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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to think they should have let DD keep the sodding toy?

314 replies

captainbarnaclesismyboyfriend · 05/07/2014 16:02

DD is 4. I have been separated from her arrogant manchild father for 2 years. Lots of backstory: his family is incredibly dysfunctional, very toxic mother who smothers her adult children, my ex as a result was extremely difficult to live with, behaviour bordering on EA. He dips in and out of DD's life, leaving havoc in his wake. I'm not perfect but I do think I have tried my absolute best to facilitate contact with ex and his family, often to the detriment of my own plans/happiness.

Ex lives with his parents and his 2 adult siblings. About 4-5 months ago, DD came back from the house with a small cuddly cat toy. She said ex had given it to her. I was pleased at this: he never buys her anything, in fact I used to have to buy DD birthday/Christmas presents 'from him' until I got a grip. I still have to send packed lunches to his house when she visits

DD is very attached to this toy. She sleeps with it every night and takes it everywhere with her. She makes a lot of the fact that 'her Daddy got her it and it's her favourite toy in the world'

DD sees ex on average once a month, or every 6 weeks. Yesterday she spent the afternoon with ex and his family. When he dropped her home, she was sobbing- really hysterical, heartbroken sobs. I naturally asked ex what was wrong. He informed me that his sister (aged 25) had decided to take 'her' cat toy back from DD. This was news to me. Nobody had ever mentioned the cat toy was anything other than a gift bought for DD by my ex.

Apparently it was in fact a birthday present from the sister's friend when she was 18 or so. The sister had 'lent' it to DD to play with, but apparently DD was not supposed to take it home and keep it. Yesterday the sister spotted DD with it. and decided she wanted the toy back. So she took it from DD who naturally had a complete meltdown

I was very short with my ex and said 'for god's sake, she is 25, could she not just let the poor child keep the toy, your sister hasn't missed it in months'

Ex just shrugged and said 'but it is HER (sister's) toy. It was never DD's.'

DD sobbed and howled until bedtime, then she woke sobbing in the middle of the night saying she missed her cat. I wanted to tear ex and his whole family apart. I have rarely seen my DD so inconsolable

I told my lovely, lovely friend all about it, and bless her, this morning she drove 30 miles to her parent's house to get the toy lamb that she has had from she was DD's age. She came straight to my house afterwards, and gave DD the lamb, along with a note asking her to take adopt it, as Woolly has been alone in the attic for ages, with no little girl to cuddle. This seems to have worked quite well (friend was given bottle of wine and cake for her troublesGrin) but I am still spitting with rage. I can't believe ex and his family. This is just another example of how they don't give a damn about DD and her feelings, they don't even see her as a child who needs nurtured and occasionally indulged.

Sorry for the rant. Am I BU and overreacting? I know it's possible the toy cat had a lot of sentimental value for exSIL but honestly I doubt it. It's not a particularly special/unusual toy (one of those you get in Toys R Us with the sort of red tags hanging from their ear?) and she doesn't even speak to the friend who gave her it!

OP posts:
flyingtrue · 05/07/2014 20:34

I agree with RiverTam, it's not fair to blame the sister. I have a toy i keep for sentimental value, it's on a shelf for safe storage, I'd be upset to have it given away because its got a lot of sentimental value and if I gave it away it would be to my child. Additionally, the sister may not know how much your DD loves it, she may just have said 'i'd like that back'.

Your ex sounds like a cunt though. Toxic. He takes pride and credit for the toy, not just allows her to take but facilitates her falling in love with it. And then rips it away.

I wouldn't initiate any contact. He has to do all the running. Do you really want him doing this again, or worse? At best he's a fucking cunt, at worse he's an emotionally abuse fucking cunt who has purposefully hurt his child.

VampyreofTimeandMemory · 05/07/2014 20:51

only read first few comments but your poor DD does not sound spoilt, she thought it was hers. and despite it being her'd auntie's fucking toy, her auntie and ridiculous father sound like stupid dicks. At least you have a lovely friend - hope your dd is feeling better now.

giraffescantboogie · 05/07/2014 20:54

Bloody hell!

VampyreofTimeandMemory · 05/07/2014 20:56

princessprimark sounds really quite vile.

VampyreofTimeandMemory · 05/07/2014 20:57

and yeah, what 25yo would make a fuss over a bloody toy? It can't have had that much 'sentimental value' if she didn't notice it was missing for 4-5 months.

ChameleonCircuit · 05/07/2014 21:04

www.teddybearland.co.uk/ty-beanie-boo-muffin-cat.html

This one?

MostlyMama · 05/07/2014 21:09

I am sure my three year old would be happy to send another cuddly buddy for your DD too OP, inbox me your address, I'll ask her to choose one tommorow, she is a very friendly and generous and has hundreds of cuddlies she will like helping your DD :) and will get it posted to you Thursday :)

ForTheLoveOfSocks · 05/07/2014 21:13

OP I would stop contact personally. Abuse is not just physical.

Let him take you to court. I doubt he could even be bothered to do it.

MrsWinnibago · 05/07/2014 21:16

All the people saying the 25 year old was ridiculous....you can't say that! I had a toy taken by my sister when I was 30...it had been mine as a little girl and she took it from my Mum's and gave it to her baby DD.

