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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To not make DD share?

237 replies

Hotchocolateyum · 18/02/2018 14:04

I visited an attraction yesterday with two other mums and their children. So 6 children in total between ages 2-7.At the end, we visited the gift shop before spending half an hour in the play park by the exit. The other children chose various toys, pencils, usual gift shop tat. I've always been very strict with DD and gift shops, as she finds them a bit overwhelming and we don't have the money to buy from them every time we are out. However I gave her a few pounds and eventually she chose some sweets.

So we all started walking towards the park, and the children were all clutching the things they'd bought and showing each other, and one of the little girls asked DD for a sweet. DD hasn't opened them, she was just holding them, and she told the little girl this nicely. The little girl went up to her mum and said "DD won't share her sweets with me". Her mum turned to DD and said quite loudly "Of course she will, I'm sure DD doesn't mind sharing them around, do you DD?"

At this point I could see tears welling in DD's eyes and she looked really uncomfortable, so I said "oh, sorry but I think she's saving them for later". DD nodded, so I asked would she like to keep them in my bag, and she did. The mum looked really miffed, and the little girl became quite cross and did the whole "it's not faaaair, she has sweeeeeeties".

I did wonder if I should make DD share, but she was the only child who had bought sweets, and if she shared with one child she'd have to share with the rest, leaving DD with almost nothing, while the other children had their items intact. This didn't seem fair to me, a lot of the children had been bought quite big items too, soft toys etc.

During the rest of the time at the park, this little girl kept glaring at DD, going over and muttering to her mum, and at one point came over to hover near me, staring pointedly at my bag.

On the way home in the car, DD was a bit quiet. I asked her if she was OK, and she said X had come up to her in the park and said she was mean for not sharing. I told her she wasn't mean, because all the other children had chosen to buy toys instead of sweets and nobody was asking them to share their bouncy balls, pencils etc. We had a chat about how sometimes we should share but sometimes it's OK not to, as long as we are polite about it.

I am on a WhatsApp group with the other mums, and that evening there were the usual "what a lovely day" comments, however the mum of the child who had asked for the sweets then made a comment along the lines of "hope chocolate's DD enjoyed her sweets, X was upset all the way home that she wouldn't share, I had to stop at the garage and buy her some, lol!" lots of smiley faces, but I felt it was passive aggressive. I just messaged back saying "well, DD only got that little packet of sweets and I'd rather she didn't eat them so close to teatime" and left it at that. I can see the other mum has read the message but hasn't replied since.

So was I right to not make DD share? She's an only child but certainly not spoilt, and we've never had any problems with her sharing toys etc. She's quite quiet and more likely to give something up to a more demanding child. I feel I was right to stick up for her, I'm all for sharing but not when it means handing over the one thing you have to others who already have plenty. Am prepared to be told I am BU though.

OP posts:
NeatFreakMama · 19/02/2018 19:50

YANBU

TheGoalIsToStayOutOfTheHole · 19/02/2018 19:56

YANBU, how ridiculous and awful that your DD ended up feeling so and about it too. Poor thing. If the others wanted sweets, they should have bought some. Fuck the mother too, passive aggressive eejit.

PegLegAntoine · 19/02/2018 19:56

Ugh YANBU I hate entitled bratty behaviour. Little things like this can add up to a child thinking their wants trump all and IME that creates bullying type behaviours. I may be biased due to my DD’s unfortunate experiences... the mother and daughter are exactly the same and we are much happier since going NC

And it affects the child made to bend to the others’ wills too, and I agree that this is socialised into girls especially :( TBH that was a big factor in me deciding enough was enough, I thought about what it was teaching her to do in a future relationship. To do whatever somebody wanted no matter if it upset them. No!

Love the suggestions for PA responses to her stupid messages.

iMogster · 19/02/2018 19:59

Everyone is in agreement that DD doesn't have to share her sweets. A lot of people have said, DD should share if she had opened them and eaten one. So to avoid being 'forced' to hand over her sweets, the only option was to put the unopened bag away. It's a shame that because of weird polite rules, DD basically couldn't eat any of her sweets and had to save them otherwise she would have to hand them out.

manicmij · 19/02/2018 20:03

Definitely YANBU. The children all seemed to have a choice. Your DD chose sweets. The others had the same chance so your daughter had her sweets for herself to take home or eat as she wished.

FlippingFoal · 19/02/2018 20:06

YANBU - it's good for children to learn that people will not always share with them just because they want it. It's an invaluable lesson for the real world.

believinginangels · 19/02/2018 20:09

Too many girls are socialised to inconvenience themselves so as not to sightly put out others
Too right. She is encouraged to share, but my almost 3yr old GD refuses to share sweets or fruit. She knows her own mind and won't give in to pressure and I love that (having grown up to always put others first) if she wants to give it's accepted as a lovely gesture and she is praised. If not, it's because she doesn't want to.

Fleshmechanic · 19/02/2018 20:16

No you were right. You don't always have to share if you don't want to, as long as you're polite. Just ask your child to put them straight in your bag next time so the other children will have to ask you directly, and you can deal with it. That mum sounds a bit immature to be honest, and if she can't say no to her own child then how dare you Hmm

Pastaagain78 · 19/02/2018 20:26

Yanbu you handled it well.

thehairyhog · 19/02/2018 20:30

‘Who stops at a garage to get sweets for a whining child who didn't choose sweets but wanted some of her friend's?!’

