting good use out of it’. He’s asked me before when we’ve been fine to take his monitor to Nanas and I’ve always said no because it’s cable tidied into his desk etc and is a faff to have to undo all that. So he knew full well I wouldn’t have said yes to the monitor but I think he felt like he could push his luck. Inside I was fuming but I just replied calmly and said I’m not sending the monitor but everything else you’ve asked for will be in the bags for you. He then collected them from outside. And my word I was sobbing my heart out. I was heartbroken packing his things and heartbroken leaving them outside.

What life is actually like at his Dad’s (important context)

What hurts the most is that my son has openly said many times that he actually prefers my house because it feels more homely and cared for. At his dad’s, his room is a mess 24/7 because no one ever asks him to clean it, his bedding doesn’t get changed unless he brings clean bedding from my house, washing takes ages to come back from the wash, and there’s rarely food or drinks in the house that he likes. His dad doesn’t think about those things and instead just gives him money to sort himself out or orders takeaways. They don’t really spend quality time together either, my son is usually just in his room when he’s there. He’s also said before that he often goes to Nana’s on nights he’s meant to be with his dad because he prefers it there. So this isn’t about him being happier or better cared for there. It’s about having no boundaries, no expectations, and never being told no, which is obviously appealing to a teenager but devastating as a parent who has actually tried to create a stable, warm, functioning home.

I’m hoping that this whole trial of living with Dad and Nana until you finish school in June will work. I’m hoping that once the initial novelty has worn off of not having rules, being expected to do basic stuff like make your bed etc, once that has worn off I just hope it sinks in for him that actually I’m really not the bad guy.

Where We Are Now
• He’s living with Dad & Nana.
• Collected belongings contact-free.
• Says he’ll see me Saturdays once I apologise.
• I’m devastated, grieving, exhausted, and terrified this will backfire.
• I’m hoping distance and reality will eventually bring clarity.
• But I’m scared it’ll just reinforce the narrative that I’m the problem.

Why I’m Posting

I don’t want validation that I’m perfect. I know I’m not.

I want to know:
• Was I unreasonable?
• Has anyone else dealt with being the only parent enforcing boundaries?
• Does stepping back ever help?
• How do you protect your health without losing your child?

Because right now, I feel like I’ve lost him — and I don’t know if I did the right thing letting him go live there. I’m not perfect and I know that and have acknowledged that to my son many times. But the things we clash about are always due to him not following some very basic rules. If I was expecting way too much of him or was shouting and screaming at him all the time then I would understand that. But we only ever clash when I say no, and I feel like I have no respect or parental responsibility because everything is always challenged and undermined by the other side.

I just know that I feel beaten down, and honestly a bit depressed in the last few days since the big row. I’m crying a lot, I feel hopeless and powerless like I’m fighting a losing battle. 😢

OP posts:
dottycat123 · 06/01/2026 05:30

No 15 year old boy would want to give up football to sit for lunch with unknown relatives, I wouldn't have even suggested to my ds's at that age they do this. The other stuff clearly stems from years of different parenting styles which is not his fault and as he gets older will use to his advantage being a teenage boy. The bin bags outside of his possessions was unnecessarily dramatic on your part and a lost opportunity to move forward. I would suggest you keep regular contact, let him know he can return and hopefully it will blow over. Letting the girlfriend stay was a rather odd plan if you didn't want them to be pushing that boundary, especially giving them 4 opportunities.

Zanatdy · 06/01/2026 05:50

It’s so tough trying to co-parent when there’s not only an ex but a grandmother. But bagging his stuff up outside was uncalled for. He is still a child at the end of the day, and that must have hurt. That said, he needs to know that there are rules in your home and he needs to follow and respect them, or yes, live elsewhere and he may find out that the grass isn’t greener.

