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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to dread hearing from this friend?

134 replies

AnonymousUser7 · 15/07/2017 03:52

Ok. So I have known this friend since childhood. TBH, childhood nostalgia is probably the only thing we really have in common, as our lives have taken different trajectories. While I do care about her, sometimes I'm not sure I really like her as a person.

Her personality and views (think someone who believes everything they read in the Daily Mail) get on my nerves. I just have to grin and bear it when in her company (in the knowledge that it will soon be over).

She also doesn't understand me, she doesn't know what drives me or makes me tick, but in her head she thinks she can read me like a book. In fact she's just projecting herself and thinks (or wants to think) I'm exactly like her. It actually seems like she doesn't listen to me and only hears what she wants to hear.

I don't mean to be unkind, but she's basically an underachiever who takes no responsibility for her future. She dropped out of school, has worked in minimum wage jobs since her teens and has never moved out of her parents' house (now aged 39). Her parents pay for everything (including buying her a car!) and they don't ask for a contribution to the household. Meanwhile her feckless spending habits (junk she doesn't need and top-priced branded goods) mean she is regularly overdrawn.

She's always been like this and it hasn't bothered me before but some time ago we had an awkward one-sided conversation.

During a conversation about cost of living rising, bills etc. She was complaining about having no money and worrying about her lack of future prospects. I flippantly said I didn't know how I'd manage in the future either (I was just trying to make her feel better, if anything I was thinking more along the lines of future pension provisions). Somehow, in her head, she twisted this to mean that I had invited her to live with me when her parents pass away. I had suggested nothing of the sort. She completely ignored my tensed up expression and stunned silence, and started planning all the things she would do to my house, as though it belonged to her!!! She also made a weird confession that she's always had me in mind as someone she could rely on to go and live with!!!

Judging by the reaction from her parents, the next time I saw them, she had also shared this news with them. They now seem to think I'm going to look after their daughter when they pass away.

We haven't discussed this "future living arrangement" since the awkward conversation but the unspoken expectation is now hanging over me and is making me anxious about the future confrontation.

She has also started texting and emailing me more frequently than I find tolerable, trying to foster (or assuming) a closeness in our relationship that just isn't there.

Even during times when I don't hear from her, I sometimes fret about when the next communication will arrive.

The advice I might give to someone in such a situation would be just to have it out and be honest with the person, but the problem is I'm just not that close or comfortable enough with her to take this approach. Even if I could confront her, I don't think I can express in this post how delusional she can be - she would only hear what she wanted to hear.

I want to be able to stop worrying about this, to be able to cast it from my mind as though it never happened. I want to be able to get rid of this expectation that's hanging over me. I hate the fact that she thinks she can rely on me to provide a roof over her head, and that she thinks it's a completely normal thing to do. I have my own life to live and my own future which doesn't include her coming to live with me.

AIBU to find her unreasonable? How can I stop feeling annoyed about this?

OP posts:
Miserylovescompany2 · 15/07/2017 09:29

Fake your own death - change your identity - run for the hills (preferably in a different country that has no means of communication)

sweetbitter · 15/07/2017 09:36

I had a less extreme problem with a friend from school who I had nothing in common with any more, actively disliked spending time with but who was really clinging on to our friendship and not picking up any hints from me about seeing each other less.

In the end I just stopped replying to messages, beyond two or three words (eg "Fine thanks") and ignored any suggestions to meet up. We live far apart so it worked and now we don't see each other any more.

I considered telling her outright why I found her so hard to spend time with, but a) I'm a wuss b) It would have caused a big drama and made it very awkward if we ever ran a into each other in the future and c) There's no way she'd have thought any of the reasons were at all valid, it would just be me being a huge bitch and being wilfully mean to her.

Any scope in just ignoring her messages and not picking up the phone OP?

bigmac4me · 15/07/2017 09:39

Is it just me who finds this heartbreakingly sad? So sad that she is so alone, that after the death of her parents, she feels the OP is a friend she believe she is so close to that they can live together. I feel for you, OP, and of course you have done nothing wrong and I wish you luck in clearing this up. I feel for you, OP, but as someone who has no family or close friends other than my husband and children I feel for your (misguided) friend more. Good luck.

BadLad · 15/07/2017 09:40

Save yourself the cost of recorded delivery and show her this thread.

That's usually terrible advice, but if you're trying to get rid of someone it might do the talking for you.

Theducksarenotmyfriends · 15/07/2017 09:41

I have a friend like this, although she's very sweet and I love her to bits but we're totally polar opposites. She has some sen and mental health issues and can be a bit of a fantasist like your friend. I've found you need to be really blunt and to the point if they get carried away with an idea, subtleties (like your aghast facial expression!) do not work!

SafeToCross · 15/07/2017 09:45

Do you want to continue contact? If no, then reduce frequency of your replies, and then stop. If yes, then next time you see her, ask her 'where will you live when your parents are no longer with you?' If the idea of living with you comes up 'no I don't plan to live with a friend/anyone.'

