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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To not want DF to bring her baby everywhere?

999 replies

DijfunvKd · 11/02/2022 12:19

My friend lives a few hours away from me, and visits the area I live in fairly often. She had her first baby last year. When she visits, it's always with her DH.

Now she's had the baby, she will contact me asking if I want to meet her and the baby for coffee or lunch, and I always go. She will also ask if I want to go for a drink or nice meal one evening, and so I find a date on which I'm available. However, I then get messages to say she'll have to bring the baby because she'll need breastfeeding, or there is no one else to look after her etc. So we end up having a quick coke in a child friendly pub, or they both come to my house.

I don't mind the lunches with the baby, and do the expected 'isn't she cute?' (she is), 'is she eating/sleeping well?' small talk, but I find it extremely boring and do it to be polite and supportive. I don't want to repeat the same conversation on the evening.

DF will always say 'baby will be no trouble while we're out, she's very placid', but it inevitably becomes DF talking to the baby while I sit and make the expected cooing noises, and then she needs to leave early to get the baby to bed. If she had no option but to bring the baby to socialise then that would be one thing, but her DH goes off for hours with his friends, child free, well into the night, and I can't understand why she can't do that. If it was because she simply didn't want to leave the baby, then why ask if I'd like to go for a drink or nice meal in the evening?

During her pregnancy she was claiming nothing would change, that she'd still be going on holiday with friends and leaving the baby with her dad, and I thought she was deluding herself with that, but now that the baby has arrived she's swung hard the other way, which is her prerogative, but AIBU to think that her expectation that she brings the baby every time we see each other is ridiculous?

For information, the same happens when I visit her too, although that is less often because she visits friends and family where I live and stays with her parents.

OP posts:
DijfunvKd · 11/02/2022 12:20

Leaving the baby with the baby's dad I mean, not with my DF's dad.

OP posts:
Seeline · 11/02/2022 12:21

How old is the baby?
Is the baby breast fed?

Susu49 · 11/02/2022 12:21

Hope you've got your hard hat ready...

JustWonderingIfYou · 11/02/2022 12:22

Depends how old baby is as to if she can easily leave it. 6 month old or younger and breastfed can be hard to leave for more than a couple of hours if they refuse bottles.

Dunrobin · 11/02/2022 12:22

"Last year" could mean baby could be anything from around 14 months to 6 weeks old. How old are they?

Theunamedcat · 11/02/2022 12:22

This reply has been deleted

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Duracellbunnywannabe · 11/02/2022 12:23

How old is the baby?

DropYourSword · 11/02/2022 12:23

During her pregnancy she was claiming nothing would change

I said this too. What a fucking idiot I was then!

britneyisfree · 11/02/2022 12:23
Hmm
DijfunvKd · 11/02/2022 12:24

@Susu49

Hope you've got your hard hat ready...
I know Grin If IABU fair enough, but I just can't understand why she asks me to do things that are not baby friendly then want to bring the baby. Why not just stick with lunches or coffees until the baby is a bit older? It annoys me clearly my diary for the night out that she says she wants, which inevitably turns into a juice at a Wetherspoons for a hour. If that's what she wants to do, then just say that, so I know I have the rest of the night free. It's so frustrating.
OP posts:
username1293948 · 11/02/2022 12:25

I assume you don’t have children?

Hollyhead · 11/02/2022 12:25

Depends on how old the baby is - if older than about 6 months yanbu

drpet49 · 11/02/2022 12:26

* It annoys me clearly my diary for the night out that she says she wants, which inevitably turns into a juice at a Wetherspoons for a hour. If that's what she wants to do, then just say that, so I know I have the rest of the night free. It's so frustrating.*

^I don’t think you are being unreasonable. That would annoy me too

AryaStarkWolf · 11/02/2022 12:26

I agree with you OP

WheelieBinPrincess · 11/02/2022 12:26

Need an age on the baby Op.

Unfortunately with babies, you can’t just switch them off at the back and pop them in a cupboard occasionally while you go about your life.

DijfunvKd · 11/02/2022 12:26

@Dunrobin

"Last year" could mean baby could be anything from around 14 months to 6 weeks old. How old are they?
Sorry, the baby was born in August so she's nearly six months now.
OP posts:
Gizacluethen · 11/02/2022 12:27

A young breastfed baby doesn't really leave their mum. I get a couple of hours away from DS a week, he's 8 month and bottle fed. But he doesn't like being away form me and I don't mind taking him everywhere with me.

I think you're being unreasonable, she has a baby now, of course she has a baby with her.

I thought I'd be ready to leave my baby much earlier than I do. So I don't think you can hold that against her

AryaStarkWolf · 11/02/2022 12:27

@username1293948

I assume you don’t have children?
I have children and it would annoy me too
AppleTangerine · 11/02/2022 12:28

I think you don't understand what it can be like with a baby. I found it really hard to leave my baby until he was about 10 months old (and even then it wasn't for hours I left him). I tried to leave him with his grandmother around 6 months or so and go out for a meal twice- one time he arrived at the restaurant for dessert because he wouldn't calm down and the second time I had to rush home before pudding because he was inconsolable.
I couldn't and didn't want to leave him for hours.

I think you just need to accept if you meet her for the next while then it will be with the baby. The baby won't be a baby forever and hopefully as he gets older your friend will be more available and find it easier to leave him.

WheelieBinPrincess · 11/02/2022 12:28

Nah she’s still a bit young OP, wait until the baby is mobile and not so placid and she will almost certainly not want her joining you in the pub.

DijfunvKd · 11/02/2022 12:28

@WheelieBinPrincess

Need an age on the baby Op.

Unfortunately with babies, you can’t just switch them off at the back and pop them in a cupboard occasionally while you go about your life.

And she presumably knows this, so why make plans that don't involve the baby if she's unwilling to leave her with anyone else?
OP posts:
Lottapianos · 11/02/2022 12:28

I don't think you're being unreasonable at all. I would be seriously fed up at this point too. As you say, this baby had a father, who could step up for an hour or two and take care of the baby while you have the odd lunch or drink or whatever with your friend. It sounds like you've been very accommodating, and more realistic about how her life was about to change than she was!

heyitsthistle · 11/02/2022 12:29

I'm in the same situation as your friend. My DD is 7 mo and tomorrow I'm having my first girls night out and I'm both looking forward to it and petrified, and I'm leaving her with DH. I know I'm going to have to leave to come home to settle her, as she's basically still EBF and refuses a bottle and sleeps while feeding. Babies are generally more cranky in the evenings, so I can see why she'd prefer to bring the baby. The first year is tricky, so cut your friend some slack.

Just steer conversation away from baby chat!

DijfunvKd · 11/02/2022 12:30

@Gizacluethen

A young breastfed baby doesn't really leave their mum. I get a couple of hours away from DS a week, he's 8 month and bottle fed. But he doesn't like being away form me and I don't mind taking him everywhere with me.

I think you're being unreasonable, she has a baby now, of course she has a baby with her.

I thought I'd be ready to leave my baby much earlier than I do. So I don't think you can hold that against her

To the pub on an evening?
OP posts:
needmoreshinys · 11/02/2022 12:30

but her DH goes off for hours with his friends, child free, well into the night, and I can't understand why she can't do that.

From my armchair detective position, based on this one sentence, I would wonder if there is more going on in her relationship, the dad not stepping up for example, not wanting her to go out.

Or is it possibe that she just doesnt want to leave the baby and didn't realise how much her life would change