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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:
Ihearyousingingdownthewire · 20/03/2024 12:49

She doesn’t sound well.

hairbrush1234 · 20/03/2024 13:09

I just wouldn't see her, and tell her why.

Jumpingoffthefence · 20/03/2024 13:16

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

Way to shoehorn your transphobia into this!

Otterock · 20/03/2024 13:43

How is she managing to hold down a professional job? She sounds insufferable at best, whether it’s some weird attention seeking or she’s regressing is anyone’s guess. If she’s defensive and doesn’t see an issue then there’s little you can do apart from keep her at arms length

Have you tried straight up asking her why she’s talking in that silly voice when she starts? Don’t entertain it, call her out ‘why are you talking in that strange way? You’re 40 not 4, come on now’. Although she sounds stubbornly set in her ways, maybe acting like an unimpressed parent will snap her out of it?

Thirdsummerofourdiscontent · 20/03/2024 13:57

This would annoy me no end. I would be letting go of the friendship.

LittleWeed2 · 20/03/2024 13:59

I've come across this syndrome quite a lot in adult women for years: self-infantilization. Adult women fetishising pink and rainbows, talking in cutesy voices, sucking thumbs, high-pitched giggles and hair-twirling behaving in self-consciously "childlike" ways.

Really - I've never seen it in my life and I'm 73 - are you in the UK Thepeopleversuswork

Begsthequestion · 20/03/2024 14:02

Callimanco · 20/03/2024 07:28

It's quite a thing in some ND circles round my way. People who are neurodivergent wanting to be comfortable and accepted, so turning up to Teams calls in those giant hoodies with the hood up or wearing fluffy "ear defenders" or with a childhood teddy as a comforter. I don't think it's appropriate in most work spaces. If you need to be comfortable fine, but there must be something in between a business suit and a giant pink fluffy hoodie with koalas on it....

See, this is one reason why I dislike the catch-all term ND (along with "spicy" to refer to being neurodivergent, which I find infantilising).

I have ADHD and am very much affected by it, and would never do this, and nor would anyone I know, ND or not.

Imposter syndrome is hard enough to deal with without these twats showing us up.

willWillSmithsmith · 20/03/2024 14:03

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.

I cannot imagine a single person thinking a man doing this would be fun? A man spinning in chairs going wheeee, farting in meetings, saying ickle and skipping round supermarkets in unicorn clothing?

She sounds like maybe she is, or has been, under some huge stress that has manifested into childish behaviour - a place in which she feels she has no responsibilities? Regressing back into childhood is probably something some therapy could help fix. She does sounds rather mentally unwell to me.

Begsthequestion · 20/03/2024 14:03

LittleWeed2 · 20/03/2024 11:00

I would give her the details of an autism, adhd psychiatrist - and not in a jokey way.

I would also say embarrassing and humiliating your DCs is not on - I had a heavy drinking parent and having a slurring, staggering DP is horrible -this sounds similar.

I would give her the details of an autism, adhd psychiatrist - and not in a jokey way.

**Why?

Evenstar · 20/03/2024 14:07

I actually have an aquaintance with some of these traits and she is diagnosed with bipolar disorder and emotionally unstable personality disorder. I think your friend could be quite unwell, especially if this behaviour is becoming more extreme.

Greenpolkadot · 20/03/2024 14:14

I don't think I could tolerate this silly childish stuff
Maybe she thinks she looks cute, especially when she does the baby talk.
Iv met someone like her before..and people avoided her like the plague.

As others have said .an increase in this behaviour would seem like it's some mental illness.
Farting in a meeting and skipping around the supermarket...dear god in heaven..

OriginalUsername2 · 20/03/2024 14:17

She needs to proper talking to. A circuit breaker that makes her realise she either needs to go to the gp or pack in the annoying behaviour.

existentialpain · 20/03/2024 14:21

From what you've said it does sound like your friend potentially needs therapy to work through the tragedy in her life, if she hasn't already. It seems like she wants to be a child again and has gone so far into that identity it's not healthy for her.