I was 30 at the time and I bloody took it back! It wasn't my sister's to take and it had sentimental value and now my OWN DD has it. As it should be.

Had her DD been upset then I would have reluctantly given it to her but that's not the point.

ChasedByBees · 05/07/2014 21:18

I wouldn't change my number but I'd be tempted to tell him that he obviously has no regard for her emotional well being. I would be considering ways to minimise rather than go out of my way to facilitate access tbh.

Bit difficult if they turn up banging on the door when she has D&V though - it doesn't sound like he'd let things fizzle out.

The toy was obviously so much more than just a toy to her but an emblem of her dad's affection. I remember how attached I was to my toys when I was a child. Bit worried for any children of primarkprincess if she thinks the reaction to having something you deeply love taken from you is nothing more than a tantrum.

VampyreofTimeandMemory · 05/07/2014 21:22

well actually, it IS the point. it's the difference between petty and mean and a considerate relative.

and it CAN be said because she didn't fucking notice for at least 4 months. must have been extremely precious to her Hmm

soapybubbles123 · 05/07/2014 21:27

Your poor DD, I hope she is feeling better with Woolly for company. I know she doesn't want a replacement cat but I have one that was my DHs when he was little that we would be more than happy to send you. You could maybe tell her that this cat heard that she was upset so came through the post to be her friend.

I don't have words for your Ex and SIL so I'm not even going to try.

intheenddotcom · 05/07/2014 21:35

TBH it may have been sentimental. I have a stuffed toy from when I was a baby - had a little niece/nephew taken it I would have wanted it back.

hiccupgirl · 05/07/2014 21:40

Your poor DD. I hope the lamb helps a bit.

My 4 yr old DS would be devastated if someone took away the toy he always sleeps with regardless of whether he should have it or not. They're 4, small children who need the comfort of a familiar object and are naturally devastated if it's taken away. The ex SIL is an adult who you would hope can cope with sharing an object or letting a small child keep if it they've already had it for months and she's not noticed until now. Clearly it didn't mean that much to the SIL if it took her 5 months to notice it was missing.

Your Ex sounds like a total waste of space and I'd be trying to keep him away from your DD if he truest has no understanding of why a 4 yr old would be so upset over this.

Aeroflotgirl · 05/07/2014 21:53

How lovely of your friend. To others, yes dd took the sat home without asking, but she is 4 fgs. The Auntie is 25 she couldvhave given her the blooming cat, have a heart. Op your anger might have transferred to your dd, you could have played it down to dd, mabey find her another cat! It's awful that her dad is rubbish, and she gets nothing from him. You should not provide her with a pack lunch, it's his contact he should feed his own dd ffs. He us just crap and I hope that dd realises soon…

Aeroflotgirl · 05/07/2014 21:58

I would facilitate no more contact. Leave it in his court! He obviously does not give a rats arse about his dd that he watched her cry her heart out. This cat was something SIL was given recently for her birthday, she did not notice it for 4 months. She just wanted to be spiteful to dd.

MarshaMallow84 · 05/07/2014 22:11

Your SIL does not sound like a very kind or empathetic person to me. The evidence suggests that she did not prize the cat and only wanted it back because it was hers. If it was that important she would have noticed it was missing a bit sooner! If someone upset my four year old like this then my inner tigress would be released I'm afraid. On the other hand your friend sounds so lovely.

MyFairyKing · 05/07/2014 22:17

YANBU, your poor DD. She's so little, too little to understand.

If it was so freaking special to SIL, how come she didn't request it back for several months?! Sorry, I think she was being spiteful.

IamSlave · 05/07/2014 22:36

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IamSlave · 05/07/2014 22:39

The toy was obviously so much more than just a toy to her but an emblem of her dad's affection

YY.

How awful it was an emblem of his affection wasnt it - not fucking much .

IamSlave · 05/07/2014 22:41

captain, yes I have small children. No I don't remove their toys from them but then they don't go around keeping toys that aren't theirs!

are you also separate from the childrens father and have to buy them gifts from him as he is sdo feckless...i suppose to comment with such confidence your situation must be identical to ops and you are handling a shit careless father in a different way with better results Confused

HarrySnotter · 05/07/2014 22:49

I can't actually believe some of the comments on here.

Of course she should have been allowed to keep the toy. Anyone who thinks otherwise is a fucking arsehole.

2rebecca · 05/07/2014 22:51

If my young nephew squirrelled away something I was attached to and I found out 4 months later I'd be miffed with my brother for taking it without asking. I wouldn't demand it back though, although if I was attached to it I'd ask that it be returned when my nephew had got bored of it, my brother could just send it back and not tell my nephew.
The father is the one to blame here, although if his sister had kids of her own she'd have realised that "lending" cute toys to small kids isn't a good idea. If you value something hide it.

FunkyBoldRibena · 05/07/2014 22:51

I have a space monkey here who was mine, then adopted by my step daughter (without asking me!) and who needs a good home as he is far from his family...if she wants to look after him too then let me know. He is a very lonely space monkey.

(Don't anybody mention it though, as he hasn't worked it out yet, but he is really a dog...shhhhh) Wink