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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:
MyGooseisTotallyLoose · 20/03/2024 07:47

I believe this, know of a woman like this who previously worked as an hr professional, moved into children's entertainment now actively lives 24/7 as for e.g 'Lucey the Goosey' with the children's style clothing, big ribbons/wool in 'wacky' bunches, animal backpack, skipping, dancing and singing everywhere.... is getting tiring as she sees herself as a local celeb who people are in awe of not avoiding as she's annoying!

LordPercyPercy · 20/03/2024 07:52

I'm sure a lot of us feel like a silly child on the inside but unfortunately there it largely needs to stay, in work meetings and supermarkets.

Thisbastardcomputer · 20/03/2024 07:57

I've worked with people like her, they are an absolute pain in the arse.

Caravaggiouch · 20/03/2024 07:58

She may not be hurting anyone else but she’s hurting herself by damaging her friendships, surely her career and generally her overall existence as a person because the vast majority of other people will think she is annoying as fuck and avoid accordingly.

HRTQueen · 20/03/2024 07:58

She gets attention and any attention is good enough

I don’t think if she were a man it would be considered fun especially the baby talking

some people crave attention the more they get they more they want it’s not necessarily a mh issue

I would the silly behaviour don’t engage with it, find it amusing and explain why you are not going out with her in public

Lurkingandlearning · 20/03/2024 07:59

It seems a lot of people drop friends when things go awry. And she definitely is. I rarely jump to mental health conclusions but I’ve seen something similar. It was a slow descent into a serious mental health problem.

If you decide to stick with her I think you need to set your stall out- what behaviour you will tolerate and what not. Maybe even say to her “I’m going to explain this as if you are a child because you are behaving like a child. You might be doing that for fun but no one else is having fun with it.’ Tell her she’s free to skip round the supermarket singing but she is not free to embarrass her friends and family so she needs to play her kiddy role by herself. And every time she acts like a child you will remove yourself immediately, half way through shopping or not.

I’d write it all in a letter and take it with me when I was going to have the conversation and if she got defensive and wouldn’t listen I would just give her the letter and leave.

I f you, as a very good friend, can’t make her see the problem then I think she is in a very bad way mentally

HRTQueen · 20/03/2024 07:59

*I would ignore the silly behaviour

ClairDeLaLune · 20/03/2024 08:08

OP I just want to say you sound like a lovely caring person. Your post is brimful of concern for your friend and wanting to help her and not hurt her feelings, she is extremely lucky to have a friend like you.

But it’s time for some tough love I’m afraid. You need to sit her down and explain to her it’s time to rein it in. Tell her she’s embarrassing you and her kids, and she’s risking alienating the kids if she carries on. She’s their parent, not their friend! Say that some silly behaviour is fun, but she needs to draw the line. Farting is not acceptable and neither is embarrassing people in public. I could probably tolerate some singing and unicorns though!

Thepeopleversuswork · 20/03/2024 08:16

I don’t think she’s mentally ill, I think she’s self-centred and can’t read a room. She thinks it’s cute and quirky and no one has ever disabused her of this.

It sounds as if people have let her get away with this for far too long.

Honestly I couldn’t deal with this, the description alone is making me want to leave the room in embarrassment.

I think you either read her the riot act and point out that this is pushing people away or you just let her go.

rainbowstardrops · 20/03/2024 08:19

Bloody hell she sounds annoying! I'd spell it out loud and clear that she's embarrassing you and her children.

LakeTiticaca · 20/03/2024 08:22

How embarrassing. Has anyone actually asked her why she does it?

?

soupfiend · 20/03/2024 08:25

Thepeopleversuswork · 20/03/2024 08:16

I don’t think she’s mentally ill, I think she’s self-centred and can’t read a room. She thinks it’s cute and quirky and no one has ever disabused her of this.

It sounds as if people have let her get away with this for far too long.

Honestly I couldn’t deal with this, the description alone is making me want to leave the room in embarrassment.

I think you either read her the riot act and point out that this is pushing people away or you just let her go.

