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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to think son could have spent £7.50 on me?

289 replies

Whyamivirtuallyinvisible · 22/07/2021 07:35

My son has just started work, admittedly it isn't the greatest wage, however he's been very lucky to get a job as an apprentice p,umber on 15K. He gets picked up every day so won't need fuel for his car at all during the working week. Incidentallly we bought the car, insured it for him for the first year and husband also gave him half towards his first big repair bill which cost us £200.

Times have been extremely tough financially the last few years, made worse by Covid, like many people. Our DD dances to a very high standard and it goes without saying that this costs an awful lot of money, but we manage somehow like no fancy expenditures and no holidays for the last five years. I've recently had an ankle op so I've also lost money from work.

About two months ago my son had desperately needed new clothes. Smart for interviews and some casual which had cost around £180/200 which we had paid for. He has had part time jobs but nothing since January due to Covid and then studying for A Levels

Last Saturday I'd gone into town with him, my first venture on crutches and he was going to buy himself a few things to wear with his first salary. He'd probably spent around £70 on himself before we decided to head for lunch and a rest as I was shattered. Without thinking I said I'd buy lunch. Force of habit really as not used to him working. However when we had almost arrived at the food place he remembered they only took cash. I waited outside for him as he needed to walk further up the road to withdraw cash. I gave him my card and PIN number and even as he walked away I honestly thought he'd come back and say he was treating me out of his first wage packet.

We ordered food and sat down and he told me he'd taken £20 out of my account. I think mine was £7.50 as I'd ordered small but his was more, possibly £9/10. He put the change on the table and then in his pocket as I had no bag or pockets. He kept the change but I am sure he'd just forgotten about it and I wasn't going to ask for £2 back.

Being honest I felt really hurt and ashamed to admit I shed a tear (pathetic I know) as it made me feel kind of crap. I've always felt guilty about DD's dancing as she has had more spent on her but that isn't my fault. I've tried to make it up to him in other ways and the year before I'd bought him an off-road bike £1000 and £500 worth of clothing, boots, helmet etc. It's not even the money, it's the gesture and I think it felt worse because I'd stood in the street on crutches whilst he'd gone to withdraw money from my own account. Even if he'd said 'Do you mind if we have a packet of sandwiches each, I'll treat you' that would have felt better.

AIBU to think this was a bit mean after 18 years of trying to always give him what we could afford or was it my fault for inadvertently saying I'd pay.

OP posts:
SchrodingersImmigrant · 22/07/2021 08:06

Zero idea about what..that if someone says "I will buy us lunch" they don't want to and it means they want you tu buy a lunch? 🙈 I think most people have zero idea about athat. Rightfully.

bigbluebus · 22/07/2021 08:07

You said you'd pay. You're still his parent who will have paid for his lunches for the last 18 years. If you wanted him to treat you then you should have said lighthearted '"as you're working/earning now you can treat me to lunch!" My student DS would never argue about paying if I said we were going for coffee but if he suggests we go for coffee/lunch then I will often say "are you paying?" and sometimes he'll say "yes " - but I'd obviously only do this in the Summer when he's working and only if it's coffee/light lunch.
If you want your DS to pay then don't offer.

GameSetMatch · 22/07/2021 08:08

I’m in my thirty’s and my Mum still buys me lunch if we go out. She won’t let me pay even though we are well off.

Distiller91 · 22/07/2021 08:09

"Don't set imaginary tests then get upset when he doesn't "pass" them"

This. Its really a rubbish thing to do.

GintyMcGinty · 22/07/2021 08:09

You are expecting him to be a mind reader.

And you told him you would pay.

Whinge · 22/07/2021 08:10

@SchrodingersImmigrant

Zero idea about what..that if someone says "I will buy us lunch" they don't want to and it means they want you tu buy a lunch? 🙈 I think most people have zero idea about athat. Rightfully.
Yep, I hate people who don't actually mean what they say. If I said i'll buy us lunch and the person I was with argued that they'd buy it instead, I would consider that pretty rude behaviour, and would assume they thought I couldn't afford it.
PeskyRooks · 22/07/2021 08:11

You said you'd buy lunch and he took it at face value. That's it. Poor kid didn't realise he made his mum cry over it!

AbsolutelyPatsy · 22/07/2021 08:11

you took him out for lunch
you are the parent still
agree it takes a long time for any dynamic to change.

