Meet the Other Phone. A phone that grows with your child.

Meet the Other Phone.
A phone that grows with your child.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Would you pay back this 10k?

507 replies

cantchooseyourfamily · 06/01/2019 04:25

I'm looking for some advice, I was really ill over the last few years and managed to get treatment overseas that cost almost £50,000. The treatment was somewhat experimental at the time but is now available on the NHS, however I couldn't afford to wait and see if it would start being offered on the NHS so we made the decision that we would pay and I would go abroad for it.

Before I went for the treatment I wasn't sure about going, was worried about leaving my children and was also worried because I was about £10,000 short with being able to pay for it. DH and I have good jobs and are very lucky, we would have been able to get hold of the last 10k within a few months and were prepared to wait until we had it before I went ahead.

However, my mother offered to give me the remaining money and was insistent it was a gift, I asked several times over the following months if I should pay it back and she was insistent that it was fine, it was a gift, she wanted to help, etc. At that point we had the 10k and could have given it back, no issue.

Not that it necessarily matters but she's fairly well off with different companies and a few properties. This all happened over a year ago, I've moved on, am doing well health wise and have not thought about the money much, other than to feel grateful. Now out of nowhere she has messaged saying she's having business problems and wants the money back. I'm so upset, I hadn't factored this in, have my own stuff going on have made investments and purchases this year that I would not have done had I thought this was a loan rather than a gift. If I don't give it to her the family fall out will be huge, with my sister's and mother likely disowning me. On the other hand I think it's a rubbish way to treat me. There's so much more to the backstory but I wasn't raised by my mum and had very little to do with her until I was in my 20's, didn't meet my sister's until they were older and so on. I'm quite sure this would be the end of our fragile relationship but don't know if it might be for the best anyway. I couldn't imagine gifting my children a house deposit or sum of money to help with there wedding or medical treatment and then asking for it back a year later.

I'm very upset and wondering if I should just pay it back or not?

I also can't help remembering times over the last few years when she has paid for very expensive holidays and bought cars and things for her other children, none of which bothered me at the time, I didn't need anything from her and am a bit older. I can't help thinking she won't be asking for those gifts back from her other children and it's just another way in which I'm treated very differently.

OP posts:
mobyduck · 16/01/2019 03:51

Don't repay it.

cantchooseyourfamily · 16/01/2019 10:51

I haven't heard much, a couple more (potentially) drunk messages saying goodbye and how she would have done anything for me but I've ruined things. I haven't replied to any of them. I'm still not entirely sure about paying it monthly, on the one hand I do think that gives me the moral high ground on the other it's like I'm agreeing with her that it was always meant to be repaid - which is obviously not the case at all!

I've spoken with my sister who says she is keeping out of it which is the best I could have hoped for. There are serious issues between our mother and the other children with high levels of codependancy and heads in the sand all round. I'm happy with them quietly knowing the truth and not really getting involved because I know non of them are ready for the fall out that will ensue if they actually spoke up. I'm not sure I'm ready tbh 😂😂

I'm not worried about any legal ramifications, I don't think she would go down that route but if she does I'm quite prepared to fight my corner.

OP posts:
NWQM · 16/01/2019 11:13

Given that she has texted you goodbye I’d personally leave it - including not setting up the standing order. I’d perhaps be putting the money away if I really felt I wanted to pay it back but I’d be tempted to not hand it over.

AcrossthePond55 · 16/01/2019 12:22

Yep, goodbye is goodbye.

At this point I'd block her and not repay the money.

KC225 · 16/01/2019 12:30

It's interesting that the sister doesn't want to get involved. If she thought you had borrowed the money with no intention of paying it back and were now lying about it being a gift - she would say something, a lot. Any daughtet would. I agree that her 'no wanting to get involved' is I believe you but if I side with you she will also turn on me.

Motoko · 16/01/2019 12:38

I agree about the sister. She'd be kicking up a stink if she thought you'd borrowed the money. But she knows what her mother's like, so is keeping her head down.

I think now, you should just leave it. Don't set up payments, and it might be an idea to block your "mother" from contacting you, at least for a few months. Make sure to keep her messages though, I don't know if blocking her will wipe them out, so check that, and it might be an idea to copy them or print them out.

Yulebealrite · 16/01/2019 15:01

Even if you did pay it back, relations aren't going to improve. Your siblings know the truth, so you may as well keep it.

Your mums parting gift so to speak.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page
Swipe left for the next trending thread