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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To ask her to go back to sitting in the back of the car?

207 replies

Reesewitherknife · 02/11/2020 11:42

For the last two years I have been a driver for a disabled lady. I drive her to a day centre which is an hours drive away and collect her at the end of the day which is another hours drive back. She has physical difficulties but no learning difficulties or mental health issues.
Before lockdown/Covid everything was good. She would sit in the front passenger seat next to me, no issues.
However, when we resumed after lockdown (in July) we both agreed to wear masks and went with the government guidelines which was that she would sit in the back of the car, we would both wear face masks and I would drive with the windows open to reduce any infection risk as much as possible. I was and am still very keen to do this as I look after my elderly mum who has Alzheimer’s and a chronic blood cancer which obviously puts her in the vulnerable category.
All seemed ok for a while, we would chat on our journey as before.
However, over the last couple of weeks it had become apparent that she has been very unhappy with me and I couldn’t work out why. She would regularly ignore me where’s previous we had a good relationship. She wouldn’t answer me when I ask her what’s wrong or would snap that she was ok. I tried talking about things as I usually would and ask questions etc but we would often drive in silence which I find very stressful and uncomfortable. She was like a stroppy teen for reasons I couldn’t get to the bottom off. I started worrying she was unwell or unhappy in her life.
Anyhow, a couple of weeks ago I found out the reason for her behaviour. I noticed on her Facebook timeline she had written ‘I STILL have to sit in the back of MY own car whilst my PA drives me’ cue angry face emoji. That afternoon when I picked her up she got in the back of the car and shouted ‘Great another FUCKING journey in the back of this car’. I said that I was sorry she was unhappy but we had agreed to go with the government guidelines and I wanted to ensure we were both protected as much as possible. She then said that she had found out her disabled friend didn’t have to sit in the back of his car with his PA or wear a mask and she didn’t see why she should, I said well that’s their decision but it’s going against the guidelines and I’m trying to adhere to them especially as we are in a tier 2 area. She didn’t talk to me on the journey home that day!
I’ve ignored the fact she swore at me but am quite upset about that as I have always treated her with kindness and respect and would hope for the same.
I stressed all weekend over that as I hate the uncomfortable atmosphere so text her and said that if she really wanted to sit in the front that much then that was up to her as it’s her car. She sent back a smiling thank you emoji!
So last week she sat in the front. She was as happy as Larry and chatty as fuck, like a kid who had gotten her own way!
However now with the new lockdown rules coming into place I’m thinking I jumped the gun a bit. I just didn’t want the uncomfortable silence. Maybe I should have been firmer?
At the moment I need this job as I don’t yet get carers allowance for looking a after my mum.
Should I just suck it up, allow her in the front and hope for the best? I don’t know what to do. Maybe Covid is stressing me out so much that I making too much of this and her sitting in the front isn’t much different from her in the back?

OP posts:
HollowTalk · 04/11/2020 19:20

OP, check here whether the day centres are allowed to open (as long as you're in England or Wales.)

Reesewitherknife · 04/11/2020 19:26

Hollowtalk I have asked the day centre. They say they are staying open .

OP posts:
Billericaydicky · 04/11/2020 19:28

Hi OP, I really think you should insist she sits in the back. A cousin of my husbands, slim and with no pre existing health conditions died of coronavirus. He was in his early 60's and a cab driver.
The gov guidance clearly says as much distance as possible between people in the car.

Reesewitherknife · 04/11/2020 19:33

Billericaydicky Just awful, that poor man and his family. This is my concern, we are in a high risk area and I now know of several people who have contracted the virus recently. I explained this to her last week but just got a ‘well I don’t know anyone with it’!

OP posts:
ApplePlumPie · 04/11/2020 21:49

OP This woman is paying you for a service, if you can’t provide the service to her requirements then why not just call it a day and part ways rather than dragging it out, letting resentment build up and causing you both stress ?

SengaMac · 04/11/2020 22:38

I don't understand the shilly shallying you are doing.

You have a risk assessment for your driving.
Tell her you're sticking to it, and it says she has to be in the back.

There's no point endlessly posting about it on here, and not doing that.

IrmaFayLear · 05/11/2020 09:18

If the client was otherwise a nice person and she and the OP had got on apart from this, then it's worth sticking it out. But it sounds as if the client is a bit of a pita so I would find a better position. As many have said - including those who use a PA - there are people desperate for a good helper.

This is an "odd" job in that it crosses usual employer/employee boundaries. A bit like one of those paid companions of old, where quite whether you are a friend or an employee is blurred, and that can get very awkward. It's even true of the boss/secretary dynamic, in which someone can be very intimate (not necessarily in that way!) with the other person and then when an actual employment issue arises (on either side) there can be a whole heap of hurt feelings or even outrage.

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