FuzzyPenguin · 22/07/2021 08:11

My sister was a dancer to a high standard, we also missed out on things because of this not just cause of the money but the most weekends were determined by if she had a contest or not. Occasionally I would get a “big ticket” item given to me to “balance it out” but it never did. I still felt pushed aside for dancing. The best bit she quit at 18 and hadn’t danced since, good investment thet was.

Anyway I agree he is young, you offered

Paperplain · 22/07/2021 08:11

Yes he could have, you told him not too.

Tulipomania · 22/07/2021 08:12

In my '50s and have to struggle to pay my own way when I go out with my parents - even though we are better off financially than they are.

OP, perhaps you should have suggested in a light-hearted way that your DS treat you.

"hey, now you're earning proper money how about treating your poor old Mum to a sandwich and a coffee?!"

It probably simply wouldn't have occurred to him otherwise, if it's what you've always done.

I hope you have brought him up to say thank you when you pay for him?

Ledgeofglory · 22/07/2021 08:12

You offered to pay, he probably thinks you can afford it if he sees how much you spend on your dd dancing.

PrettyBlunt · 22/07/2021 08:12

YABU it's £7.50 and you said you'd pay.

You've said yourself your DD has a lot more spent on her over the years which you have continued to pay for.

ItPearl · 22/07/2021 08:12

He is so used to the parent child role. It doesnt occur to him so try not to be hurt. But shift that dynamic gradually as you go along now.

"I know you'll want to pay your way so....

"I know you wouldnt want your mum to be still treating you to lunch every single time now you are working"

Subtly subtly change the narrative to him being a man who wants to pay his own way!

LadyCatStark · 22/07/2021 08:12

Think back to when you were 18, would you have thought to buy your mum lunch? I know I wouldn’t! I don’t think most teenagers’ brains are that developed yet.

comebacksunshines · 22/07/2021 08:14

@Bluntness100

I’d not expect my daughter to by me lunch no, certainly not on that low salary and I don’t think she owes me because I raised her either.
£15,000 is a decent amount of money for a young person still living at home. A lot of adults with households manage on less than that. We get it though, you’re a high earner.
SchrodingersImmigrant · 22/07/2021 08:14

@ItPearl

He is so used to the parent child role. It doesnt occur to him so try not to be hurt. But shift that dynamic gradually as you go along now.

"I know you'll want to pay your way so....

"I know you wouldnt want your mum to be still treating you to lunch every single time now you are working"

Subtly subtly change the narrative to him being a man who wants to pay his own way!

Or stop saying opposite of what you mean 😁
rjacksmiss · 22/07/2021 08:15

My son earned £20 from helping me in work. He bought me a Mars bar from it. I was so chuffed. Then told me a week later - you owe me a Mars bar. 😂 He's 13. They just don't think like that.

Wavypurple · 22/07/2021 08:15

I’m sorry that you’ve been upset but YABU.
Also the ‘I’ve paid for my son for 18 years why can’t he pay me back this one time’ comment is not appropriate. He was a child for those 18 years and owes you nothing.

stayathomer · 22/07/2021 08:16

I get it op. As my kids get older there's times I hope they'll do something a certain way, kind of to prove to me that my parenting is on track, all those years of 'share,' 'say please and thank you're etc. It was a test without you even realising it. So people can call you oversensitive etc, but we also it because we're parents and sometimes they come through, other times they don't think or are just going with the flow etc. So yanbu and yabu because he may have just been on autopilot and you were leading himBrewCakeFlowers

Bagelsandbrie · 22/07/2021 08:16

£15k is a good salary for an 18 year old living at home. But he doesn’t realise the child / parent dynamic is changing and it wouldn’t have occurred to him to pay especially as you said you would!

iluvalfredo · 22/07/2021 08:16

I'm 29 and I don't think I've ever treated my mum to lunch Blush I feel like she just always offers and I'm always skint. I do feel bad about it but once I'm earning a decent wage I plan to treat her more. Your son is young and boys are kind of like that so I wouldn't take it personally. I bet he didn't even think about it to be honest.

FortunesFave · 22/07/2021 08:17

Honestly I can't imagine expecting or wanting my 18 year old to 'treat' me.

I'd rather they kept their money for themselves!

Fullofglee · 22/07/2021 08:17

Give your a head a wobble he's on pittance and you offered to buy him lunch. You favour your dd paying for her hobby. Your a parent parents don't go on like this.

stayathomer · 22/07/2021 08:17

rjacksmiss I was thinking awwww then oh.Grin

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