MoonWoman69 · 20/03/2024 14:23

The lack of compassion and empathy in this thread is staggering! Don't people care about their friends any more? I shouldn't be surprised by the posts really, Mumsnet seems to be full of people who don't seem to give a shit about anyone but themselves!

LolaSmiles · 20/03/2024 15:07

As for the “if she was a man” stuff there’s a grain of truth in there, it’s seen as more acceptable for men to have childish nerdy hobbies, but in this case I think it’s more than that and if this was a man people would also be concerned.
I think it's still acceptable for women to have childish nerdy hobbies tbh.
In my experience it's the associated behaviour that's usually annoying rather than enjoying a visit to Disney, enjoying Harry Potter, colouring etc.

I've got male friends who have some nerdy interests but none of them have a "ooh I'm so little, ickle old me with my Lego and models. I'm so different and quirky. I'm not boring like the other adults". If they did then people would rightly find them annoying too.

JonVoightBaddyWhoGrowls · 20/03/2024 15:09

MoonWoman69 · 20/03/2024 14:23

The lack of compassion and empathy in this thread is staggering! Don't people care about their friends any more? I shouldn't be surprised by the posts really, Mumsnet seems to be full of people who don't seem to give a shit about anyone but themselves!

There have just been about 20 comments in a row suggesting that the friend has some mental health problems and suggesting that the OP try to help her address it.

I honestly don't understand this sort of comment. Its like you're on a completely different thread to me.

Trulyme · 20/03/2024 16:19

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 think she is absolutely mentally ill.

There’s being fun and childish and not fitting into a box and then there’s acting like your friend acts.

I would perhaps write her a message and say how much you love her and her fun side but you’re concerned because you think she’s having a MH crisis as you’ve noticed changes in her personality and you would feel better if she booked an appointment with the gp and possibly try and get some therapy.

rooftopbird · 20/03/2024 17:00

How do you think she'd react if you calmly and quietly asked her to stop whichever daft habits she has as you find them irritating?

If you daren't because you worry she might react badly then it's a different issue, but I would start from there, a true friend should feel comfortable being honest without causing offence.

MoonWoman69 · 20/03/2024 17:23

JonVoightBaddyWhoGrowls · 20/03/2024 15:09

There have just been about 20 comments in a row suggesting that the friend has some mental health problems and suggesting that the OP try to help her address it.

I honestly don't understand this sort of comment. Its like you're on a completely different thread to me.

Seriously?! Having read the entire thread and all the comments, there are a lot of disparaging comments about the friend and how OP should just drop her/walk away/she's an idiot.
Or are we just disregarding all those in favour of the handful of slightly positive ones and the opportunity to have a go at my comment?

Victoriancat · 20/03/2024 17:37

I wanna be friends with her, she sounds awesome

Mamabear487 · 20/03/2024 17:39

Your post says people think she’s mentally unwell but isn’t. Maybe this is the starting point for her actually becoming mentally unwell and she might need help rather than being told she is annoying. She could genuinely be in denial about getting older and it’s causing the erratic behaviour or she could be having a mental breakdown but if I were you I would tread with caution and help her she how’s she’s acting and it’s not normal

Devon23 · 20/03/2024 17:44

You are in control of you only. Only spend as much time as you want to with the person. Sounds like you have brought it up many times and she's choosing not to change. That's her choice.

penjil · 20/03/2024 19:09

It's attention seeking.

And it's got worse because nobody addressed it when it first started happening....so she thinks it's OK and has ramped it up even more.

Bluegray2 · 20/03/2024 19:12

Is it her way of dealing with extreme stress or anxiety…..there must be some reason

Sometimes people who are depressed try and convince people they are very happy

DanielGault · 20/03/2024 19:16

penjil · 20/03/2024 19:09

It's attention seeking.

And it's got worse because nobody addressed it when it first started happening....so she thinks it's OK and has ramped it up even more.

It sounds very extreme though doesn't it? Like, very extreme!