EmirateReign · 06/01/2026 05:50

His stuff wasn’t in bin bags it was in normal bags. And it wasn’t all of his stuff, just some of his new clothes and aftershave he had for Christmas then some school uniform. I let him decide how he wanted to collect it, leave it outside or he can come in. He chose leave it outside so I respected that. I understand he wouldn’t choose to go to a family thing over football, I do get that, but, I do also think me wanting him to go is not unreasonable. People have to do things they don’t always want to do for the sake of others. Sure he would prefer football, but me and the rest of the family would very much have liked for him to have been there. Letting the girlfriend stay was done out of reluctance if I’m honest as he’d been allowed to stay at hers by the other side. Although really I should’ve stopped it happening after the first time they woke me up, so I probably didn’t handle that the best.

OP posts:
MeTooOverHere · 06/01/2026 06:01

EmirateReign · 06/01/2026 04:07

That’s when it got even worse. I said I’ll go without you regardless of whether there is or isn’t football on because im
not asking them to book you a place for you to cancel last minute. He replied saying think about me having to tell my dad who pays £1000 a year for a season ticket to tell him sorry I can’t go because I’ve got to go to a meal with people I hardly know. And you’ve got the audacity to speak to your son like that, I can’t name any other parent who would do that (that’s in relation to me saying ‘they’re fucking family’) then it got a bit worse with him saying he never clashes like this with dad and nana etc and I was like you don’t clash with people that don’t say no that’s why, we clash because I do.

It might seem on the surface level to be ‘not a big deal’ but it really is unbearable. Every week there’s something, but part of that is him just being an annoying teenager which I acknowledge but it’s made so much worse because I’m not just ‘battling a teenager’ I’m also battling 2 other adults who have consistently filled his head with rubbish and undermined my parenting to him for years. Why’s your Mum doing that, why’s your Mum doing this, she shouldn’t do that, she always creates such an issue etc etc.

He is very selfish and gets worse when he’s been there for a few days, when he comes back to me it takes him a couple days to readjust to being a bit ‘more normal’.

He had a big debate with me and his girlfriend about how he doesn’t think he should have to get her a Christmas or birthday card, they’re a waste of money and he may as well just throw £3 down the drain, he is only bothered about the present. Then because his girlfriend said she would like a card I was trying to get him to see that he should just get her a card and he was like my dad and his girlfriend don’t get eachother cards, and basically insinuating that that’s normal.

I can’t ask him to do anything without there being an issue. When I try and create boundaries they’re undermined by him being the hard done by kid and input from the other side. Friends etc tell me all the time just ground him or whatever and I’m like but I don’t think you realise I can’t, because even if I do, the minute he goes back there it’s undone so if they’re not going to be consistent then it doesn’t work.

yeah I defo do plan on keeping communication open, I will text him every week asking him to come on the Saturday, I will text him to see how his day was, wish him good luck in his exams, share new music I think he might like etc etc. I’ve got no intention of not continuing to do that, just right now (bearing in mind this is still raw as it only all kicked off at the weekend) I need a bit of restbite. I will apologise for how things ended the other day, I’ll apologise for swearing and also for us both ending up angry and upset as that wasn’t my intention. But I just don’t know if he’s going to accept that as I think he’s looking for me to apologise and say that I was wrong and out of order etc when actually really he should also apologise too but he isn’t going to do that.

Let him have time with his dad and nanna. Don't continue contacting him. (Don't block him though, just stop being the one to initiate). You rest up, sort your own issues, get your health back.

He's 15. Let him learn what it's like living there on a day to day basis.
The easiest way to win a tug of war is to let go of the rope.

EmirateReign · 06/01/2026 06:01

Yeah it has been unbearable. I think I have not done a very good job at putting my foot down with them and have basically allowed them to get away with interfering etc. Loads of my friends always say to me girl just fucking tell them no and especially to Nana tell her she needs to stick to the same plan, but because she’s helped me out by having him for me when I have been in hospital etc, I think I always felt like maybe I couldn’t really put my foot down as much as I would’ve liked to do. I’ve just responded to someone else on this, he needed to come and get some things, I gave him the choice on how he wanted to get them, he chose to collect them from the door and so I respected his wishes. The only thing I didn’t do is give him his monitor, because that’s for here. It was just some clothes and aftershave he got for Christmas and some school uniform, the rest of his stuff is still here so it wasn’t like I bagged up all of his stuff and just left it outside. He went to Dads/Nanas but he said he needed some of his things and would call for them which is when I was like let me know what you want and I’ll get them ready for you and would you like to grab them quick or come in. He said he would only come in if I apologised, told me what he wanted and then said he’d get them from by the door, I think I was still too angry then so just replied to say The monitor is staying here but everything else you’ve asked for I’ve sorted for you. Let me know when you’re on your way and I’ll pop them by the door for you xx

Ive since text him and apologised as now that I’m a bit calmer I do see that I handled it badly. He wasn’t being very nice but I shouldnt have continued to engage in that and for that I am sorry so I have apologised for that and said it wasn’t my intention and I love and adore him lots.

