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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:
worrierandwine · 17/07/2017 08:20

This has probably already been said but the worst (best) that can happen is that she never speaks to you again as a result of you telling her there must have been some misunderstanding and she needs to make other arrangements for who she is going to leech from when her parents have died. This is just like my younger brother, 26, parents pay for everything and no sign of getting a job but then why would he when my parents are funding his lifestyle even down to paying for his credit cards! I actually feel sorry for my brother and totally blame my parents, they have created the situation but won't accept any responsibility so he's stuck in a house with arguing parents making constant digs about him not having a job but continuing to fund his lifestyle. Anyway, I could rant forever but this person is draining you, not contributing anything to the friendship and as you say, you have nothing in common so just break the news and cut ties. This is probably the push you needed to break free from this drainer. Does she have siblings?

Leapfrog44 · 17/07/2017 10:03

psychopath - steer clear!!

Mumoftwoandover · 17/07/2017 10:12

You sound a very clever and decided person. Why allow such a foolishness stand on your way causing such anxiety ? Put a STOP on this Now!!
You know how... eighter sending that beautiful e-mail someone suggested here or saying in her face.. why are you worried if you don't even like her ?? Really ?!

Theaspidistraiswilting · 17/07/2017 14:14

I had a childhood friend a bit like this. She always felt hard done by and that everyone else had a much better deal in life and that we should look after her. She helped herself to people's clothes, 'borrowed' money (and boyfriends), lived rent free in several people's flats for ages or asked us for money for rent, never paid if we went out for a meal etc. I paid for an abortion for her when she was stuck in a foreign country with no money. She went on to have three more in the UK, she just had zero sense of responsibility. I kind of blame her mum who always told her she was so pretty she would just marry well and someone would look after her all her life. It was sad but honestly the relief when I finally didn't have to deal with it any more. I STILL feel guilty - this was 20 years ago!

TheUpsideDown · 17/07/2017 14:23

This kind of batshit craziness would have my anxiety off the scale! I don't even like guests just calling round unannounced for the day, let alone ones that decide they'll actually be living with me AND have plans to make various changes to MY house!

I would most definitely be distancing myself from this kind of friendship. Its all one-sided and she sounds immature & needy, self-centered, oversteps boundaries and doesn't listen.

I distanced myself from a childhood friend who was similar (although she thankfully had no plans to live with me one day!). I kept in touch with her for years, even though we lived around 300 miles away from each other. But each time she visited I found her bolshy & over-bearing, we had nothing in common anymore, all conversations centered around her, she had strong political and religious views that she constantly tried to force on me/others - views that I didn't share and found offensive at times. She was also very delusional. She would tell tall tales about how amazing her life was...stories that I knew weren't true. She told lots of stories and lies when we were kids, but when someone reaches adulthood you expect them to stop. I dreaded her visits more and more and I came to dislike her.

The straw that finally broke the camels back was when she visited and claimed she was pregnant. She excitedly produced an ultrasound scan pic that was of a baby in the third trimester - it wasn't hers, it was her brothers wife's scan photo. The SIL's name was right there on the pic, the hospital name was from a hospital in the area that her DB & SIL lived that was nowhere near where my friend lived, the date on the pic was from months ago so the baby in this ultrasound would have actually been born by this point.

I tried to appreciate she was unhappy, depressed, clearly had some deep-rooted mental health issues and her pride got in the way of her being 'normal' around me. But the pregnancy lie was too much and I stopped returning her calls/texts.

She recently found me on facebook and she pm'd me telling me she just got married - he's an old man over twice her age and is living in a religion-based cult community somewhere remote in America. I feel sad she ended up on this path, but I feel she was always destined for something like this and I couldn't go along with it any more

Palpatine · 17/07/2017 15:17

Just text her "Sorry, I think you got the wrong end of the stick, but living me will not be an option." and that's it. Don't engage in any back and forth, don't let her drag you into a discussion about it.

My MIL was sort of your friend a while ago. It was one of her big birthdays and she told us she was going to holiday with her best friends as a birthday treat after the big day. Later on it turned out that was never the plan to begin with. Her friends (husband & wife) had been talking about going to Country X and my MIL just assumed she was going too (they often go on hols together). She didn't talk to them for a few weeks after because apparently it was their fault for her making assumptions. eyeroll

mumof3boys33 · 17/07/2017 16:13

Where's the OP gone?

Tess123 · 20/07/2017 10:16

OP, I'm usually all for confronting people, and usually with disastrous consequences the, but in this case I would slowly Ghost her out of your life. I don't think any amount of talking will end up in anything other than you being the bad guy! You don't have to disappear immediately, never to be seen again, then you'll be the bad guy! But maybe you could start by missing meetings with her, giving excuses at the last minute, not making new arrangements in their place. Always be busy when she asks to meet up, and be vague about future your arrangements, and don't phone her, and only answer her phone calls occasionally. Eventually, she should get fed up with you and disappear. If not, you may have to do the disappearing.

Dizzywizz · 21/07/2017 15:09

Op did you decide to speak to your friend?

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