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.

AIBU to think this is an overreaction to me being 'flakey'?

206 replies

Carrados · 11/01/2017 09:18

I'm a flakey friend. My friend a week before Christmas invited me and another friend to an event this Friday which has £10 tickets. We both responded that sounds good but didn't discuss buying tickets. I was busy with work before Christmas and my other friend was travelling in NZ. My other friend a week and a half later says 'shall we organise tickets?' And I respond 2 days later (we were in holiday) and said that's a Christmas was a bit more expensive than we thought and I'm short until pay day - could I cancel and can we all get drinks on pay day? I cancelled with 2 weeks notice.

Similarly in Oct same friend organised attending the Friday evening of a week long cocktail event. I cancelled with 4 days notice.

On both events our mutual friend has found someone to replace me and has said from the outset that that was fine (she's very social and her and her friends regularly do this). She's also had to be a bit up in the air with plans as she's working unpredictable days in another city, long days etc.

Over Christmas I was 40 mins late for drinks with a group of friends. I had organised this and was v stressed because this friend didn't have any flexibility with time or date and didn't offer or suggest another time or date in the week we were there over Christmas. I was late because my parents wanted dd for the night, DH then wanted that evening as a date night, and we forgot dad's stuff as we'd taken her on a day out that day.

I know all of this is my fault. I cancelled on the cocktails in October because I'd had a heavy week at work (I was leaving 2 weeks after) and we were all, including this friend, going away for the weekend together the next day. We also saw each other in November and over Christmas, also August and I think September.

I've really struggled to balance work and family life with my new job I started in October. The job is demanding and we had flu then norovirus on the house. My commute is also 3 hours a day and with a toddler waking up at 5.30 in the morning, it was all getting on top of me.

Friend sent me a 300 word message last week and in the message that:

  • I was treating her pretty poorly
  • She was frustrated at me dropping out on more than one occasion at short notice (for the events listed above)
  • That's she guilty of 'trying to make me think'
  • That I shouldn't commit with certainty and then drop out
  • She had been gracious to me so far but can't be expected to over and over again
  • That I need to be fair with my friends (I've checked in and no-one else upset)
  • She gave me a list of things that I could and couldn't cancel for and what I should say in "" when responding to an organised event
  • she said she understood it was demanding being a parent but that was no excuse for how I'd been treating her

I'm at a loss here. I've responded and said I essentially take her point but feel it's a massive overreaction and going 50 notches ahead of what it needs to. If she'd asked I would have told her that I was struggling to balance everything since starting new job and committed to the things above whilst not realising it's full impact.

I should mention she has form for doing this to other friends. She did it to a close friend who became more distant at uni that 'she deserved more respect than that' and then a few years later told her she'd 'let it go considering the circumstances' that her mother had just died.

I don't know if I can be friends with her anymore and I feel awful for thinking that.

AIBU to think this is an overreaction?

OP posts:
DinkyGT · 12/01/2017 09:37

Gooseygoosey12345 exactly! "Why do some friends expect you to act like you're in a relationship?"
OP YANBU - your friend has spoken to you like you're a child and unaware of your own actions/feelings. It's so hard to juggle all of these things and unsupportive friends just make life harder. I am very similar to you and over time I have had to be the one to 'phase out' certain friends who showed me they could not deal with the fact that I couldn't do everything they expected of me on every occasion they wanted. "High pressure friendships" - as another posted called them- are not helpful and are more about the other person's idea of what friendship is rather than liking and appreciating you for who you are. We're all a bit shit sometimes but other times excel ourselves. That's life.

MondayTuesdayWednesday · 12/01/2017 09:56

OP, your "friend" sounds really needy and like very hard work. You aren't even that close to her. If I were you I would not make any commitments to meet her except every once in a while and only when you were sure it suited you.

I would never be so precious towards a friend, and none of my friends towards me, as she is acting towards you by sending you that OTT email. Real friends understand that life gets in the way and plans can change. The examples you give are fine. Nothing was even set in stone for the first one.

Gooseberryfools · 12/01/2017 10:13

OP I think you probably just need to be more realistic about how much you are able to do considering all the demands on your time. Set your default as 'I'd love to do x but that week is too busy sorry'. Only agree to socials on quiet weeks.

It is interesting she's text you. She clearly values you enough to be open and honest with you about how she feels. Maybe you should be open and honest with her about how difficult your time has been. No one is a mind reader.

Gooseberryfools · 12/01/2017 10:17

I personally wouldn't have sent such an email but I would have stopped inviting you to bookable events. Just met casually in groups where your absence wouldn't have created work for me.

You're probably guilty of trying to do everything but you need to learn to say no.

LoveDeathPrizes · 12/01/2017 10:19

If you don't really know her well enough to do things 1-1 then I'd actually take this message as a bit of a compliment. She evidently thinks you're quite close and wants to work on the friendship. It's not the best way to communicate that but still!

coffeetasteslikeshit · 12/01/2017 16:05

But if it is just the usual normal life stuff we ALL deal with (work, kids, family) then being flakey is really just another word for rude.

It's another word for being disorganised imo.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page