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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Very very petty and slightly passive aggressive, but unreasonable?

54 replies

LittleMissPetty · 08/07/2012 11:04

So yesterday went out with DD and her friend (Mary) and her Mary's mum to a local play place. We got there, and there was also another friend of our DDs there. Mary's mum agreed to look after this friend so her father could go home and do some things he needed to do, and pick up this friend from Mary's house later (no problem, all the girls get on well etc).

Mary's mum and I were in the cafe talking whilst the girls played. Towards the end of our time there, Mary's mum bought the girls a chocolate each. They saw these, but Mary's mum insisted they could not have them until we left in 15 minutes and walk home (fine by me). We were packing up when Mary's mum went to the toilet, so Mary picked up the chocolate. DD and friend protested but she said she was just holding them and wasn't eating them (fair point possibly, but to them they couldn't understand why she was allowed to hold the chocolate when they couldn't).

I then decided that I would also like a chocolate bar, and as Mary's mum had bought DD a chocolate, I bought two, one for myself and one for Mary's mum and put them on the table explaining who they are for. Mary grabbed her mother's bar, and went to grab mine, but I got there first and gave her a look that sort of said "just you try it". DD and friend then said they would like to hold their own chocolate, to which Mary said "no I am". My own DD then took a chocolate out of Mary's hand when Mary was offguard. I don't condone snatching in any way, but I sort of saw this as a dominance and power thing if that makes any sense at all. This is when Mary's mum came back, asked where the chocolate was, and Mary said she was holding it until we get outside. Mary's mum just agreed and we went.

DD and friend asked if they could have their chocolate once we were outside, at which point Mary ran on. We were halfway home before Mary relinquished the chocolate she had been holding, which her mum did not force her to, but it was Mary's decision if you know what I mean. The friend brought a chocolate to Mary's mother, at which point she said no that was for DD. Friend said DD had already got hers. I explained that I had bought further chocolate for Mary's mum and myself and briefly what had happened whilst she was in the toilet about Mary holding the chocolate. She agreed that Mary hadn't opened it and she did say they could not have it until they were outside, not seeing the bigger picture and the unfairness of it in the eyes of the children.

I didn't say anything further to her, but I wish I had said that I didn't think there was any difference with my DD holding her chocolate and Mary holding the chocolate. DD did not eat hers until halfway home when Mary relinquished the chocolate to everyone else.

I know it's EXTREMELY petty and of no importance in the grand scheme of things, but I am very wary of DD not being bullied, and being able to stand up for herself in the long run (so I was secretly proud of her taking the chocolate from Mary in a stand up sort of way - especially as she followed the rules regarding not eating it until told). I also think that Mary's mum is making a rod for her own back in allowing Mary to dictate these things (eg, it was Mary's decision when she gave out the chocolate, not her mother's i.e when we got outside).

The girls are 9 btw

OP posts:
RobinSparkles · 08/07/2012 11:44

Well, that's five minutes I'll never get back!

CurrySpice · 08/07/2012 11:44

The bit that surprised me was that the kids are 9!! I expected them to be 3

I hope typing all of that incredibly confusing and detailed guff out made you feel better op Grin

Here, have a chocolate bar!

LittleMissPetty · 08/07/2012 11:46

Sorry RobinSparkles have a chocolate bar to make up for it

OP posts:
RobinSparkles · 08/07/2012 11:47

I really really want some chocolate now.

MigratingCoconuts · 08/07/2012 11:48

well Robin, you can't have any. Not until we are at least half way through this thread!!

LittleMissPetty · 08/07/2012 11:49

Yes it did make me feel better CurrySpice.

OP posts:
LittleMissPetty · 08/07/2012 11:49

Yes it did make me feel better CurrySpice.

OP posts:
CurrySpice · 08/07/2012 11:50

Good! Now unclench!!

pumpkinsweetie · 08/07/2012 11:51

Its only chocolate, nothing much to worry aboutConfused

marathonrunner · 08/07/2012 11:52

I think I nodded off after the first paragraph Grin

Back now though!!

LittleMissPetty · 08/07/2012 11:55

You're missing the point pumpkin. I would still be saying the same had it been £5,000 notes (if there were such a thing and if I was lucky enough to have 9year old dds fighting over that). Its about power and enabling by the mother and standing up against the dominater.

OP posts:
youarekidding · 08/07/2012 12:09

Actually despite the essay about a bar of chocolate Wink YANBU and totally get where your coming from.

My friends DD is just like this - it is about control and power and if anyone did the same back the people in all these countries with 'real' problems would hear her screams. Grin She just cannot or won't! see how unreasonable she's being even if everyone is telling her so.

Often after meet ups with them I am just grateful I don't have a child who has a stronger personality than I do - it must be incredably difficult.

MagicDougal · 08/07/2012 12:11

Totally agree with Worral. Really can't understand why you stood by and just watched what was going on if you were that bothered. I also wouldn't be proud of my child snatching something off someone else whatever the reason. That isn't standing up for them self.

If you want your to teach your child to stand up for them self you should set a good example and be assertive yourself. If you, as an adult, can't take control of a situation when you're dealing with a 9 year old child how on earth is daughter meant to learn how to do it with her peers???

LittleMissPetty · 08/07/2012 12:22

I know I am entirely weak and feeble Magic so desperately trying to ensure dd is stronger than me. She is very tolerant of Mary usually and never snatches usually.

OP posts:
squeakytoy · 08/07/2012 14:05

I cant believe I actually read all of that... but I did, and my only question is why, as the only adult present, did you not take control and tell the child that the chocolate was to stay on the table..

I was out last night, and someone who I know had her two near feral children with her. She was sat in the pub, they were running wild in the garden. At one point a friend and myself went out for a smoke, and the kids were trying to snap the branches of the trees that were recently planted. I said "oi, stop doing that", and at that point the mothers boyfriend came out, so I said to him "your gf's kids are damaging the trees", his reply "oh I cant tell them off, she doesnt like it"... Hmm

squeakytoy · 08/07/2012 14:06

I should add, he only came out to smoke, not to check on the children.

TheMonster · 08/07/2012 14:10

Why didn't you just take all the chololates from the kid?

Marymaryalittlecontrary · 08/07/2012 15:12

The best way for you to enable your daughter not to get walked over is for her to see you take control in tiny incidents like that. At 9 I was very shy. Inside I still am a bit, but nobody would know it as little things like that wouldn't bother me. The chocolate would stay on the table or I would hold it. I'm how I am now because I grew up watching my mum take control over situations when necessary.

fuzzpig · 08/07/2012 15:23

They're NINE?!?

I thought they were 3 or 4 until I got to the end of the OP.

9?

Everyone needs to grow up a bit by the looks of it.

Thatsnotmypenguin · 08/07/2012 15:34

Mary sounds like trouble. I'd probably have told her put the chocolate down, or told her to share nicely, or something. I tend not to pussyfoot around other people's kids in case I inadvertantly teach DS to be a doormat.

comedycentral · 08/07/2012 15:37

Go watch the tennis instead of stressing over this non event

JamieandTheOlympicTorch · 08/07/2012 16:02

I wouldn't let anyone hold the chocolate, as Mary says
L

JamieandTheOlympicTorch · 08/07/2012 16:02

Marymary above, not Mary in the op

snice · 08/07/2012 16:05

why didn't you just shout at Mary "put my kids chocolate down, motherfucker"

snice · 08/07/2012 16:06

or would that have been a bit OTT?