I’ve got every intention of speaking to him daily like we normally do, and seeing him on Saturdays. But I do also think that he should stay there for a while and once the novelty has worn off I hope he will then see that actually this house really isn’t that bad and if he then does start asking to come back / go back to normal, of course I want him here and will let him know that but I will also say that my rules are not changing and he needs to live by them and respect them etc

OP posts:
SoftBalletShoes · 06/01/2026 06:04

OP, you sound like an amazing mum, the way you're determined not to give up on bringing him up well, despite having no support with that.

Honestly, it sounds like you could use a break. Perhaps it's a good thing he's with other family members for a bit.

And maybe take a day or two's break from contact, except for perhaps a quick text.

Your relationship sounds basically good. I wouldn't give in about the apology, or he'll learn he can control you, too. If you just give the situation a bit of space, I'm sure he'll be home in a bit. Enjoy some self-care and a bit of downtime in the meantime.

Everything will be all right!

Sending hugs xxx 💐💐

ItsNotMeEither · 06/01/2026 06:08

I think you've realised that for now, you need to take a step back and let him settle in with Dad and Nan. Literally nobody cares that they undermined your parenting when he was a baby. Nan probably did, but your DS won't remember or care.

I don't know you at all, but going by your posts, you like to do things in quite a wordy way. This isn't the way of teens, so keep those messages to him short for now.

Sometimes, as they grow up, they are unreasonable, you do end up giving an apology and letting go of what they did. They are so focused on themselves as teens, so they rationally believe it was you and not them.

Let time do some healing and revealing of the truth. Things will be great right now, the grass will truly look greener, but time changes that. Give him the time and space to work out that the grass isn't as green as it looked. Give Dad and Nan some time to do the day to day grunt work and realise that he's also more work than they realised.

Will he eventually come home? Who knows, all you can do is regularly remind him that you love him and that he can come home if he changes his mind. If that eventually happens, that's the time for laying some new, more adult ground rules. As for having sex with his GF, that horse has bolted. I wouldn't be happy about it, but it's too late to undo that.

In the meantime, take this as a (quietly) good thing! Get more sleep, save more money, less to clean up, cook whatever suits you best. You've given us all the reasons you've been stressed and unwell, so use this as a break to recover. That way, if he does come home, you'll be more ready to tackle whatever comes next.

EmirateReign · 06/01/2026 06:11

Thank you ♥️

I have text him to say ‘I want you to know that I love and adore you more than anything. I am sorry that things ended up in a row and went back and forth like they did. That wasn’t my intention when I first messaged and I wish it had been handled more calmly. I hope your first day back at school goes okay. xx’

This is genuine from me, ultimately I’m the adult so even when he was being so rude and disrespectful I shouldn’t have engaged really but I just lost my cool. So for that I am sorry. But, he was also so out of line it’s unreal how he thinks it’s ok to speak to me the way he does.

The hard thing is, when we’re not clashing we are actually best mates and so close, but we just clash because he doesn’t like being told no or what to do etc.

I think it will be beneficial for him to stay there a while. Once that initial novelty of no rules has worn off, when his dads not taking an interest in him, his rooms a pig sty, he doesn’t have all his favourite things around him, he’s clashing with his Dad and Grandad, because the reality is, he actually clashes with them a LOT more than with me just their clashes are football opinions or political opinions never because he’s got rules etc, but I think eventually it will sink in and I hope it does.

