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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Am I an ungrateful brat?

121 replies

2021x · 16/03/2024 03:16

This is not something I am proud of, and I am aware that I am going to come off as spoiled and entitled, but here goes.

I have a big birthday coming up- the type where you question all your life decisions. I live alone in a different country which I am pretty isolated in, and will be spending my birthday alone, so am already a little emotional about it.

My mum said she wanted to buy me something special. I am not big on gifts and normally she just sends me a big bunch of flowers which I love, but this was important for her. I have been burnt many times by her gift giving and then she gets upset when I don't like what she gives i.e. clothes, chocolate etc. We have very different tastes and to avoid situations like below I am very explicit about what I want. However its important to her to surprise people as that part of the reason she likes to give gifts.

I suggested a high value item from a specific manufacturer. These are extremely expensive new but are such good quality it is considered an investment, so was very happy to go second-hand. She agreed and we saw some items in a retailer, but when I looked up this retailer there are some buyer beware reviews about the quality and the price and I discussed it with her in Janurary.

I found an official re-seller approved by the manufacturer and have been looking online. I found some items that I really liked and sent them on. After chekcing them everyday there was one particular item which I still really liked, and sent a message saying this is what I would like for my birthday. A few days later it comes off of the website.

This morning I get an email from the first retailer telling me that they will send me the gift my mother has bought me........and predictably I hate it. Its is not my style and I would never wear it, was nearly double the price of the one I selected and because of the reviews I don't trust the retailer. She has bought it because at the very beginning I said it would be cool to have something manufactured in the year I was born- but I after looking at the options that was thrown out the window pretty quickly.

I was in floods of tears for 2 hours just through sheer repeated frustration of not being heard. After I pulled myself together, I realise my options are to just not say anything and feel like shit about the present and what it represents, to not say anything and buy me what I wanted anyway, or to say something before it is shipped and run the risk of being labelled ungrateful, spoiled etc. Also because the retailer is a bit dodgy there is the risk that she might not be able to get her money back i.e. exchanges only but as I don't trust the manufacturer there is nothing that I would prefer from them.

My parents are not hard up by any means, but as it was such a lot of money I chose the hard option and messaged her saying I was grateful for the effort but its not my style is there anyway we could get a refund. I also emailed messaged the retailer and asked them to hold off sending it. I am in a different time zone so she won't see the message until later.

So AIBU for telling the truth and causing her pain or should I have put-up and shut-up and be grateful that I got something similar to what I asked for.

OP posts:
Lwrenn · 16/03/2024 07:17

telestrations · 16/03/2024 03:40

My Mum does this all the time though on a less grand scale. The gifts have nothing to do with me it's all a dopamine hit for her and anything I actually want, need or suggest just doesn't do it. I'd really prefer that she just spend it on herself.

I have this exactly thing with my mum. I'll ask for something (under a tenner) that I'm actually happy to get, book I want or nice shower gel etc, I'll get £30 quids worth of home bargain things that I'm often allergic to and then need to find homes for and pretend I'm delighted with so she doesnt have a tantrum. She just doesn't get it. It's hard isn't it? One of my dc has autism and before he gets anything I'm coaching him if he doesn't like it to say thank you etc but last Christmas he just blurted out, "what the hell do I do with this?" Which my inner monologue has been asking for the best part of 30 years 😂

hattie43 · 16/03/2024 07:25

@Commonsenseisnotsocommon

Sanctimonious- look it up

notanothernana · 16/03/2024 07:26

BlastedPimples · 16/03/2024 05:45

Are you so upset because over and over again you don't feel heard by your mother?

Not just about the gift?

👏👏👏👏👏👏

Kwasi · 16/03/2024 07:26

PoochiesPinkEars · 16/03/2024 05:59

That's mad! Why on earth does anyone think lots of money spent overrules any style or taste preferences. I don't get that mentality at all!
Must drive you mad.
Have you said what you said here to him... That you don't want it anymore than he does.... Surely he'd get it then!?

