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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To go and spend the weekend with my friend under these circumstances?

108 replies

beyondtherebound · 17/08/2023 04:43

Used to have a FWB situation with a man over a period of about 5 years. It started as sex, but over the years, the benefits became very much secondary to the friendship, and he became one of my closest friends. We did sometimes get silly after a few drinks, but not that often in the end.

Then he got into a serious relationship and distanced himself. I've been there myself the other way around. So I was a bit miffed but I understood and was happy he was happy.

I haven't heard from him in 6 months and he called me out the blue to meet for a drink yesterday.

Turns out his GF had upped and left him over night, a couple of weeks back. He came home from a work trip and all her stuff was gone. It sounds horrendous.

Without a doubt he called me thinking a rebound shag would make him feel better (I don't judge him for that, it's very normal to want validation and intimacy a break-up) but instead I forced him to sit down and talk, and he ended up just pouring his heart out for hours. He's completely heartbroken.

I felt absolutely nothing for him except empathy and sadness as his friend. He'd clearly not had a good chance to talk it through with anyone and was so confused and in pain. He's not been eating or sleeping well. I've never seen him like this. Needless to say he didn't get anything from me except a lot of hugs and a listening ear.

He's got to go and cat sit for his parents in Devon for the weekend and asked if I'd go with him, as he was dreading being there alone.

I don't have anything else on and he clearly needs someone to drag him out the house for some air, make sure he eats some proper dinner and let him talk and cry and muddle through it all.

Our relationship has two such distinct sides to it though, that I'm torn.

The friend side of me feels like it's absolutely the right thing to do. He's very dear to me and he's in pain and I'd do it for any one of my female friends, even if they'd been a rubbish friend while they'd been loved-up. I have no doubt that just being there for some company and to make sure he's not wallowing, will absolutely help him get through the worst of it.

The side of me that used to sleep with him though, and knows he also thinks a rebound shag will make him feel better, feels a bit icky about it (although I've got no right to be self righteous about it as I've called on him for the same reason before).

I realise I don't have to sleep with him even if I do go, so it's not the act of it itself, but more just feeling that that part of our past makes it feel a bit less 'above board', to go and spend the weekend with him.

OP posts:
daisychain01 · 19/08/2023 07:03

Cleaning the house, mowing the lawn, watching TV this weekend otherwise. Nothing exciting!

I'd find pottering in the gardening and a bit of housework ultimately more appealing in this context, I couldn't think of anything more dull and irritating than being with a moping bloke under any circumstances, it'd be like watching paint dry.

At least you'd have something to show for it at the end of the weekend Grin

nfkl · 19/08/2023 08:15

You may be extremely friendly at times, but if you have never had a conversation where he told you your place in his world (romantic partner, friend, etc.), sorry to say, for him, you are still the temporary filler that can be cancelled anytime

Don t go waste a weekend tending to the needs of a man who doesn t care for you even if the scenery is nice, that s not how to get them or to treat yourself well

Very potential situations: imagine she calls/shows up and he just forgets your existence, that he starts crying after sex or he s pretending you re her, that he spends all hours explaining to you how great she is, etc.
You may be in the same place, you may end up in his arms, but you won t get his true attention, she ll be there

So, I d say not to go.
Go do nice things for yourself rather, better than being the background of a gloomy weekend.

narkyspirit · 19/08/2023 08:27

Grimchmas · 17/08/2023 10:41

On the suicide thing - I say this as somebody who has lost a brother to suicide - it is NOT the responsibility of women to prevent men from killing themselves.

Sorry if that sounds blunt, but I think it's important to remember.

OP, I don't think you should go. He's single now, and I think taking you along with him is just surrogating in a friend/fb rather than getting used to being single.

I'm sorry you lost a brother to suicide, your comment of 'it is NOT the responsibility of women to prevent men from killing themselves.' is not very nice!!!

They have been friends for a while and he has reached out to a friend to spend time with, a female friend. Men will not have the same conversations with their 'mates' because they will feel as if they are weak and will be ridiculed by said mates.

This is where the feeling of being so alone with no one to talk to leads to spending the time on your own looking into the bottom of a bottle and the possibility of suicide.

OP sounds like a nice person and if she wants to just let him chat over the weekend he will feel so much better for it.

Remember we all have some bad time and ALL of us have emotions but men have always been brought up to hide them and get on with it!!

empathy people

Ilovecleaning · 19/08/2023 12:27

TheOutlaws · 19/08/2023 05:18

@Ilovecleaning What’s your point? Different people make different inferences based on written (and unwritten) info.

I don’t know what my point was. I’ve forgotten what I said . You didn’t click on ‘quote’. 🤣

Ilovecleaning · 19/08/2023 12:30

Ilovecleaning · 19/08/2023 12:27

I don’t know what my point was. I’ve forgotten what I said . You didn’t click on ‘quote’. 🤣

Ok. I’ve found my post. I wasn’t making any point.

T1Dmama · 19/08/2023 19:42

Just be clear you’re going as a friend only and not as a fuck buddy.

CoffeeQueen91X · 20/08/2023 23:19

That's just selfish as your only thinking about yourself. I'd go help a mate out if I had nothing else planned

chimamandafan · 21/08/2023 09:51

CoffeeQueen91X · 20/08/2023 23:19

That's just selfish as your only thinking about yourself. I'd go help a mate out if I had nothing else planned

So many of the miserable/ disempowering situations women find themselves in come because they are socialised to always be kind and helpful and not to be selfish. We don't socialise boys in the same way. It's why women do 70% of the domestic work, are the ones expected to look after everyone else and so on.

Women need to learn to be more self-focussed and ask 'What's in this for me?' They need to become a bit less empathetic and more hard-headed. We need to stop taking it for granted that jumping in automatically to look after other people and putting their needs first is a good thing.

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