Meet the Other Phone. Only the apps you allow.

Meet the Other Phone.
Only the apps you allow.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

See all MNHQ comments on this thread

My friends think I'm BU in asking them to change our restaurant plans for my DD

509 replies

EweHaveGoatToBeKiddin · 28/09/2013 10:31

Last week my 4 friends and I arranged to go out for dinner tonight. Not for anything special, just because we haven't see each other in ages and fancied a catch up.

I told them that i wouldn't be able to get a babysitter and they said that they expected and wanted me to bring 5yo dd along as they were missing her too.

Anyway, we emailed each other links to various local restaurants so we could check out prices and menus. We all agreed on an Italian place.

So i printed off the menu a few days ago and have been going over it with dd. I've let her pick her meal in advance and we've 'practiced' how to behave in the restaurant and I've shown her pictures of it online. We've also discussed things she can do while waiting for the food being served such as taking a colouring book or reading book. She's been to restaurants before and loves doing her little script of saying hello and ordering from the waiter/waitress. But because this is a new place, i wanted her to be prepared to prevent her getting too anxious.

Anyway, all was going well until this morning when i awoke to another group email. One of my friends have said that she was at an Italian restaurant last night with her parents and can't really face another Italian meal. Another friend chipped in with 'Yeah, i feel the same. TBH i'm not really into pizza and pasta anyway. How about a Chinese place?'

So then a dozen other emails followed containing various links for local Chinese places. By the time i'd managed to compose a polite email, everyone was pretty much set on a certain Chinese place.

I'd had a look on the website, and tbh there's nothing there that dd would eat. She doesn't like things with batter, not much of a meat eater, doesn't like spicy things, doesn't like chips, doesn't like rice, noodles or curries etc. And I'm not really keen on anything there either, but would have put up with it if dd wasn't involved too.

Anyway, i sent them a message explaining that i felt it was a bit short notice to be changing plans. DD was already prepared for the Italian place, had selected her meal, had been going on about it for days, had already seen all the pictures of the restaurant's interior. And that she wouldn't eat anything from there anyway.

They came back with the following responses:

"Feed her before she comes then just get her an ice cream or something while we're all eating."

My response to this: "But she was really looking forward to eating out with us, and tbh i don't think i can make ice cream last 2 hours."

"If she gets a bit antsy, we don't mind."

"It's not just a case of her getting 'antsy', it's the fact I'm going to be changing her plans with only a half day's notice, and all that preparation I'd done last week was for nothing. She will be incredibly anxious and upset for the whole meal."

"Bring her a toy to stop her getting bored."

"She can't play with toys alone. And she's already picked a colouring book to bring, but I don't think that will keep her calm and amused for 2 hours."

"Fine. We'll just go the Italian place."

This is then followed by a few 'pffffts' and eye roll smilies.

I feel horrid and guilty. Tbh i want to send them an email just saying that I'd rather they all went to their Chinese place and we could rearrange a group meal for another time. but if i do, it'll just be met with passive aggressive. "Don't be silly, we wouldn't dream of it' etc etc.

I actually don't want to go at all now. Or I'd rather just me and dd head out for a meal. if i do go, the whole atmosphere will be off and it will be like i dragged them all along. And when it comes to ordering, they will probably huff and puff about it because they've openly said they don't want to eat anything from there.

I genuinely don't know who's being unreasonable here. the fact I'm feeling so guilty about it makes me think that I'm the one in the wrong, but then again i feel guilty about everything. Blush

OP posts:
Threalamandaclarke · 29/09/2013 14:49

So I see.
But my view is still the same. That is what I would have done.
I didn't see what happened though.

ProphetOfDoom · 29/09/2013 15:32

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

SauvignonBlanche · 29/09/2013 16:56

A really good way to find out what happened on a thread is to read it, failing that, highlight the OP's posts which you can do through 'Customise' at the top of the page.

Threalamandaclarke · 29/09/2013 17:05

I did read the thread.
But I couldn't see how it ended.
Obviously I missed something.

catinboots · 29/09/2013 17:06

YABVU and rather precious.