And thank you, i definitely do need a bit of restbite that’s for sure so I will try and just slow down a bit and regather a bit of my strength. X

OP posts:
EmirateReign · 06/01/2026 06:15

Thank you so much. ♥️♥️

I have text him an apology, because I am genuinely sorry for how it ended with us both being angry. I told him I love him lots and said hope your first day back at school goes ok.

That is a happy medium I think, because it’s not quite what I feel like he’s looking for which is for me to apologise and say I was the root cause of the row, because I wasn’t but as the adult when he started being rude and mean I should’ve known better and not continued to engage so I am genuinely sorry for that.

Me and him are actually really close when we’re not clashing so I will maintain that but I do also think he needs to be there for a while. I’m hoping that once the novelty of having no rules wears off he will start to see things a bit more clearly and then realise that actually it’s not terrible here he just has to do a few basic things and if he does them me and him literally wouldn’t row xx

OP posts:
Meadowfinch · 06/01/2026 06:24

Tumbler2121 · 06/01/2026 03:52

Be glad he has gone to his dads, read again how he was behaving towards you when he lived with you. He will not get any better.

use the time he’s away to get fit and well. Maybe get a life for yourself that doesn’t spin around fights.

I also think that it was pointless to insist that he comes to family events, why would you?

This. Do not apologise. You have done nothing wrong. Reiterate that you love him but he is disrespectful. He will be welcome home when he has learned some manners.

Parsleyandthyme · 06/01/2026 06:27

I think you could make sure you appear a confident, smart, busy, happy. woman with a full life - as his DF and Nan are probably critical of you. Don’t appear too needy for DS so he is pressured to do things out of pity,
He sees a well run happy household at yours as opposed to where he is now and will probably Choose it in preference to DF’s soon.

moose62 · 06/01/2026 06:33

You have texted him, he knows how you feel, now leave him be at his dad's.
If you don't he will keep pushing you to basically beg him to come home and admit everything is your fault. Then you will find this is dragged up every time you try to impose boundaries.
This won't be good in the long run.
Let him try living with his dad and hopefully he will find that the grass isn't always greener.
Try and enjoy the peace and quiet in your house and build your strength up in the meantime.

SameShitDifferentDate · 06/01/2026 06:52

Enjoy the peace and quiet.

justasking111 · 06/01/2026 06:54

Another year he could be working, another two years he could be away at college. Time to give him some autonomy. He'll learn the hard way maybe m. But he has three adults who love him. He'll be okay.

Time to focus on your health and wellbeing. You're going through now what every parent has to go through just sooner. Read up on empty nest syndrome. It's hard but the freedom it brings, don't waste it.

Kevinbaconsrealwife · 06/01/2026 06:55

Tumbler2121 · 06/01/2026 03:52

Be glad he has gone to his dads, read again how he was behaving towards you when he lived with you. He will not get any better.

use the time he’s away to get fit and well. Maybe get a life for yourself that doesn’t spin around fights.

I also think that it was pointless to insist that he comes to family events, why would you?

I agree with this wholeheartedly xx

Comeonpup · 06/01/2026 06:59

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Comeonpup · 06/01/2026 07:00

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Maryberrysbouffant · 06/01/2026 07:03

He could have checked if there’s a home game in less than a minute, fixtures are online and decided in advance.

I agree with PP, you’re not being unreasonable to think he’s playing off his dad/nan against you but the decision about the meal/game could’ve been sorted in seconds and wasn’t worth having a huge bust up over.

Tbh moving forward I’d be sticking to my guns and letting him get on with it as far as living over there goes. Try and keep busy with other things, catch up with friends, have some downtime and take care of yourself. Keep in touch by text, ignore any demands to apologise.

Barney16 · 06/01/2026 07:16

I think with teenagers you have to pick your battles and probably the meal would have bored him rigid and rather than fight about it you should have let him go to the football. Going forward let it all go. Forget about dummies and potty training and your feelings about his dad and his Nan. Let him live with them and see how he gets on. See it as you having a holiday from his nonsense. You may find it's very restful and gives you a chance to recharge. Just keep telling him you love him and miss him and leave it at that.