Aeroflotgirl · 15/07/2017 09:55

My goodenss, as soon as it was suggested she sponging off you in the future, I would have said, no I don't mean you coming to live with me, and you should have set the record straight with her. I would be distancing myself from her, she sounds awfully hard work. It does not sound like you like her very much, let her go.

GETTINGLIKEMYMOTHER · 15/07/2017 09:56

You need to nip this in the bud asap.

You can say it reasonably nicely, e.g.- 'X, I'm not sure how, but you seem to have got the wrong idea here. I'm sorry, but you really can't come to live with me. It just wouldn't work for me.'

And then harden your heart to any tears/pleadings, etc.

Aeroflotgirl · 15/07/2017 09:56

Well you do need to have this honest and candid conversation with her. Set her straight, then let go.

GETTINGLIKEMYMOTHER · 15/07/2017 09:58

Should have added, if she then gets angry and cuts you off, then I for one would thank my lucky stars.
Sounds as if she's just a parasite looking around for a new host to suck dry.

Aeroflotgirl · 15/07/2017 10:01

I agree Getting, he brass neck is amazing, she is taking advantage of your kind nature. she is looking for the next host, don't let it be you!

rollonthesummer · 15/07/2017 10:04

God, why didn't you say something to begin with?!

altiara · 15/07/2017 10:13

Just say you've had time to think about it now and you don't want to do it.

beachcomber243 · 15/07/2017 10:18

Years ago I had a passionate, loving relationship and one day we discussed meeting at that same date and time in the same place in 10 years time no matter what had happened between us.....like a Hollywood movie. We vowed we would.

I can't remember what year that was, what day it was, what time it was or where it was! That's normal...a moment of fantasy, good intentions and connection [mutual not one-sided!], but forgotten as life moves on. Your friend on the other hand is a complete fantasist, a parasite and a user.

You don't like her, dread hearing from her. Tell her the facts, about real life...and get rid.

TheFirstMrsDV · 15/07/2017 10:20

Please don't faff around with emails and letters.
You don't even like her!
Just stop being her 'friend'

How utterly ridiculous to end up supporting someone in their old age because you are too polite to say 'no fucking way'

Just stop communicating with her.
Don't return her texts

Aeroflotgirl · 15/07/2017 10:20

Just be straight with her, op never said anything about her living with her for the future so can't gave changed her mind. Tell her you never said she could live with you in the future, so she has to put that idea out if hervhead and tell her parents or you will.

Sugarpiehoneyeye · 15/07/2017 10:22

OP, you need to get this off your back today, so that you can start the week afresh, with no stress. It is only once to do, then you'll be free.
If you are unwilling to face her, then email her, keep it short and to the point, no false promises of bargaining. She is a grown woman, as are you, she'll soon get over it, as it was of her making.
Then distance yourself, this isn't a friendship.💐

HoldBackTheRain · 15/07/2017 10:22

It's pretty ironic that the DM is sneered on in general on MN, and yet there are quite a number of mumsnetters that could easily pass for some of their columnists!

OliviaStabler · 15/07/2017 10:26

@HoldBackTheRain *Olivia so people that work in jobs that pay the minimum wage expect the world to owe them a living? And anyone who objects to this way of thinking is projecting?

grin Thanks for the laugh!*

Of course not, don't be so limited in your view FFS Hmm

I have known people like this who take zero responsibility for their lives. It isn't what she earns or who she lives with, it is the lack of responsibility for her life that I have an issue with and saw in my ex friend.

elevenclips · 15/07/2017 10:31

I'd start going lower contact. Don't reply to the flurry of communication.

If it comes up again say you always want to have privacy at home.

LazyDailyMailJournos · 15/07/2017 10:34

You sound as if you don't actually like her, in which case why are you so worried about being straight with her? In fact, why are you still 'friends' with her at all?

Send her an email. If you have contact details for her parents then send them a copy as well. Job done.

astoundedgoat · 15/07/2017 10:37

I can't remember what year that was, what day it was, what time it was or where it was!

Oh no! Can you imagine if on that day and place, there he/she was, in a Burberry trenchcoat, standing in the rain on (presumably) Brighton Pier or possibly one of the more romantic small bridges in Venice (it's an afternoon in February, so rain is more likely than not in this scenario, in either location), waiting for you for hours with new passports and £100k in cash to start your new lives together in Buenos Aires/Naples/Hong Kong, and then slowly realising you're not coming after all, and walking off alone into the rain?

WHAT HAVE YOU DONE???

(has taken it too far)

user1493413286 · 15/07/2017 10:38

Do you get anything from this friendship? Because the way you e described it doesn't sound like you particularly enjoy spending time with her so maybe it's time to put an end to it by distancing yourself, particularly if she's not going to hear it if you tell her she can't live with you.

woodhill · 15/07/2017 10:43

You need to tell her no but could you offer her any advice when her parents are no longer there.

HoldBackTheRain · 15/07/2017 10:56

Olivia and you were the one that brought up projection..!

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