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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU for getting sick of friends baby voice?

291 replies

Itsmekate · 20/03/2024 02:21

Name changed as this is outing.

My friend of many years has always been quirky and that’s why I love her, she’s over 40 but still has a silly side and is very reluctant to grow up! Even her children get embarrassed sometimes at her immature behaviour but she just doesn’t give a fuck what anyone thinks.

Some examples of her behaviour are: skipping round supermarkets singing, wearing very bright clothing often covered in glitter and unicorns, finding it funny to fart in meetings and blame someone else, giving people silly nicknames, playing practical jokes etc…
Her teenagers love her to bits but often have to tell her to grow up and remind her that she has friends her own age when she wants to join them when they go out of friends visit the house.

I know this makes her sound like a nightmare but she’s an amazing friend in every other way and puts everyone before herself, other then these quirky behaviours she’s loyal, great company, reliable and trustworthy. She’s had a lot of tragedy in her life which I think has caused her to regress and why I worry I’m being unreasonable.

Recently she’s started talking in a baby voice and changing her words to childish ones, she’ll say things like here come the nee naws, I got an ouchie, I need to go do a wee wee, my wanna do it, and in a whiney voice “that’s minnnnne” or “I don’t wanna gooooo”
She had to go to an important meeting and asked me to go as support but I had to tell her to get a grip when she span on a swivel chair saying “wheee watch me!”

I have mentioned this a few times and she gets defensive and says it’s just a bit of fun, her children are older teens but she copies things her young nieces and nephews say.
Her children have begged her not to do this and my partner refuses to go out with us after she was behaving like this in public. Her parents have told her to grow up and she just laughs and calls anyone who criticises boring, the more people comment the worse it gets.

I know this sounds absolutely ridiculous and people will think I’m making it up, but it’s actually getting ridiculous because I’m starting to hate spending time with her, I feel terrible saying I’m embarrassed by my friend but an adult skipping round Tesco wearing a unicorn backpack and singing silly made up rhymes just attracts attention and I hate people staring at her and judging her, it makes me feel protective as well as embarrassed.

WIBU if I tell her that people don’t see her as this young fun person she thinks she is and that it’s making me cringe or should I just hope she’ll eventually either take on board what people are saying and hope it passes? If it’s making her feel better about growing older then should I be interfering? She’s not hurting anyone and doesn’t do it all the time - but it is becoming more frequent and I’m scared it’ll become an ingrained habit.

If anyone asks her age or date or birth she tells them she’s 18 and even if it’s being asked for an important reason (like a hospital appointment) she refuses to back down until they just go along with it. I think most people are humouring her assuming she’s mentally ill and I don’t feel that’s the case. I think she’s just recently turned 40 and completely in denial but I’m hoping as she gets used to it the behaviour will stop.

I wondered if anyone else knows someone like this and how they handled it? I don’t want to lose my friend but it’s difficult having a serious conversation with someone who answers serious questions like “did you get your car fixed?” With
“No brum brum is still poorly and has to go to car hospikal”
Its getting increasingly difficult not to get frustrated and angry.

She has no husband or partner because she wanted to wait until her children were grown up and moved out so they never had a step dad they didn’t like or a blended family. This is an example of the selfless person she is, her children’s father has seen this side of her but just says it’s nothing to do with him and it’s not causing any harm to the kids and she’s just a bit batty.

OP posts:
NotestoSelf · 22/03/2024 14:43

LuckySantangelo35 · 22/03/2024 14:39

@jen337

i would much prefer a world without OP’s mates behaviour. Vast majority of other people would too

Well, the good thing about this thread is that the OP brought it up with her friend, who has promised to reform.

sarah12397 · 22/03/2024 16:07

OnHerSolidFoundations · 20/03/2024 06:28

Oh god the baby voice thing. Reminds me of a woman who lives near me who posts pictures of her pets on social media and writes their "thoughts" in the captions in baby voices.

Eg:

"Hello hooman. Can I has some biz kits please? They are so nom. Fang que"

It's the cringiest thing ever.

these are my least favourite type of people!! so insufferable

MaybeRevisitYourWipingT3chnique · 22/03/2024 16:57

Fang Que sounds like it should be some kind of hybrid Chinese/Spanish martial art or ballroom dance!

ArthurTheBadger · 22/03/2024 17:07

I agree that she possibly may be ill (yet she does choose when to do this), but she actually seems like a rather pathetic attention seeker to me. She doesn't do any harm? Of course she does. She makes people squirm with embarrassment. I think she is a combination of insecure and egotistical. If she is an uncomfortable presence, tell her that you won't tolerate it any more. Give her an ultimatum to stop. When she does it (and she will), tell her to get in touch when she can control herself, and walk away.