SauvignonBlanche · 29/09/2013 17:08

Oh FFS!

AnaisHendricks · 29/09/2013 17:10

YANBU and the friend who wouldn't eat Italian food two nights in a row, like the Italians do, was unbelievably unreasonable considering you have an autistic child who wouldn't cope with last-minute changes to arrangements you have carefully prepared her for.

Threalamandaclarke · 29/09/2013 17:12

Yes. I agree with anais
sauvignon why the head banging?

Bunbaker · 29/09/2013 17:15

"YABVU and rather precious."

The OP has stated that her child has autism. You obviously know nothing about autism or haven't read the OP's subsequent posts.

Threalamandaclarke · 29/09/2013 17:16

Right. Well, I have highlighted op's posts but I still can't see the outcome.

SunshineMMum · 29/09/2013 17:17

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

FrussoHathor · 29/09/2013 17:18

Right. Well, I have highlighted op's posts but I still can't see the outcome. me neither

AnaisHendricks · 29/09/2013 17:18

I don't think the head-banging was directed at you Threalamanaclarke.

Threalamandaclarke · 29/09/2013 17:19
Blush
GatoradeMeBitch · 29/09/2013 17:20

Well, I understood your dilemma completely, OP, I have a son with ASD, and rehearsing things in advance is a great strategy that works for us too. He would also refuse to go to a Chinese restaurant. Chinese food in the UK often features MSG so s bad for kids with autism anyway.

Your response to your friends was excellent, and I hope you and dd enjoyed your night out together Smile

Threalamandaclarke · 29/09/2013 17:21

Personally I thought op was NBU even before I bothered to red realised that dd had asd.

Threalamandaclarke · 29/09/2013 17:26

So, sauvignon what did I miss? What was the outcome?

Threalamandaclarke · 29/09/2013 17:30

H. Silly me. Got it.
Good. Just spot on OP. well done.

SauvignonBlanche · 29/09/2013 17:38

I was banging my head in response to yet another poster who obviously hadn't RTFT.

I no more know the outcome than anyone else, but what you missed amanda, was that the OP's DD had ASD before you posted, a fact that was disclosed by the OP on page 1.

I loved the idea on this thread about highlighting OP's posts automatically.

Threalamandaclarke · 29/09/2013 17:43

I see sauv
I confess I didn't read the thread before my initial post.
The asd info simply underlined the point IMHO.
I'd like to know what happened next op. but is that just nosey?

SauvignonBlanche · 29/09/2013 17:53

If you're anything like me, there will be an element of nosiness, but I do also genuinely care (as a fellow mother of a child with ASD) and really hope the OP had an enjoyable evening after all. Knowing that this had occurred would be nice but if it didn't then i understand that OP may not feel up to talking about it.

AintNobodyGotTimeFurThat · 29/09/2013 17:57

Hope you had a nice meal OP. :)_

nkf · 29/09/2013 18:00

Expecting people to read a long thread in case there is some key information on page whatever is silly. And if you are really asking how to help your friends appreciate how difficult it is to prepare a five year old child with autism for a meal out, then say that. In the thread title. Or if you are feeling in need of sympathy then say so. Up front. I think people use AIBU because it gets the most traffic but with that comes a certain roughness in the response. Of course, people shouldn't be unkind or ruthless, but a little common sense wouldn't go amiss.

MrsCampbellBlack · 29/09/2013 18:05

NKF - have you never made a mistake/typo? The OP meant to say in her first post her DD had autism - she mistakenly forgot to - so she corrected that 7 mintues later - hardly a massive dripfeed is it?

And you know if I'm going to post in an aggressive manner to the OP on a very long thread - I may just read her posts to avoid looking like a dick.. To me that is common sense.

Panzee · 29/09/2013 18:05

The OP apologised for missing out the autism mention but claimed she thought she had done so.

If a thread's too big to read properly it's too big to reply on.