This! No wonder the girl expected her to hand over her sweets, sounds like her mum can’t say no! It wasn’t sharing she was asking for, she just wanted her to hand over her sweets. Don’t think I’d have been so polite in my response on the WhatsApp group as you op!

tempester28 · 19/02/2018 20:30

No in this scenario the sweets were bought as a souvenir to take home. The other mum should have realised that and explained it to her child. If your dd had bought other items the same as the other children plus a big bag of sweets and was eating them in the playground, then in that scenario she might be expected to share.

PersianCatLady · 19/02/2018 20:38

Honestly the other mother sounds like a right bitch and she obviously hasn't yet realised that her DD isn't more important than everybody else.

elfycat · 19/02/2018 20:42

I think you handled the issue like a pro.

I'm more of a 'sweets' kind of person, and I often used to get my colleagues commenting about me not sharing fruit gums (we had one of those sandwich delivery services for lunches). They'd bought a chocolate bar and eaten it, but my 'treat' was longer-lasting and more readily shared. I used to point out, pointedly, that they hadn't offered me a bite of their chocolate bar and eventually they got the hint MY fruit gums

DD2 (7) is the kind to offer sweets around and give away her last one if needed.

DD1 (9) is more likely to slink off and eat them quietly.

Keepingupwiththejonesys · 19/02/2018 21:01

Yanbu in the slightest. Sharing totally depends on the situation and in this situation it was fair what you did. The woman is obviously glutton for punishment buying her daughter some sweets on the way home.

Keepingupwiththejonesys · 19/02/2018 21:03

Elfycat, I do find that interesting about your dds. Both my dds will happily share in most circumstances but yes if mine have sweets, my dd1 (age5) tends to eat hers faster and will as you said slink off. Dd2 (age3) would give away her last rolo.

GetsPostByOwl · 19/02/2018 21:09

YWNBU!! My children are big sharers. If DS (5) gets a sweet out of the sweetie box he automatically takes two more for his older sisters. If they have Halloween/Christmas/birthday sweets it's rare to see them dig in their own. They put the between them and share. But never would I expect them to give away what they have if they didn't want to.

Many years ago I used to pass DD's (8 at the time) school at break time so would pick up a bag of sweets for her. Naturally she would take the bag and a dozen kids would magically appear. I ended up telling DD she wasn't allowed to share anymore after out of a 50p mix up she got maybe two sweets, then maybe four when I stopped buying mix ups and bought a bigger bag (Haribos).
Some kids would politely take one or two but a number of the so called "friends" would dig handfuls out and stuff them into their mouths. One actually looked like a hamster, cheeks fit to burst! She choked trying to force them down whilst grabbing a second handful.
She was actually rude enough to say that DD should share. I told her that if she liked sharing, perhaps her mum could come tomorrow with some sweets to share!

speedynamechange73 · 19/02/2018 21:52

Sharing because you want to is one thing, being asked for something is completely different surely. The person in possession should be the one to offer and set the boundaries. If we offer something to a friend, like our last Rolo, that's lovely. What would not be lovely is someone coming up to you and saying give us some of your sweets and then getting all pissy about it.

Surely we teach our children to offer to share, rather than just to acquiesce and hand stuff over on demand?

Yes, of course, it's appropriate to share in some situations but this was not one of those situations and a child demanding sweets from my child would have immediately got my back up and I would have done the same as you.

If your sort of friend wishes to make a rod for her own back by buying her children sweets to pacify her, good luck to her.

FrozenMargarita17 · 19/02/2018 22:08

I would be really embarrassed if my child pestered someone for sweeties. My nephews are like this - I love them with all my heart but it drives me mad that when you have a food item, they will instantly say 'I'm hungry!' Or come over and stare at you or even worse, hold their hand out and say nothing!

Quite often I'm giving my 6m old a little rice cake or something just to keep her happy while we're out.

I will be making sure she never does that !

IlanaRemikee46 · 19/02/2018 22:25

Just post a link to this thread to the Whatsapp group.

Apontypandypioneer · 19/02/2018 22:58

YANBU.

My thoughts basically echo comments already posted. The other child could have chosen sweets in the shop but didn't. If they wanted sweets they should have got them. End of.

IMO you handled it really well.

KimchiLaLa · 20/02/2018 00:08

YANBU. The mum and her DD remind me of Veruca Salt. I can't believe she watsapped such a stupid comment over a pack of sweets. She can f- right off

MrsDilber · 20/02/2018 00:23

Yanbu. I'd have put "all the others didn't share their treats, why should she?" on the chat.

SherbrookeFosterer · 20/02/2018 01:24

There is no right answer to this.

It just depends what character you want your DD to have.

Whisper something clever in your DD's ear, let her take the lead.

She will probably amaze you.

jacobsgirl · 20/02/2018 02:08

Handled very well great example for DD

I think the whole assuming kids NEED to share can get a bit OTT nowadays , making kids feel uncomfortable in certain situations. This is a great example

YANBU

ExFury · 20/02/2018 02:54

I hate that kind of forced sharing some kids have been taught to expect.

My BIL was particularly bad for insisting kids share. Until the day I suggested he'd need to tear a few pages out of his DD's magazine that she'd bought at the shop if it was "only fair" that my DD shared one of the two little toys that came in the thing she'd chosen. He was genuinely baffled.