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Boyfriend displaying red flags

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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,051 ✭✭✭Shelga


    Bobtheman wrote: »
    He is unlikely to be want to be house sharing in 5 years. Ask him if he'd ever like to own a house.
    I think you are jumping ahead at this stage. Be careful. You don't want to scare him off.

    :rolleyes: There's nothing to be scared of. Depending on how early days it is, I don't think it's too soon to start asking questions like does he see himself owning a house. For me, I'd be thinking about those kinds of questions from about 3 months after saying we're official. The tidiness thing would bother me much less tbh, although still something to be aware of.

    Maybe he's having his own doubts about these kinds of things too, who knows.

    There's a strong stench of "you should feel lucky you bagged a man, keep quiet, you don't want to get to late 30s and be single (god forbid!!!)" off this thread.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 312 ✭✭MrsBean


    I think your concerns are valid if not a bit premature. Chances are these things will resolve themselves for you as your relationship progresses. If it’s still early days then maybe try and give it a bit more time to get to know each other. Sometimes people who seem amazing at the start are actually charming jerks. Sometimes people whose circumstances are not appealing to you are already on the path to change.

    You never know, some aspects of his personality might be revealed that turn you off completely or maybe he’ll say “I hate living in this manky gaff, maybe I should look for a more steady income” one day.

    If it’s mostly good then you should just focus on that for now and enjoy that buzz. You’ll know if these things are really problems for you as you get to know him better.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 656 ✭✭✭hurleronditch


    I lived with friends until I was 30, and though my now wife improved my attitude towards cleaning bathrooms and changing towels and bedclothes, when I was living with the lads I could be as messy as the next fella. Now I probably almost do more of the cleaning in our house, certainly the kitchen as I cook more but I now see things that needed to be cleaned, whereas before I just saw things that were grand as they were.

    The other issue I have no experience of as I’ve always been career focused, but you need to trust your gut, and there’s nothing wrong with wanting someone who has similar life’s aspirations as you. But maybe that is the intention of your boyfriend, he’s just enjoying where he is but had always intended to find something more stable in the longer term. Most lads are aware they can’t drink cans and play XBox until 4am with the lads when they please, as much as they’d love it last forever.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 11,188 ✭✭✭✭J Mysterio


    I lived with friends until I was 30, and though my now wife improved my attitude towards cleaning bathrooms and changing towels and bedclothes, when I was living with the lads I could be as messy as the next fella. Now I probably almost do more of the cleaning in our house, certainly the kitchen as I cook more but I now see things that needed to be cleaned, whereas before I just saw things that were grand as they were

    What I think is pertinent about this post is that people do change, and also that they can be willing to change for the sake of a relationship.

    What concerns me about the OP is that it's not clear the poster has addressed these rather straightforward issues with her other half, and has clearly been dwelling on them for some time. These are simple things that can and should be discussed.

    Feels as though the OP is ready to cast aside her partner for something he may not even know is an issue, and for me, that shows a lack of respect for him and their relationship.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,385 ✭✭✭lainey_d_123


    I see this all the time.

    I work with some beautiful women. Beautiful unmarried women in their late 30's. They're all waiting for that special guy. The issue, as I see it, is that they want Mr Perfect. Instead of settling for Mr Right.

    OP, you can't have everything. You live in a country that taxes couples at 50% above €70 odd grand (joint assessment). Working free lance or from home could save a fortune on child care. This guy ticks most of the boxes. Don't balls it up.

    I can't stand this rhetoric, that women who expect men in their thirties to be financially stable and know how to clean are being overly demanding, and should just settle before it's too late. Why is the onus not on men like this to grow up and cop on?

    Fair enough if the fella wants to do a creative job and isn't focused on money, to an extent, but having a manky towel festering for weeks is just disgusting! Never mopping the floor is disgusting. OP is also right to be concerned about ending up as the sole breadwinner. Maybe she doesn't want to work hard for years, have a taxing pregnancy and then have to go back to work ASAP because her partner doesn't earn enough to do otherwise.

    Maybe these beautiful women you describe don't want Mr Perfect, maybe they just want a decent, kind man who is also capable of being an adult and doing things like laundry and mopping and paying the bills and if they can't have that very reasonable expectation met, they'd prefer to just be single? I'd much rather be alone in a nice clean one-bedroom flat than nagging a 35-year-old man about washing towels or worrying about paying the mortgage on my own.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 610 ✭✭✭Cutie 3.14


    I can't stand this rhetoric, that women who expect men in their thirties to be financially stable and know how to clean are being overly demanding, and should just settle before it's too late. Why is the onus not on men like this to grow up and cop on?