Nothingbutstress · 06/01/2026 07:20

Not sure why people are telling you to apologise! He sounds rude and manipulative, I would leave him to it and he’ll soon miss all the things you do for him at home. Keep communication open but don’t be bullied into apologising. He’s 15 and the way he’s been treating you is awful. If he turns out selfish it isn’t your fault, you’ve done your best. Try and see your friends and family, relax and enjoy some time away from him. Maybe a few days away for yourself. Let his dad deal with him

olympicsrock · 06/01/2026 07:28

OP you sound like a great mum and you have had a really awful time with health and money.

You need a break so maybe him staying away is a good thing for you and he will unfortunately have to learn from his own mistakes now.

You both sound incredibly stubborn - maybe he has learnt that behaviour from you. In this case I do think you were wrong to ask him to cancel football for relatives he doesn’t know.

His reaction was out of all proportion but so was yours. Is it about control?
You will need to try and see his perspective and stop insisting you were right to demand he miss football if you want to be able to move forwards with a relationship.

socks1107 · 06/01/2026 07:28

If he swore at you would you ask for an apology? I would if my dd swore at me and so if I swore back I would expect to apologise.

At 15 of course he doesn’t want to go to a family meal with people he hardly knows, I’d have let it go to be honest. And be whole card thing? I don’t know why you even clashes over that - I’d have said oh ok to my DDs. I pick my battles.
Having a gf stay over at 15 is a battle
I would pick though.

He’s learnt to play you off against each other, I had it happen here with my sd it was awful
to watch her parents run around her when I knew most of what she said was lies. So some time where he can’t do that will be good for him and you probably.

first step you do need to apologise to him for swearing.

TheignT · 06/01/2026 07:37

I've got three sons. I think 15 is peak horror territory. Mine all suddenly became lovely reasonable people between 18 and 21, some mature faster than others. Don't beg him to come back, don't be needy but be happy to hear from him, see him. High chance all will be well in time.

In the meantime try to look after yourself

GAJLY · 06/01/2026 07:38

He is safe and with family. I’d leave him there and enjoy the break. He’ll soon change his behaviour after a few months and they’ll see the real him and kick him back to you.

Lilactimes · 06/01/2026 07:49

ItsNotMeEither · 06/01/2026 06:08

I think you've realised that for now, you need to take a step back and let him settle in with Dad and Nan. Literally nobody cares that they undermined your parenting when he was a baby. Nan probably did, but your DS won't remember or care.

I don't know you at all, but going by your posts, you like to do things in quite a wordy way. This isn't the way of teens, so keep those messages to him short for now.

Sometimes, as they grow up, they are unreasonable, you do end up giving an apology and letting go of what they did. They are so focused on themselves as teens, so they rationally believe it was you and not them.

Let time do some healing and revealing of the truth. Things will be great right now, the grass will truly look greener, but time changes that. Give him the time and space to work out that the grass isn't as green as it looked. Give Dad and Nan some time to do the day to day grunt work and realise that he's also more work than they realised.

Will he eventually come home? Who knows, all you can do is regularly remind him that you love him and that he can come home if he changes his mind. If that eventually happens, that's the time for laying some new, more adult ground rules. As for having sex with his GF, that horse has bolted. I wouldn't be happy about it, but it's too late to undo that.

In the meantime, take this as a (quietly) good thing! Get more sleep, save more money, less to clean up, cook whatever suits you best. You've given us all the reasons you've been stressed and unwell, so use this as a break to recover. That way, if he does come home, you'll be more ready to tackle whatever comes next.

Hi @EmirateReign I agree with @ItsNotMeEither and many of the other posters.

He is with 2 people who love him - let them take the grunt work for a bit. I'm sure eyes will be opened on both sides. You have been an amazing mum - 15 is a tough age to deal with in your own, so let them carry the weight for a bit.

You are heart broken but the relationship absolutely will repair.

Take this time to mend yourself.

You have the house to yourself - reset it how you want it; rest; cook when you want; watch tv when you want; see friends and family when you want!!! It's bliss!! You know he's safe.

Finally I would recommend some meditation for you. I think you need to quiet and still your thoughts. Find some peace in your head.

Calming your thoughts, may also help you communicate better with him when it so much is whirring around and everything is stiller.