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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To be upset that I'm not invited to my oldest friend's wedding

63 replies

honeybun11 · 21/06/2021 11:12

Hello Mumsnetters! I have not posted here in decades but I need some perspective. I will try to be as honest as possible about what has happened so apologies in advance if I come over as a massive b*tch... During lockdown my oldest friend A stopped speaking to me. I had known her since primary school, we had daughters the same age who played together since early childhood, and A had supported me through some really difficult times in my own life. We had very different lives – I was a well-off professional in a secure, long-term relationship while she has had a number of abusive partners and has always struggled to have a stable career or even to make ends meet – and she might have seemed like an unlikely friend for me, but our shared past meant a huge amount to me and I loved her deeply. My family would often tell me A wasn’t a good friend to me: she was unreliable, often cancelling arrangements at the last minute, and sometimes lying about the reasons why. But I persisted in our friendship, often sending her flowers and presents and inviting her on trips and holidays, and meals out, almost all of which I paid for.
Through A I got to know another woman C, who over the years became a very close friend of mine in her own right. C is another professional woman with a relatively stable home life so perhaps (at least to the outside world) a more natural fit for me as a friend. She is also loving, supportive and empathetic and a wonderful friend. Our friendship has always been on a more equal basis – we do nice things for one another but it isn’t a one-way street.
Recently I separated from my partner after many decades together. At around this time A confided in me that she had got together with a man, B, who was C’s ex. I knew that C still had strong feelings for B and I was concerned at how she would react and I said so to A. A asked me to conceal the relationship from C and even asked me to lie about what was going on. I declined to do so. I hate lying and also felt a certain loyalty to C. I didn’t like the fact that A was asking me to lie for her.
I now wonder whether I should have got involved at all in what was really an issue for A to resolve with C herself. I have subsequently apologised to A for being judgmental about her relationship with B but A feels my apology didn’t go far enough. I think A felt hurt by my divided loyalties and that she (rightly) felt that C and I were discussing her behind her back. I am not proud of the fact that we did this.
Things moved on and I didn’t hear much from A in lockdown though I heard from my daughter that A was now planning her wedding to B.
Just recently A has written me a long letter detailing a number of ways I have hurt her feelings and saying that she never wants to see me again. Foremost in her list of grievances is the fact that I discussed with C her relationship with B. As A sees it, her relationship with B is nothing to do with C.
I don’t know whether I have got caught up in something that doesn’t concern me and have lost a valuable friendship as a result, or whether I have failed to notice that my friendship with A has run its course – or indeed whether A has actually abused the trust we built up over long years of friendship. A has said the way she feels is non-negotiable and that although I have apologised on a number of occasions, she still doesn’t feel I respect her.
Do I just need to learn from this and move on? I am, needless to say, not invited to the wedding

OP posts:
Duckdown · 22/06/2021 10:51

I agree with pp. I think you're well rid of her. I'm sure it's very hurtful though.
I think you did the right thing not to lie to C.

Herja · 22/06/2021 10:53

I had a friend like this. It was a bit odd, she was a long term frenemy of my closest friend (known each other since childhood, but always been friends of friends). It became apparent over time that every partner my best friend had, the now ex friend would move in on as soon as they had broken up/were in the end stages of the relationship. It happened time and time again, culminating in ex friend physically attacking best friend in public for no reason. IMO it was some kind of wierd envy thing over best friend's confidence and relative (to exfriend) success. She couldn't have the life, family support or job, but she could have the girlfriend...

I'd not worry about why the friendship ended OP, either it ran it's course, you were shit, or she is wierd. Regrdless, the friendship's over. It sounds like you made all the effort and she was a bit of a user and a shit friend anyway, so it's for the best, no matter how it ended.

Auntienumber8 · 22/06/2021 10:55

Do you live in a village or tiny town as it all seems a bit everybody knows each other.

fairycakes1234 · 22/06/2021 10:57

l would let her go, she was unfair to involve you You did nothing wrong. Move on from her.

Wiredforsound · 22/06/2021 10:57

A sounds like unpleasant, jealous, possessive and manipulative woman who has spent much of her life wanting what she can’t have and blaming everyone else for it. Why else would she be fixated on C’s exes? She’s no loss. If anything, I’d say she was out to do damage to C, and didn’t like it that you ‘took her side’. I think you’re collateral damage here, rather than the object of her obsession.

honeybun11 · 22/06/2021 11:00

@Auntienumber8

Do you live in a village or tiny town as it all seems a bit everybody knows each other.
ahahaha no we live in London but we've all known each other since we were young from school/university! We are all in our early 50s now.... @Auntienumber8
OP posts:
dworky · 22/06/2021 11:00

@spotsoddsocks

Some people on here will disagree, but I don't think friends should have relationships with friends ex husbands or partners. It's sleazy. A clearly thinks this to an extent, or she wouldn't have asked you to lie for her, to try and hide the relationship. In my opinion she's not a very good friend to you or C.
It's only sleazy if you're a sleaze. Don't judge others by your own hangups!
fruitbrewhaha · 22/06/2021 11:07

Urgh, it is sleazy when it's 5 bloody exs though.

It does rather sound as if you're better off without her.

honeybun11 · 22/06/2021 11:08

@Herja

I had a friend like this. It was a bit odd, she was a long term frenemy of my closest friend (known each other since childhood, but always been friends of friends). It became apparent over time that every partner my best friend had, the now ex friend would move in on as soon as they had broken up/were in the end stages of the relationship. It happened time and time again, culminating in ex friend physically attacking best friend in public for no reason. IMO it was some kind of wierd envy thing over best friend's confidence and relative (to exfriend) success. She couldn't have the life, family support or job, but she could have the girlfriend...

I'd not worry about why the friendship ended OP, either it ran it's course, you were shit, or she is wierd. Regrdless, the friendship's over. It sounds like you made all the effort and she was a bit of a user and a shit friend anyway, so it's for the best, no matter how it ended.

thank you @Herja wise words - C has said for the longest time that A is motivated by envy. It's so toxic. x
OP posts:
Yousexybugger · 22/06/2021 14:17

Ew. 5 exes. Whatever her motivation for this odd pattern, I'm surprised C tolerated her so long. You did the right thing in telling C

CagneyNYPD · 22/06/2021 15:06

5 exes...and some when C was still involved with the men in question. Nope, that would be it for me. I can't put up with being dragged into other people's dramas.

Let A and B walk off into the sunset, full of love and wedded bliss. That way, you won't have to be around to pick up the pieces when it all goes tits up. The friendship with A is done. She has made it clear by not inviting you to the wedding. She has given you a Get Out of Jail Free card. Grab it.

billy1966 · 22/06/2021 15:10

OP,
How could you want to be friends with such a snake?
Constantly doing the dirt the C's ex.

Standards?
Really?

You are well rid of her.

Youdoyoutoday · 22/06/2021 15:28

5 times??
It's a no from me, move on!

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