    Fair enough if the fella wants to do a creative job and isn't focused on money, to an extent, but having a manky towel festering for weeks is just disgusting! Never mopping the floor is disgusting. OP is also right to be concerned about ending up as the sole breadwinner. Maybe she doesn't want to work hard for years, have a taxing pregnancy and then have to go back to work ASAP because her partner doesn't earn enough to do otherwise.

    Maybe these beautiful women you describe don't want Mr Perfect, maybe they just want a decent, kind man who is also capable of being an adult and doing things like laundry and mopping and paying the bills and if they can't have that very reasonable expectation met, they'd prefer to just be single? I'd much rather be alone in a nice clean one-bedroom flat than nagging a 35-year-old man about washing towels or worrying about paying the mortgage on my own.

    This!

    There is a thread in The Ladies' Lounge about this very thing!

    I dont think its unreasonable for the OP to be questioning whether or not she will have to carry the burden that is the mental load down the line.

    Its early days OP, give him a chance and suss him out, but go and have a read of that thread too.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 312 ✭✭MrsBean


    J Mysterio wrote: »

    What concerns me about the OP is that it's not clear the poster has addressed these rather straightforward issues with her other half, and has clearly been dwelling on them for some time. These are simple things that can and should be discussed.

    Feels as though the OP is ready to cast aside her partner for something he may not even know is an issue, and for me, that shows a lack of respect for him and their relationship.


    She has stated it’s very early days. So she has not been festering on this for some time. Given the infancy of their relationship it is unreasonable to state she is showing a lack of respect for him by having doubts. She came here looking for advice not a critical commentary.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,992 ✭✭✭Mongfinder General


    I can't stand this rhetoric, that women who expect men in their thirties to be financially stable and know how to clean are being overly demanding, and should just settle before it's too late. Why is the onus not on men like this to grow up and cop on?

    Fair enough if the fella wants to do a creative job and isn't focused on money, to an extent, but having a manky towel festering for weeks is just disgusting! Never mopping the floor is disgusting. OP is also right to be concerned about ending up as the sole breadwinner. Maybe she doesn't want to work hard for years, have a taxing pregnancy and then have to go back to work ASAP because her partner doesn't earn enough to do otherwise.

    Maybe these beautiful women you describe don't want Mr Perfect, maybe they just want a decent, kind man who is also capable of being an adult and doing things like laundry and mopping and paying the bills and if they can't have that very reasonable expectation met, they'd prefer to just be single? I'd much rather be alone in a nice clean one-bedroom flat than nagging a 35-year-old man about washing towels or worrying about paying the mortgage on my own.

    Good for you. You'd rather be alone than compromise your principles. And that's a good point about being the sole bread winner. There's always the chance that the guy could ask for a divorce and screw her for maintenance if he is the home maker raising a child.
    More and more people are less willing to take the risk and compromise the standards that they've set for others. Good luck to them. I'd love to have that kind of resolve. Being able to watch friends settle down. Attend weddings alone. House warmings and Baby showers too. Births and baptisms. Birthday parties. Looking at photos and videos on Facebook of friends' kids growing up. Not being part of the parents' WhatsApp groups at school. Saturday morning sports. And slowly losing contact as each of your once single friends gradually lose interest in you as their family life takes over.

    Perhaps have a read of this book https://www.amazon.co.uk/Men-Strike-Boycotting-Marriage-Fatherhood/dp/1594037620

    I actually envy your strength of character in that you'd prefer single life in a one bedroom flat to risking it on some bum who won't domesticate.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 16,660 ✭✭✭✭cj maxx


    Shelga wrote: »
    She says herself, it's very early days. I think she's shrewd to be acknowledging what is likely to bother her down the road. I'm trying to get a house at the moment on my own, and it's incredibly difficult. Being in a relationship and still having to go through all the financial stuff alone? Not hot!

    It's meant to be a partnership, not her struggling alone financially through life. Don't make her out to be overly picky by wisely sensing that this will bother her massively, if his work ethic or priorities don't change. And note that she also wisely says that she's not trying to change him!

    OP, I would continue having fun with the guy, but don't ignore your gut feeling on what are majorly important things to be on the same page on in a serious adult relationship.

