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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

to think this is unacceptable behaviour when 'just popping in'

74 replies

LaLaGabby · 23/06/2012 00:27

So me and DD were just sitting down to our tea tonight when the doorbell goes. DD answers the door to DH's friend who comes in, sort of grunts to me that he'll wait for DH and sits down at the table.

Ok, at this point I'm not sure why he is meeting DH or what but fine.

There are about 8 small sandwiches on a large dinner style plate which I pass to him and say 'would you like something to eat something'. This is the serving plate that all the sandwiches are on, which we have each helped ourselves to one sandwich from. DH's friend takes the plate, holds it in front of him as though it was his personal plate, and starts to eat all the sandwiches on it one by one.

This is DD's evening meal before going to bed and my snack before eating with DH.

DD is now looking at me like 'why is this man eating my dinner' so I give her a piece of cake and then hand the plate to 'friend' saying very clearly 'have a piece of cake'. But somehow the emphasis escapes him and he takes the whole plate, we are both watching him starting to eat every single cake one by one.

He is actually a lovely bloke, single and lives in a share house with some much younger student types, prehaps he doesn't feed himself or just doesn't know how normal people eat at a table? As soon as he had finished all DD's tea he looked round the kitchen to see what else he could find, ate all the supper that was cooking in the saucepans, all the food in the fridge, and all the packets and tins in the cupboard, and he drank all the milk and all the orange juice and all DH's beer and all the water in the tap. Then he leaves before DH gets here saying he will see him in the pub?

So I am left literally planning to get takeaway and wondering if DD, 7 stays up til her dad gets home and has some takeaway or goes to bed hungry? Should I have said something, grabbed the plate back off him or sent him to sit in the front room without any food available?

OP posts:
runningforthebusinheels · 23/06/2012 00:53

The 'all the water in the tap' thing always got me, even as a child. Because noone, not even a tiger, can drink all the water in the tap can they? Unless it's just all the water in the tank, and they're not connected to the mains?

LaLaGabby · 23/06/2012 00:53

AnyoneForTennis not sure what you are asking but Judith Kerr also wrote 'When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit' and various sequels which tell the story of how she are her family were refugees from Nazi Germany in France and then England.

It is very good although obv. for an older audience than TTWCTT.

OP posts:
FairPhyllis · 23/06/2012 00:54

Ah but you never know ... I would do it just in case.

FairPhyllis · 23/06/2012 00:59

Also, you do wonder why Sophie's mummy doesn't look more concerned than she does - is she doped up on Valium to blot out the tedium of her housewife existence? OP can you shed any light on this?

AnyoneForTennis · 23/06/2012 01:02

Yeah... Loads of previous threads on Judith Kerr and this book.... Some odd theories iirc!

HolyCameraConfusionBatman · 23/06/2012 01:05

Love it Grin

LaLaGabby · 23/06/2012 01:10

FairPhyllis she's probably thinking 'wait til I tell AIBU about this'.

OP posts:
Idreamof · 23/06/2012 01:32

Oh, and it's so lovely when after leaving the cafe all the lights are on in the town.
Thanks it was great I know what DD and I are reading tomorrow night.

giraffesCantFitInThePalace · 23/06/2012 01:53

I think if he came to my door I would scream and run the fuck away

MammaTJ · 23/06/2012 07:20

My DD1s favourtie book as a child but DD2 and DS aren't interested in it.

Thanks, I've missed it!

roughtyping · 23/06/2012 07:23

Brilliant! Totally sucked it!

OH and I love that sausages and chips is a big treat. Always makes me smile :)

TheCunnyFunt · 23/06/2012 07:45

Whaaaa. . . .? Confused

gettingeasier · 23/06/2012 07:51

Smile I miss bedtime stories

takingiteasy · 23/06/2012 07:55

Aw that was lovely!

Cockpark · 23/06/2012 07:56

Hahahahah! Love that.

SaraBellumHertz · 23/06/2012 07:59

My favourite bedtime story- going to dig it out for DD later Smile

Stannwigg · 23/06/2012 08:04

Pahahaha brilliant. Definitely go to a cafe.

mayaswell · 23/06/2012 08:13

I have read that this is an allegorical story, and the tiger is alcoholism.

It was def one of our favourites, TWCTT (not alcoholism).

WhyTheBigPaws · 23/06/2012 08:21

You totally had me until about half way through when it clicked. Now DH and I are in hysterics - thanks for getting my weekend off to a good start :)

FormerlyTitledUntidy · 23/06/2012 08:24

Oh I loved "When Hitler Stole Pink Rabbit".
My copy is so wrecked well read, dd has turned her nose up at it :(

Tiger was silly as my mum has an apocalypse press with lots of tins, so no way a tiger could get through them all :o

NinaHeart · 23/06/2012 08:32

I had a slightly similar friend but he turned into a butterfly at the end of the week.

tara0202 · 23/06/2012 08:39

I had it at the cakes!

ledkr · 23/06/2012 08:47

Bastard Tigers. They always do that.

SpagboLagain · 23/06/2012 08:48

Obviously just wait for DH, he will just sort everything out while you just hang around looking worried.

Why does the tiger play the trumpet at the end? I never got that.

ledkr · 23/06/2012 08:48

It took me untill he drank all the milk and juice,brilliant.