Snazzysausage · 22/03/2024 17:07

I don't care how loyal and trustworthy she is,there is no way on gods green earth I would ever go within a mile of her. Harsh? maybe - but I suspect my blood pressure has gone up a few points just reading that first post.

Wellhellooooodear · 22/03/2024 17:12

grinandslothit · 20/03/2024 04:31

She sounds fun.

If this was a man, everybody would be going on saying how fun and eccentric he is.

There are plenty of grumpy miserable people around and people put up with it, but somehow a woman who has decided to be light-hearted and fun has something wrong with them and needs to be told off.

If you don't like her, don't hang out with her anymore. I'm sure there will be other people who want to hang out with her.

She doesn't sound fun. She sounds like an attention seeking nightmare. I'm mad me, look at me, what am I like. Nope.

willWillSmithsmith · 22/03/2024 18:35

Wellhellooooodear · 22/03/2024 17:12

She doesn't sound fun. She sounds like an attention seeking nightmare. I'm mad me, look at me, what am I like. Nope.

She may well have a mental illness but those ‘I’m mad me’ types are the most tedious people ever.

JLou08 · 22/03/2024 20:30

I had a friend act in a similar way, it turned out to be a manic episode, she was sectioned a few months later when she became delusional and was having hallucinations. She was always a bit quirky too but it did really escalate.
It may not be that with your friend, but I would be keeping a close eye on her if I was you. You've said so many positive things about her. It sounds like she deserves a good friend no matter what the reasons for her behaviour are.

Jacesmum1977 · 22/03/2024 22:40

I’d say that your friend has serious mental health issues. Mid life crisis? From what you’ve said all I could think was, she’s not well. She’s not recovered from trauma.
I hope she gets help.

Jacesmum1977 · 22/03/2024 22:46

Jacesmum1977 · 22/03/2024 22:40

I’d say that your friend has serious mental health issues. Mid life crisis? From what you’ve said all I could think was, she’s not well. She’s not recovered from trauma.
I hope she gets help.

I’ve just read the update.

easylikeasundaymorn · 22/03/2024 22:49

MaybeRevisitYourWipingT3chnique · 22/03/2024 14:38

It really irritates me when people don't bother to read the full thread - or even to read all of OP's posts.

They often get offended when you suggest that they should take the time to understand the conversation that they've joined, but it's not just being mean for the sake of it; it can be really insensitive and unhelpful and make them look quite foolish.

I've no idea why you would see that there have been 300 or more posts but nevertheless assume that nobody else in all of that can have said anything pertinent or that there may have been updates or developments since the OP.

I know, drives me mad
At the very least read the op's posts if nothing else. MN literally could not make it easier with the "see all" button and ability to have all ops posts a different colour....

friendlyflicka · 22/03/2024 23:54

Sickdissapointed · 21/03/2024 17:50

This is possibly a schizophrenic type presentation and needs evaluation with urgency.
good luck

In what form is this a schizophrenic presentation?

DisabledDemon · 23/03/2024 03:46

T1Dmama · 22/03/2024 12:23

I’m thinking bI-polar disorder / personality disorder or just sheer breakdown!

I'm bipolar and definitely don't indulge in baby talk. I think you'd also find that this is the case for other bipolar people.

AbbyBradley · 23/03/2024 04:18

grinandslothit · 20/03/2024 04:31

She sounds fun.

If this was a man, everybody would be going on saying how fun and eccentric he is.

There are plenty of grumpy miserable people around and people put up with it, but somehow a woman who has decided to be light-hearted and fun has something wrong with them and needs to be told off.

If you don't like her, don't hang out with her anymore. I'm sure there will be other people who want to hang out with her.

"If this was a man, everybody would be going on saying how fun an eccentric he is"

That's simply not true.

BlueFlowers5 · 23/03/2024 12:21

It sounds as if your friend has a dramatic side and needs to find an outlet for that. Amateur dramatics?

ShellsBells1971 · 24/03/2024 12:31

Sounds bleddy annoying as lovely as she is. There's a difference between being childlike and childish.

I hear you berating yourself asking AIBU - but actually, you might just be the friend who loves her enough to reflect her behaviour back to her. My only caution would be to do this with compassion and kindness; sounds like she's managing enough without adding judgement and annoyance to her behaviour.

You mentioned she has past trauma - regression could be a sign that she might benefit from expert help from a psychotherapist.

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