    I don't get that. As you say its very days and have fun etc. I totally agree.
    Though the op asked advice about this guy but she's already planning their future, house mortgage etc. Have fun and wait till houses, mortgages, marriage et al become an issue. You really are putting the horse way way before the cart op imo


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 8,029 ✭✭✭SusieBlue


    Good for you. You'd rather be alone than compromise your principles. And that's a good point about being the sole bread winner. There's always the chance that the guy could ask for a divorce and screw her for maintenance if he is the home maker raising a child.
    More and more people are less willing to take the risk and compromise the standards that they've set for others. Good luck to them. I'd love to have that kind of resolve. Being able to watch friends settle down. Attend weddings alone. House warmings and Baby showers too. Births and baptisms. Birthday parties. Looking at photos and videos on Facebook of friends' kids growing up. Not being part of the parents' WhatsApp groups at school. Saturday morning sports. And slowly losing contact as each of your once single friends gradually lose interest in you as their family life takes over.

    Perhaps have a read of this book https://www.amazon.co.uk/Men-Strike-Boycotting-Marriage-Fatherhood/dp/1594037620

    I actually envy your strength of character in that you'd prefer single life in a one bedroom flat to risking it on some bum who won't domesticate.

    That reply is a thinly veiled passive aggressive dig if I ever saw one. I’m sure you really do envy her ‘strength of character’ as you nastily list off all the life milestones you perceive that she’ll miss.

    I don’t disagree either. I don’t think having a partner who knows how to clean and has aspirations to possibly own a home one day is asking for too much.
    The fact that this is even being perceived as being picky or demanding is mind blowing.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,454 ✭✭✭Airyfairy12


    Id agree with other posters, these aren't red flags they are personal life choices and current circumstances that aren't inline with your own or what you want in a partner.

    I think youre over thinking it and thinking way to far ahead, as you mentioned its early days and you get on great, why ruin a good thing? Who knows what the future holds for either of you? Circumstances change all the time.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 614 ✭✭✭notsoyoungwan


    Good for you. You'd rather be alone than compromise your principles. And that's a good point about being the sole bread winner. There's always the chance that the guy could ask for a divorce and screw her for maintenance if he is the home maker raising a child.
    More and more people are less willing to take the risk and compromise the standards that they've set for others. Good luck to them. I'd love to have that kind of resolve. Being able to watch friends settle down. Attend weddings alone. House warmings and Baby showers too. Births and baptisms. Birthday parties. Looking at photos and videos on Facebook of friends' kids growing up. Not being part of the parents' WhatsApp groups at school. Saturday morning sports. And slowly losing contact as each of your once single friends gradually lose interest in you as their family life takes over.

    Perhaps have a read of this book https://www.amazon.co.uk/Men-Strike-Boycotting-Marriage-Fatherhood/dp/1594037620

    I actually envy your strength of character in that you'd prefer single life in a one bedroom flat to risking it on some bum who won't domesticate.


    You do realise that being single doesn’t mean being sad and lonely and being married doesn’t equal being happy and content, don’t you?

    Op, fwiw I’d find it hard to be attracted to a man who used the same manky, smelly, damp towel to dry himself after a shower for weeks on end. It’s gross. Irrespective of how gorgeous he is.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 1,346 ✭✭✭TheW1zard


    Youre not a romantic thats for sure


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 166,012 ✭✭✭✭LegacyUser


    Hello everyone,

    Thank you everyone for your replies, I appreciate strangers taking time out of their lives to give me their opinion.

    I am also very surprised about the amount of 'you're lucky to have him". He is really great and special but I think that I was fair enough in having trepidations about a future with someone that I could potentially have to carry financially or clean up after. I am also funny etc but I also clean up after myself! I have never dated someone so filthy in that sense, it is a turn off! It isn't a high expectation to expect someone to clean up their bathroom or kitchen before you call over. It isn't like it is just messy, it is dirty.

    I do agree that I am definitely thinking way too far ahead. However, in past relationships I have ignored little niggling doubts like this and it very much blew up in my face later down the line.

    Thank you all, I will definitely calm down a bit, enjoy the time together and raise these doubts when things become more serious. I just don't want to become a Mammy figure, I see that relationship dynamic a lot in Ireland and I despise it.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 14,673 ✭✭✭✭Dial Hard


    OP, you're perfectly entitled to want some standards in a partner and I certainly don't think being clean and financially independent are particularly onerous ones! In fact, I'd consider them fundamentals of being a functioning adult.