Bit of a back story:

Just after we got together, he did some work for them at their HQ in Denmark and manufacturing site in Thailand. I took the piss and said I bet I could make it look cool. I got one of the leather wraparound bracelets and a subtle charm. It actually looked nice and suited my style.

Since then (nearly 10 years ago), he’s used it as an excuse to only have to go to one shop for presents.

wp65 · 16/03/2024 07:28

Commonsenseisnotsocommon · 16/03/2024 06:07

Goodness me, sorry to say it but you sound both a spoilt brat and a drama queen. Might do you good to volunteer some of your time to actually helping others to understand just how good you've got it and how ungrateful you're being. Rein it in, not very attractive behaviour at any age.

Oh ffs

notanothernana · 16/03/2024 07:29

Presents should be about the receiver, unfortunately for some it's about the giver and their needs.

You also said in your OP that "it's the sort of birthday you think about your life choices" so my guess is you're feeling fragile?

Severalwhippets · 16/03/2024 07:30

This is not really about the present op, it’s the isolation and being faced with the hard questions of your life decisions at a milestone moment. If so few people will mark your birthday and you are alone, this gift may be the only one you have and you don’t like it.

I would stop looking at the gift and crying, but start having an honest conversation with yourself about what is missing from your life. What you will need in the next ten years to feel happier and is it time to go home? Move on?

You sound lonely and unhappy and spending a milestone birthday alone without a choice of options must be very hard. Can you fly back? Have an adventure?

I think you need to probably face up to the difficulties in your life and this is causing the pain and upset.

Kwasi · 16/03/2024 07:31

OP, I always ask people what they want for presents unless I know 100% that they want a certain thing. It means people get exactly what they want and my money has been well spent. Even for kids’ parties, I ask the mum if their child would like a specific gift or money towards something. It’s not cold, grabby or ungrateful. It’s practical.

Springcat · 16/03/2024 07:36

I've never had a present of either parent since becoming an adult..just a card from mum , nothing at all ever from dad .
So something, anything they had chosen,would of also made me cry ..
But probably for different reasons that you were crying.

Riverlee · 16/03/2024 07:39

You said you wanted something from the year of your birth, and from this company. Your mother fulfilled these requirements.

It’s also a gift, and sorry, you do sound a little ungrateful.

BibbleandSqwauk · 16/03/2024 07:42

@Springcat I'm sorry for your situation but really it's irrelevant to the OP's. They'll always be a "worse" situation for someone but it doesn't invalidate or change the one the op is dealing with. I completely agree with the poster who said this isn't really about the present and two hours of crying over not having a connected relationship with a parent is not unreasonable. If you have the funds, I'd be tempted to get the thing you want as a present to yourself and try to approach the issue of your mother's relationship with you separately.

Kwasi · 16/03/2024 07:45

Springcat · 16/03/2024 07:36

I've never had a present of either parent since becoming an adult..just a card from mum , nothing at all ever from dad .
So something, anything they had chosen,would of also made me cry ..
But probably for different reasons that you were crying.

The OP also said she doesn’t usually get presents but it’s a big birthday and her mum asked her what she wanted. Why ask if she wasn’t going to get what OP chose?

PoochiesPinkEars · 16/03/2024 07:47

Kwasi · 16/03/2024 07:26

Bit of a back story:

Just after we got together, he did some work for them at their HQ in Denmark and manufacturing site in Thailand. I took the piss and said I bet I could make it look cool. I got one of the leather wraparound bracelets and a subtle charm. It actually looked nice and suited my style.

Since then (nearly 10 years ago), he’s used it as an excuse to only have to go to one shop for presents.

😳 wow. He's... Resolute when he finds a solution isn't he. 😬
Not to derail the thread, but, you should buy him this for his next Xmas/b'day
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Who-Moved-My-Cheese-Amazing/dp/0091816971/ref=cm_cr_arp_mb_bdcrb_top?ie=UTF8
🤣

PoochiesPinkEars · 16/03/2024 07:48

@BibbleandSqwauk good advice.

