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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

to think this mother has been rude and thoughtless (birthday party related)

183 replies

lem73 · 16/07/2015 21:37

Last week we invited a girl from dd's class for tea. Let's call her Amy. She has only just started this term. When we dropped her at home the mother said thanks etc and the little girl whispered something in her ear. So the mum said 'oh yes, would your DD like to come to Amy's birthday next weekend (Sat 18th)'. I said yes that's fine thanks for the invitation, she can come'. The mum said she'd give me a proper invitation at school, she was just a bit disorganized. I couldn't help thinking dd was just an after thought but as it was said in front of dd I had to accept. Anyway she hasn't given me an invitation and I'm sure she's trying to avoid me at school. I didn't really care til dd came out of school and started asking questions about Amy's party on Saturday, as some girls were talking about it. I said I'm sorry we've not been given a proper invitation so it looks like you're not invited after all. She got upset and said 'but her mum told me I was'.
So my question is this: AIBU to think if you tell a 7 year old child to their face that they are invited to a party you don't change your mind and hope they are either forgetful or thick skinned? I agree not everyone needs to be invited but she told dd she was and has apparently changed her mind. In the past my dcs have gone and invited extra kids to parties without asking first and I would never dream of letting a child down, even if it costs extra. It was even her child who did the inviting, it was her.

OP posts:
BalloonSlayer · 17/07/2015 18:13

Amy is new. She arrived last term because she was bullied at her last school.

Ahh cut the mum some slack. The other "best friends" have probably said they don't want her to invite your DD, for catty 7 year old girl reasons, Amy doesn't want to upset new best friends, and mum is terrified of her being bullied again so wants to create a smooth path for her.

If I were you I'd suddenly remember some fabulous treat you were supposed to be doing this weekend - "you wouldn't have been able to go to Amy's anyway ha ha!"

DoreenLethal · 17/07/2015 18:15

Is Amy the new Wendy for kids?

pictish · 17/07/2015 18:18

I think the mum is absolutely pathetic. You can't uninvite a kid from a party ffs. You especially can't uninvite a kid from a party for those reasons! How utterly childish and small she is to indulge her daughter this way. Fucking rude and selfish.

pictish · 17/07/2015 18:20

Doreen I thought the same. Sounds like Amy wants a firm wedge between OP's dd and her friends into which she may slot neatly. And her mother is going along with it. Confused

sanfairyanne · 17/07/2015 18:25

wow!! that mother and daughter sound a nightmare. time to get organised op - endless social activities over the summer with her friends but without little miss trouble!

sanfairyanne · 17/07/2015 18:26

make sure you text how sad and disappointed your dd is. you are sure she will understand, given her dds experiences at her old school sad face sad face sad face
passive aggressive Grin

ChazsBrilliantAttitude · 17/07/2015 18:31

It may not feel like it now but I think your DD may have had a lucky escape. It sounds like a potentially toxic little friendship group with the potential for being snubbed or being told you can only play with certain people etc.
The Minions film is fun if your DD needs a treat.

ChameleonCircuit · 17/07/2015 18:34

DoreenLethal said exactly what I was thinking.

pictish · 17/07/2015 18:38

May lightning strike me down for saying this, but I wonder if 'bullied' really means Amy caused trouble at her old school and was fallen out with as a result.
Seriously...if the mother genuinely thinks this is a reasonable way for her daughter to behave and actively supports it, it makes me wonder about their overall social politics.
I realise that sounds horribly victim-blamey, which I am a bit disgusted with myself about...but I can only speak as I find.

Tequilashotfor1 · 17/07/2015 18:45

Wow what a load of drama over nothing!

Just take her swimming/ice skating/MacDs.

Party threads make my teeth itch!

Hellionsitem2 · 17/07/2015 18:47

I can understand a child being uninvited if a fall out involved horrid bullying. However the girl is obviously a total princess, unkind and manipulative to boot.

Hellionsitem2 · 17/07/2015 18:47

I blame the mother though!

Hellionsitem2 · 17/07/2015 18:56

I'd text back 'oh that's such a shame, DD was so looking forward to it'

Then avoid the DD and mother like the plague.

Imustgodowntotheseaagain · 17/07/2015 18:58

Sorry, I read that as Amy is best friends, not your dd.

Eva50 · 17/07/2015 19:07

Txt her back saying "no worries, we now have something else planned" and start inviting the children that are going to be in dd's new class for play dates. Avoid Amy and her Mum in future.

Baffledmumtoday · 17/07/2015 19:36

This reply has been deleted

Message withdrawn at poster's request.

DoreenLethal · 17/07/2015 19:38

I'd probably text back 'So glad that you managed to sort it that my daughter is now the one being excluded. Still, if it works for you'.

diddl · 17/07/2015 19:42

I wouldn't bother to text back tbh.

There's no reply needed.

honeyroar · 17/07/2015 19:49

Your poor DD. No wonder Amy is a little madam if her mother can't even be polite as an adult. You're all better off without them in your life. Roll on next year when she's not in their class!

pictish · 17/07/2015 19:50

I wouldn't text back either. There's nothing sensible to say to that nonsense.

Pumpkinpositive · 17/07/2015 20:50

The mum has just called me. She now says there was no falling out

She and her daughter need to learn to settle on one lie story and go with it. All this chopping and changing about is irritating.

I wonder if Amy wasn't so much the bullied at her last school, but the bully? She sounds highly manipulative and good at isolating other children. Not usually the hallmark of a bullied child, I would have thought.

Hope you and your daughter have a lovely weekend regardless, OP. Thanks

TendonQueen · 17/07/2015 20:55

tequila maybe don't read birthday party threads then? It was pretty clear from the thread title. Did you not manage to read it properly? Hmm

DoJo · 17/07/2015 21:03

So you and your daughter invited the new girl in the class over to play, to be nice and make her feel included, and her mother has repaid that kindness by encouraging her daughter to exclude yours from a party? If the mother was worried about bullying, surely being nice to the girl who wanted to be friends before the carrot of a party was dangled in front of her would have been a better choice. It's a shame that your daughter has got caught up in this weird little power play, but I can't imagine you would want your daughter going to the party now, even if the mother did realise the error of her ways and reinstate the invitation.

ChampagneBabyCakes · 17/07/2015 21:05

The mum sounds thick - your DD could have been a nice friend for her Amy, but instead she's gotten involved in a load of nonsense instead.

I hope you let the mum know her behaviour was hurtful towards your daughter - she's obviously too stupid to realise that herself.

Don't invite her over again.

eddielizzard · 17/07/2015 21:13

extraordinarily bad behaviour from amy's mum. i would steer very well clear in future. don't get involved. awful awful awful.