    I think people are being particularly dismissive of the job thing. I don't need a partner to be a high flying career executive by any stretch of the imagination but if they didn't have the money to be able to do things like go out for dinner, go on holidays etc. then that would be an issue for me, I have to say. No doubt that will be dismissed as shallow and materialistic by some, but it's how I feel. I don't need or expect any man to pay for me, but he needs to be able to pay for himself.

    ETA: I think it's the phrase 'red flags' that's getting the backs of some posters up. I think they're more compatibility issues then red flags, but perfectly valid ones for all that. I have absolutely zero interest in clothes or shoes or "stuff" but I absolutely love eating out and going on nice holidays. A guy might have zero interest in that and be perfectly happy earning enough money to pay rent in a (grotty!) houseshare and buy a few cans every weekend. It doesn't mean he's a bad person, it just means we're incompatible.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 166,012 ✭✭✭✭LegacyUser


    OP this sounds like the dynamic my parents have. My Dad would not be great for hygiene, doesn't "see" dirt and tends to revolt my Mum by various things he does or doesn't do. She finds this very hard to deal with and it has only gotten worse as they both get older. She has gotten less tolerant and less able to clean up after him. He has given up making any effort.

    You have the final say on what your red flags are and he is displaying them. Don't expect him to change because he either can not or will not. Either change your red flags or change your company asap.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 12,449 ✭✭✭✭pwurple


    I see this all the time.

    I work with some beautiful women. Beautiful unmarried women in their late 30's. They're all waiting for that special guy. The issue, as I see it, is that they want Mr Perfect. Instead of settling for Mr Right.

    I see this all the time too... handsome interesting funny fella, can't seem to keep any relationship going.

    One glance at his manky living habits and they hang around another small while to see if it was an off day, and then off they pop to look for a grown-up man, instead of someone still waiting for his mammy to clean his loo.

    OP, do this fellow a favour, and mention it subtly. A lot of this is about attitude.


  • Posts: 0 [Deleted User]


    OP, you sound like you have a good sense of what you need from a relationship and definitely worth keeping an eye on those issues over the next few months - you'll likely get a better sense of whether the issues will improve or not.

    For people saying OP is thinking too far ahead - better that than to invest a year or two and then have a painful break up over these issues later.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,653 ✭✭✭KiKi III


    OP, when you say early days, do you mean three dates in or six months?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 290 ✭✭lozenges


    Dial Hard wrote: »
    OP, you're perfectly entitled to want some standards in a partner and I certainly don't think being clean and financially independent are particularly onerous ones! In fact, I'd consider them fundamentals of being a functioning adult.

    I think people are being particularly dismissive of the job thing. I don't need a partner to be a high flying career executive by any stretch of the imagination but if they didn't have the money to be able to do things like go out for dinner, go on holidays etc. then that would be an issue for me, I have to say. No doubt that will be dismissed as shallow and materialistic by some, but it's how I feel. I don't need or expect any man to pay for me, but he needs to be able to pay for himself.

    ETA: I think it's the phrase 'red flags' that's getting the backs of some posters up. I think they're more compatibility issues then red flags, but perfectly valid ones for all that. I have absolutely zero interest in clothes or shoes or "stuff" but I absolutely love eating out and going on nice holidays. A guy might have zero interest in that and be perfectly happy earning enough money to pay rent in a (grotty!) houseshare and buy a few cans every weekend. It doesn't mean he's a bad person, it just means we're incompatible.

    I agree with this. There's nothing wrong with the way he's living his life, and there's nothing wrong with you having a clear idea of what's important to you in a relationship.

    I also very much dislike the 'mammying' thing. You can compromise on it though. Eg my partner does all the cooking, I do the cleaning. I remind him about doctors appointments, etc, but I explicitly say to him that I'm not going to do it for him. Sometimes that means it doesn't get done, but I'm much happier with that than taking on the 'mammy' role.

    It is a case of potential incompatibility though rather than a 'red flag'. I would consider red flags to refer to behaviour that is definitely negative e.g. maliciousness, suspicion of cheating, controlling. This is just a case of (potentially) different attitudes to what's important in life.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 166,012 ✭✭✭✭LegacyUser


    Thanks again everyone :)

    MODS please close the thread now.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 7,426 ✭✭✭Hannibal_Smith


    Mod Note

    Thread closed as per OPs request.

    Thank you to all who took the time to help and advise.

    HS


This discussion has been closed.
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