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AIBU?

Friend gave me her rubbish. AIBU to feel so hurt by this?

333 replies

MyShinyWhiteTeeth · 12/05/2019 15:15

I've been struggling more for money the last few months. I am not broke but I have to really watch what I spend and budget.

A friend bought round some unwanted supplies as she knew I am short this month. I was really touched by her kindness at first but was then a bit shocked to find that all the food was out of date, opened or manky. She has very high standards on food so I'm amazed she could have found most of it acceptable.

The bread was mouldy, some of the jars were opened or way past their use by date, the vegetables were way past their best. From the two large bags of supplies she gave me only 2 items were not put straight in the bin after she left.

I feel really upset and let down by her. I can't believe she didn't notice it was all rubbish except for two obscure food items that I'll probably never use.

AIBU to want to end the friendship over this? It feels like I'm overreacting but I just feel so hurt she gave me two bags of rubbish and I thanked her so much.

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EmeraldRubyShark · 15/05/2019 04:30

Thank you for posting. It is a good warning to others. I will not even give a drink from an open bottle of water to anyone. I keep singles of fruit juice and for years have told people they must not accept a drink of anything from an open bottle, and that goes for children too. I hope everyone on mumsnet make their children aware that they must refuse food and drink if from an open packet.

That seems so excessive llizzie, why do you think that?

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WillLokireturn · 15/05/2019 04:35

Sarell1967 if you RTFT you'll see OP's many updates which show she already spoke to friend who gave her mouldy food deliberately as a cruel joke, who has form for nasty tricks.

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MummasTheWord · 15/05/2019 08:29

This OP’er seems genuine, but I wonder if these tabloid journalists ever ‘plant’ posts so they don’t need to worry about getting people in trouble with friends / family or complaints/privacy.

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MyShinyWhiteTeeth · 15/05/2019 12:13

I'm glad they didn't RTFT as I'm worried everyone will know who I am in RL.

I've asked for this to be deleted.

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MummasTheWord · 15/05/2019 12:42

I hope they do delete it if risk of making things difficult for you.

This post was on the Mumsnet email round up of Hot Threads which might be why the Mirror picked it up - Mumsnet should put an option where you can specify you would bot want a post publicised like this if risk of embarrassment or repercussions if picked up by the national press.

Friend gave me her rubbish. AIBU to feel so hurt by this?
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TanMateix · 15/05/2019 17:46

Agree, I have found it quite intimidating when a thread you post it is paraded in trending conversation as if it was the new Jeremy Kyle show.. sorry but some times it just feels like advertising.

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WillLokireturn · 15/05/2019 19:04

Well OP before it goes down. Just to say, you've had all us MNers supporting you. It breaks my heart a bit when tabloids pick up something as an easy news items because there should be a rule that disallows it. It steals our safe space to get advice and chat over issues. Just because it makes a little effort news story, they splash it across national newspapers. Bastards.

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WillLokireturn · 15/05/2019 19:05

Journalists, not MN. I wish that there was a rule that MNHQ could enforce to prevent this. Sometype of copyright or something.

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WillLokireturn · 15/05/2019 19:09

Or GDPR.

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EmeraldRubyShark · 15/05/2019 19:11

MNHQ like it. Individual forum helpers may make sympathetic noises but the powers that be at MNHQ are happy with papers picking stories up as it drives visitors to the site who click through from the article, which in turn increases revenue from advertising. To be fair they do make it clear when you sign up that whatever you’ve posted no longer is your own intellectual copywrite, and that they can do what they like with what you post. Every single poster on this forum has expressly agreed to that being the case by the fact they agreed to the T&C and signed up.

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MyShinyWhiteTeeth · 15/05/2019 19:26

I think that it's free advertising for mumsnet and I'm glad my situation has possibly encouraged women to visit the site. This forum has helped me deal with several issues over the years. I've got a lot of encouragement, good advice and direct plain speaking and I'd like to think that raising awareness of it helps others.

Although I'm scared shitless about repercussions in RL.

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icannotremember · 15/05/2019 19:31

Hopefully people IRL will see your ex friend for the nasty piece of work she is and any repercussions will be hers to deal with, not yours.

Picking up threads from mumsnet is such lazy journalism, no wonder people think so much less of journalism as a profession these days.

