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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To not continue to help friend

88 replies

QueenofDestruction · 07/01/2020 20:18

At the beginning of December my neighbour, who we have a very good relationship with and who we would consider a friend (but not of the close variety) had a terrible breakup with her partner. She caught him cheating whilst away on holiday and he tore up her plane ticket left her goes home and took all his things and a lot of hers and moved out. He stopped paying a lot of things including his half of the rent and took both their cars, she had recently reduced work hours due to his insistence and and as then left financially stranded. He was imo abusive but she was left as others before her in dire straits just before Christmas with a daughter (from previous relationship). She is a very good cook and gardener and asked me if She could help me out at home cooking and with odd jobs for an hourly rate, I doing really need any help but felt it was because she didn't want to ask for a hand out so I gave her £300 for helping bit when asked because it was Christmas coming up and she has a child I said she could make me a Christmas cake .
We only asked her to fetch a few things for us when she was going to the shops herself maybe 5 times in the month and if course don't expect repaymnet. We also supply her with say extra eggs when we buy, milk etc..

However, this month I got an email asking whether she can continue ' working' for us and I paid her again, but frankly feel resentful as a few.months were mentioned. I really don't want to leave a mother stranded but neither do I want to support her. I bought her really nice Christmas presents but feel she was a little grabby about them and also I felt she could have reciprocated at least with a few baked biscuits or something cheap.

When we paid her again she invited us around for dinner to Thank us and then had 'forgotten' which I might be being a selfish about but feel somehow mugged. I am worried about leaving her in a bad situation with a child to support but am feeling used.

I am thinking enough how to deal with it , do I continue to help out for a few months to May when she has another job starting, do I decrease the amount by £100 over the next 2 months or tell her that I won't be helping her from next month? I am also a neighbour and want the relationship to stay pleasant. I had always intended the help to be short lived.

Any advice on how to deal with it. I don't want to be selfish and part of me feels that I am extra resentful because she has not just come and say just trim a rosebush, provided a cake she baked or something like that. We don't expect her to work but she offered and I probably feel used that she didn't at least do I something. At this I don't mean hard labour just a token act.

She does have family and an ex husband who pays minimum but they also are all low earners and she won't be able to afford to stay next door without my help and I might end up with a worse neighbiur!

OP posts:
TheFormidableMrsC · 07/01/2020 22:39

@StripeyDeckchair I agree with you, and further to my post above about the possibility of her reporting this "employment" for UC purposes, it could be a slippery slope. It IS a slippery slope in terms of implications for OP going forward, regardless.

Memsnutter · 07/01/2020 22:40

I’d suggest that this very dramatic break up with the ripped up plane ticket and theft of goods by her ex might be slightly exaggerated for sympathetic effect...

She sounds like a con artist whose given you a sob story to extract money.

TimeForPlentyIn2020 · 07/01/2020 22:42

Have you e mailed her?

JayAlfredPrufrock · 07/01/2020 23:05

Bless your heart.

But stop.

VenusTiger · 07/01/2020 23:08

I think the best thing you can do for her now is to say "let me please come round for the day and sit down together and figure out a permanent way forward for you and your daughter" get in touch with some agencies, or women's aid, job centre, go through outgoings, what credits can be applied for etc. and give her this kind of help instead of money. Tell her you can't afford to give her any more money, but that you're happy to help her get out of this bad situation and back onto her feet. Advice is free.

1Morewineplease · 07/01/2020 23:15

This needs to stop. By all means ask her to clean/garden/iron for an hourly rate but a blanket £300 for naff all is taking the mick.

paranoidmum2 · 07/01/2020 23:23

OP, this needs to stop. Seriously. If she stops being a friend or good neighbour because you stop giving her money then she was never a good friend.

draughtycatflap · 07/01/2020 23:30

Do you have a catflap? I’m coming round. I can smell a muggins three streets away. I like Dreamies and smoked salmon, ta. And can you make sure the duvet is nice and fresh and plump.

Grumpelstilskin · 08/01/2020 00:13

I'd expect her to scrub my loos and fucking work for the money. She sounds a right CF.

readingismycardio · 08/01/2020 05:24

What a cf! This needs to stop, OP, and you know it!

CatteStreet · 08/01/2020 05:41

Tbh in the situation she appears to be in, I don't blame her much for not providing baked biscuits or asking you for dinner, but what I don't understand is how you got into the situation of paying her so very disproportionately for a bit of helping out in the first place. I think I would have given her a no-strings-attached gift (either money or a couple of food shops) as a one-off in the acute situation and then helped her sort out her finances if necessary. Now you're in this position, you need to explain kindly that you don't need anyone to do jobs for you and you can't go on giving money.

Soffy · 08/01/2020 06:34

There's being nice, and theres being a mug.

Dizzywizz · 14/01/2020 16:28

Is there any update on this @QueenofDestruction?

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