ZenNudist · 16/03/2024 07:51

I seem to remember getting upset as an adult when my mum, who is a rubbish gift giver, gave me something crap and I bought her a nice gift she actually asked for. Usually in conjunction with dsis who has history of giving cheapy/regifted but not what you want gifts in exchange for something expensive she asked for off me.

Nowadays I'm older, wiser, just give them gifts and specifically don't ask for gifts in return.

It is still spoilt brat behaviour. I'm assuming your big birthday is 30. Or you are older and in fact weeping over something deeper than the bag.

Kwasi · 16/03/2024 07:54

PoochiesPinkEars · 16/03/2024 07:47

😳 wow. He's... Resolute when he finds a solution isn't he. 😬
Not to derail the thread, but, you should buy him this for his next Xmas/b'day
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Who-Moved-My-Cheese-Amazing/dp/0091816971/ref=cm_cr_arp_mb_bdcrb_top?ie=UTF8
🤣

I love it! This would suit him down to the ground.

Calamitousness · 16/03/2024 07:57

I’m very sure she bought you a gift she thought you’d approved to please you. So yabu.
you say thank you and accept that it was bought with love and either trot it out when you see your mum to please her and let her think she got it right or you quietly sell on since it’s worth a lot. But to actively tell her it’s wrong. That’s shit. A husband is different, it’s a different level of closeness. That’s one where I would expect him to know me.

Globetrote · 16/03/2024 08:00

My DM never listened when she asked for my suggestions for birthday gifts either. I once sent her a list of 12 items (nothing expensive- books, CD, socks, earrings etc) for her to pick something from. I received 5 items of clothing instead - in a size 8, when I was a 16 at the time - plus a bra in a completely wrong size (she said can’t I just wear it anyway!). The whole lot went to the charity shop.

My point being that you need to lower your expectations with some people if they simply never listen. I had years of the above scenario- plus months later the constant asking about if I was using the gifts, and expecting thanks yet again etc.

However, I feel the gift situation is a smokescreen and the last straw for other things going on in your life. I’ve just turned 50, had no acknowledgment from friends that it was my birthday, and spent it alone at the cinema. I am at a crossroads with various other things in my life and maybe you are too.

BlastedPimples · 16/03/2024 08:01

The idiotic competitive posts on here that say, " I have it shitter than you. I have never got a gift from my parents," completely miss the point.

erikbloodaxe · 16/03/2024 08:02

Are you an only child?

Waspie · 16/03/2024 08:07

Sell the gift and buy the one you like with the proceeds.

I'm afraid the fact that she has, once again, ignored your wishes, is not something you can fix as easily. Happy Birthday (when it arrives)!

Landlubber2019 · 16/03/2024 08:09

@Globetrote
I had a similar experience with my 50th! I did speak to my friends after the birthday and they were mortified that they hadn't realised. However I recognised that I didn't know their ages and so could easily miss a big birthday neither had I set out my expectations. Looking at others who have done a big birthday celebration, they have often organised this themselves or delegated this to another friend to organise.

Please speak to your friends and remember your 50th is for a year so start organising something now ❤️

wp65 · 16/03/2024 08:10

erikbloodaxe · 16/03/2024 08:02

Are you an only child?

Why would this be relevant?

Bestyearever2024 · 16/03/2024 08:13

Your Mother didn't listen to you, hear you or respect your choice/request

However, you've said that this is normal, so I'm a bit surprised that you're surprised

And crying for TWO hours? Wow!

Your mother is who she is. She's not going to change. I'm amazed that you think she will change

You've decided to tell her you don't want her gift, therefore she'll probably be upset.

Don't be surprised if she's upset 🤣

Whatthefrance2024 · 16/03/2024 08:13

Gift giving can be more about the givers needs than the receivers.

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