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floraloctopus · 15/05/2019 19:33

It steals our safe space to get advice and chat over issues

Anybody who thinks a public internet forum is a safe space really needs to get a grip.

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Amibeingdaft81 · 15/05/2019 19:34

Or GDPR

Don’t be daft. It’s an anonymous forum. And the OP chose by her own free will to post any and all detail that she has done to. Knowing full well that accessible to anyone and everyone, including DM journalists.

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Amibeingdaft81 · 15/05/2019 19:35

It steals our safe space to get advice and chat over issues

You do realise that anyone, literally anyone, can read these threads, don’t you?

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floraloctopus · 15/05/2019 19:38

You do realise that anyone, literally anyone, can read these threads, don’t you?

Some people seem to think they can never be recognised and that their boss/husband/wife whatever never will use MN.

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WillLokireturn · 15/05/2019 22:40

Yet, people do post and that's what MN works on. What pp don't expect is it will be taken out of a relatively niche forum that people can log onto and find if interested, and that of details splashed across national newspapers with generic wider readership. That has never been part of agreement.

For those of you rolling your eyes that 'hey ho they posted in an internet forum, silly them', nope that was never explicit part of permission given in first place that it could be shared on other sites.

If tabloids sought permission to share from OP that would be different but they are taking something unagreed without permission from a limited forum to a wide audience that many OPs would and do object to. Brilliant that you eye-rolly people (who never share details nor need real help) think is ok, but the vulnerable people that post here and want help won't agree with you. If you don't think it's a travesty that newspapers can share people's MN names and details of their stories without permission to, then you are condoning an abuse of this site and the vulnerable posters on it

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WillLokireturn · 15/05/2019 22:46

I really worry about PPs that agree it is ok for tabloida to do that. You know it is wrong. That people ought be able to chat and talk to others without it being stolen and paraded Infront of millions,not in original site, of people that OPs never wanted nor agreed it to be.

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WillLokireturn · 15/05/2019 22:51

In our team/ field, GDPR applies. It ought have a challenge in courts. Because I think it has numerous justifiabe complaints.

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JaniceBattersby · 15/05/2019 23:01

It’s not a niche forum WillLokireturn, it’s one of the biggest forums in the UK and it’s certainly not a safe space. In fact, depending on subject matter, the thread will be read by many more people on this site than it would be on The Mirror’s website.

If you put something on here you should remember that you are putting it into the public domain.

And it’s all very well calling journalists lazy: they are anything but. Most work 70 hour weeks for shit pay in crap conditions. The reason they lift stories from here is because they are under a lot of pressure from their editors to get as many clicks as possible as efficiently as they can. Many journalists write upwards of 5,000 words per day. They have no choice if they want to make it in this profession but to, at some point, work for the Mail or another tabloid as a career step.

So you might think that what they’re doing is wrong (and I might agree with you ) but I know dozens of journalists and not a single one of them is lazy.

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JaniceBattersby · 15/05/2019 23:03

And any challenge on GDPR grounds for something already in the public domain would not make it past the ombudsman, never mind past a judge.

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MummasTheWord · 16/05/2019 01:14

It is not a completely ‘safe space’ as obvs a public forum, but when posts are in the confines of the forum, it is a relatively safe space to anonymously discuss things and get opinions/help/advice. It is wrong that posts can be lifted for the tabloids and although journalist may not be lazy, it is a very ‘lazy’ form journalism and having to hit targets really should not be a reason for them to justify it - especially if it could have repercussions for posters, or cause potential posters that could be really helped by sharing an issue on here to hold back.

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gluteustothemaximus · 16/05/2019 01:19

Maybe Branleuse is the friend Grin

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MummyParanoia101 · 16/05/2019 02:01

@MyShinyWhiteTeeth What did her last text say? The one which you said you didn't know what to make of it?

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Milkn0sugar · 16/05/2019 02:42

What a silly thing to do. There is a food bank collection every Christmas at my work. I'm trying to imagine on what planet I'd put food in that was OOD and I couldn't/ wouldn't do it. A good friend would have brought you a bag of actual supplies to help you out or even researched a list of local charities that are on hand for support etc. I'd not be able to move past this without saying: "I've had a look through the groceries but it's mostly inedible with the exception of x and z - mouldy, OOD etc. Do you want it back or shall I throw it? " if she says: "throw it", ask her "are you sure you don't want to eat it yourself or feed it to your kids?" Point made. Thanks

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