Absolutely this

Everyone is jumping on the trauma bandwagon on this thread, its yet another overused concept on this site

She might be suffering from difficult emotions, leading her to act this way, on the other hand she might just be a complete idiot who loves attention and thinks its funny and quirky 'Im mad me!!!!'

And I repeat, if this was a man the responses would be hugely different, no one would be talking trauma.

BuzzerCompany · 20/03/2024 08:27

MyLadyTheKingsMother · 20/03/2024 06:22

This sounds like psychosis op

No it doesn’t.

PossumintheHouse · 20/03/2024 08:30

So what happens if she has a serious problem? Or if you want to discuss something sensitive or serious? Does she just say "Awww, boo boo, boo hoooo" or what?

OnHerSolidFoundations · 20/03/2024 08:32

@EverybodyIsFantastic glad it's not just me being mean!

serin · 20/03/2024 08:33

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.

Rubbish!
If a man was saying I need a wee wee in a baby voice, he'd be labelled a creep, pretty quickly.

PuppyMonkey · 20/03/2024 08:45

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

OMG this made my toes curl, I see people do this on FB too.

OP If you recorded her doing it and then played it back to her, do you think that might be a wake up call perhaps? Or maybe she would just find it hysterically funny and delightfully mad. I wouldn’t cope with this.

5128gap · 20/03/2024 08:50

If I was so embarrassed by a friends behaviour I didn't want to go out with them I'd tell them straight. If you do x, you or z when we're out I won't go out with you again. It's then up to your friend to decide if she wants to change her behaviour to keep you around or not. I don't think you need to put up with it, no. Spending time with friends is meant to be positive not an embarrassment or irritant. You could still be there for her without socialising in public.

Shady7 · 20/03/2024 08:52

MyLadyTheKingsMother · 20/03/2024 06:22

This sounds like psychosis op

Yep. Mid school run (waiting for my DC) so haven’t read everything but a brain tumour also came to mind! Extreme I know but the person o know who had a fairly recent change in behaviour which was also bizarre had one.

Universalsnail · 20/03/2024 08:54

I think leave her alone.

Ok it might be a bit embarrassing but I definitely wouldn't let social etiquette ruin a friendship who you have stated is a very kind and helpful good friend.

Just let her be herself.

burnoutbabe · 20/03/2024 09:06

Not sure its that bad to want a funny backpack.

My work is full of people who share Lego creations and play video games.

Though no one farts in meetings (well not without an apology).

Partner and I will occasionally say we have a poorly baddy if we have cut our fingers.

So most of it separately is okay but all together is too much. I'd refuse to take someone to medical appointments if they refused to give age and spin in chairs in public meetings. I'd not assume a huge mental health issue though.

ChampagneGold · 20/03/2024 09:07

I had a good laugh reading your OP! She does sound very amusing, but only in written prose!

I would imagine she becomes highly irritating when spending more than 10 mins in her company.

I'm not sure what the answer is tbh, an intervention maybe? She sounds like she's enjoying life though so maybe just let her get on with it.

LightsCameraBloodyDoSomething · 20/03/2024 09:07

From what you've described I would actually find this a bit creepy, I'm afraid. I struggle to put my finger on why but I think because it's just such age-inappropriate behaviour that I'm instinctively on guard for her failing to observe other social norms and boundaries too and would rather avoid her than risk it.

If she was my friend and this had all just started I would be genuinely concerned about mental health issues but if she's always been like it to some extent and is just ramping it up we wouldn't be friends in the first place as I'd think it was insufferable attention-seeking I think I'd just cut my losses.

Walkingwashingmachine · 20/03/2024 09:10

My DB went through a baby voice phase in his mid 40s. It was excruciating. To make matters worse he did it sometimes to my DH. "Hurty tummy" etc. He used to be very cool but was going through some personal stuff. But no excuse. So every time he did it we just shouted NOOOOO!! STOP IT NOW!! And then laughed so we kept it light hearted. He's stopped now thank F.

Allshallbewell2021 · 20/03/2024 09:15

Baby voices - completely intolerable- run for the hills as kindly as you can