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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to think I wasn't rude?

135 replies

lalalalyra · 01/06/2016 18:06

I have a 3 week old baby so I'm aware I may be being a bit hormonal, but I'm seriously tempted to put my foot down over a friendship Ds2 (8yo) has because I'm growing to really dislike the child's mother.

I'm 38, I have 6 children from 17-3 weeks. So far I've managed not to kill, maim, permanantly misplace or seriously traumatise any of them - the teens are a bit iffy atm as they found my teenage Greece holiday photos in a box last week and apparently seeing your clearly drunk mother on a bucking bronco in a club is 'sooooo sad and embarassing' but I'm sure they'll get over it. My kids are happy and healthy and I've working fucking hard to make sure my issues with my parents (they were neglectful and abusive so I ended up being brought up by my grandparents from 7) don't impact them negatively in any way.

DS has a new friend. New friend's mother is a counsellor. Someone else (I'm not sure who and I'll be having words when I find out) has mentioned to her that I'm seeing a counsellor atm after a massive fallout with my siblings when our father died. New friend's mother has taken to commenting on every single decision I make about DS and what he's allowed or not allowed to do and trying to analyse it in terms on my past. I see her every day at the moment when I take DS to playscheme, once school is back I'll see her twice a week at activities. I won't see her at the school gate as DS walks himself - a decision I've apparently made as seeing children being met at the gate by their parents is obviously painful for me as I was never met at the gate by mine.

I've said to her twice that I don't dwell on the past. I've also said twice, politely, that I would never mix social crowd with counselling so I'm quite happy with my own counsellor, but she's still going on. Everything is a thing and today the boys asked if they could go to an adventure place after the playscheme. I said no because it's the kind of place we'd go as a family if we were going and we'd done something DS wanted to do yesterday so today I'd promised DD3 we'd do feet painting. This apparently (because yesterday's choice by DS was at home) suggests that I'm nervous about my children being around strangers and I lack confidence. I, admittedly rather abruptly, told her I didn't lack confidence, I just don't feel the need to say yes to everything DS asks and I'd rather she stopped trying to analyse me when she knows nothing about me or my past. We then left as I didn't want to discuss it any further and I didn't want a scene at playscheme because I'm actually the chairperson.

She's mentioned to a committee member that she's concerned about me because it's not like me to be rude! I'm now bloody livid. Any suggestions of polite, but firm ways to tell her to back the fuck off? I've enough on my plate as DH goes back to work next week and that means he's away for 10 days and my new HV is humming and hawwing about 'lack of support' even though I'm fine, baby is thriving and my PIL are a great support and 5 minutes away. I get that people are nice, but no-one was bloody concerned when I was on crutches and barely able to walk with SPD and had 5 kids, I've now got the ability to walk and a newborn who luckily has taken to BFing like a dream and is considerably less work than the pain of SPD!

OP posts:
Krooski · 02/06/2016 13:15

Analyse her back. Tell her (in a whiny compassionate voice) that you can tell that she is obviously insecure about her identity because she feels the need to cling to her role as a counsellor even when this is inappropriate. ;-)

Primaryteach87 · 02/06/2016 17:32

100% agree with her being unprofessional and inappropriate. What a weirdo! I can see why this would drive you mad!

GrandMarmoset · 02/06/2016 17:36

In the circumstances, I think you've been exceptionally polite.

Policom123 · 02/06/2016 19:35

Ignored her literally. I have some parents that behaved like or worst( give they opinion on my private life just because I invite them over for a play date) I literally ignored them at school gates or in the streets, I pass near or cross the road and don't even say hi.

beccabanana · 02/06/2016 20:03

Excellent text, I wouldn't have had the balls to send that, too much a scaredy cat! I agree, she sounds either very newly qualified and using you as a Guinea pig, isn't a counsellor at all (she's acting more like some pseudo psychiatrist) or is just one friggin nosey cow that's heard a bit of gossip and using her 'qualification' as an excuse to fish about for more details!!!

monstiebags · 02/06/2016 20:18

Spot on

malikasmum · 03/06/2016 00:39

Is she actually a counsellor or has she just done an online course? Just saying because one of the big things I think they would teach when learning about counselling is confidentiality and when to act and when not to. analyse away but keep it to yourself iykwim I would ask which body she is with and tell her you are offended by her attempts and will contact them if it doesn't stop advise you are not trying to be rude but she doesn't seem to be accepting that you are not requesting or in need of help from her

ThumbWitchesAbroad · 03/06/2016 05:05

I'm getting a little irritated at the "she's very newly qualified" comments - I didn't complete my counsellor training because I wasn't actually in the right place to do so, but trust me, even in the first half of training, we're taught NOT to do what this woman is doing! and as a newly qualified counsellor, if anything you should be MORE careful not to overstep boundaries! Plus she should be having regular supervision, so her supervisor would bring her up short on what she's attempting.

If any decent training programme let someone like her through, then I'd be astonished, quite frankly. Which is why it feels more likely that she has done an uncredited "training" course, or done some training as part of a different course. Or she's just slipped through the net and managed to blag her way through all the exams and competency tests, and has now gone maverick.

justilou · 03/06/2016 06:43

My mother has mental health issues. She spent quite a bit of time telling everyone and anyone that she was a counsellor and doing exactly what this woman is doing. She is manipulative, controlling and quite frankly - dangerous if anyone is vulnerable enough to fall for this. (I had to call her work - she was working (as a nurse) in a drug and alcohol rehab facility and inviting people to stay at her home, giving them money, etc....) and inform them that I was concerned for her safety as well as theirs. I'd be definitely interrogating her about her qualifications and if you believe that they're genuine, report her. She sounds really dangerous.

CRAZZZYLADY40 · 05/06/2016 10:33

she clearly believes her own life is 'simply perfect' and its her duty to save the world of their troubles, maybe she should be seeing a therapist, might help her with her Superhero alter ego.

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