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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To have taken DD’s side?

278 replies

SmellsLikeTeenSpirits · 26/04/2024 09:37

Genuinely looking for how you might have handled this as can see how it could have played out differently.

DD 15. Diagnosed ADHD. In middle of revising for her GCSEs. Was having a friendship issue yesterday with one of her oldest and closest friends. Was handling it ok but not getting response she was looking for from friend and was frustrated and emotional. Came downstairs to ask me for advIce. DH is on sofa. Not long back from work. Hasn’t been involved in conversations to this point and doesn’t tend to get involved in DDs ‘dramas’. As she’s talking to me he tells her she should just leave it. That she’s escalating things and should drop it (not terrible advice tbf). She gets upset saying ‘I’m not asking you , you don’t know what’s going on’ he repeats ‘leave it’ a few times but not in a particularly engaged way. DD starts crying. DH says ‘there’s no need to get upset’ DD gets up to leave the room and mutters ‘prick’ under her breath as she leaves (she has never sworn in front of or at either of us before).

DH roars ‘what did you say?’. DD runs upstairs in full tears. DH chases after her and gets really in her face on the landing shouting ‘what did you say? Say it to my face! You do not get to call me that’. At which point I go upstairs and intervene - DD goes into her room. DH is stil fuming. I tell him to calm down and stop making this about him (not helpful I know). I then go in and calm down DD. I listen to her for a bit and I do tell her that it’s not acceptable to say that to her dad and that she shouldn’t take her anger out on him.

I then go back downstairs where DH is scrolling on his phone. I leave it 5 mins and then say ‘are we going to talk about this?’ He says ‘what, the fact that you’re ok with DD calling me a prick?’ I say ‘No, about how you could have handled that differently and how it’s not acceptable that she called you that but your response wasn’t what she needed from you at that moment and you could have just let the whole situation defuse and then talked to he about it when you were both calm?’. He says ‘I’ve given up expecting you to support me on anything and I’m not having this conversation’ and goes to bed. He left for work that morning without saying goodbye (although he did still make me a coffee). I feel rinsed today and am wondering if he’s right and I should have just let it play out between them? What would you have done?

OP posts:
CosyLemur · 04/05/2024 18:37

T1Dmama · 28/04/2024 09:43

My advice to my DD is always to not carry on an argument at home… I tell her to respond to her friends with a simple ‘let’s just forget it tonight and talk about it tomorrow after we’ve slept on it!’
she’s talked to her friends about the fact she hates texting after school about school and needs that wind down time, they all have agreed it’s wise not to argue over text and 9 times out 10 by the morning they’ve all forgotten what it was about and have a calm conversation about it… things get massively blown out of proportion over text, particularly when they’re all still angry/upset and tired!
As for your DH, he sounds very much like my ex… after she asked him to stop he should have… there is nothing more annoying than someone just parroting the same phase over and over… my ex would do this and it drove it me mad!… I probably called him a prick more than once for it!! Like someone saying ‘I told you so’ over and over in your ear….. or ‘just drop it’, drop it, drop it… when you’re trying to explain/express a feeling … it was very childish of him!! And to them strop off and sulk like a child!

She didn't ask him to stop though did she she said "I Wasn't talking to you" just because he told her to not continue texting - which is extremely rude!
If she was my DD at the start of the arguing over text her phone would be confiscated, especially if she had ADHD and I knew she couldn't control her emotions.

Comefromaway · 04/05/2024 19:11

She said I wasn’t talking to you because that, in her mind was a fact. She wasn’t. It wouldn’t have occurred to her that it was rude.

that’s just the way a lot of ND minds work.

what should have happened was that someone give her a gentle reminder that saying that comes across as rude and please don’t speak like that.

CosyLemur · 04/05/2024 22:37

Comefromaway · 04/05/2024 19:11

She said I wasn’t talking to you because that, in her mind was a fact. She wasn’t. It wouldn’t have occurred to her that it was rude.

that’s just the way a lot of ND minds work.

what should have happened was that someone give her a gentle reminder that saying that comes across as rude and please don’t speak like that.

I'm ND my kids are ND we still know if we're being rude or not! The OP's reaction shows me she's a parent that thinks that ND children can't be taught what's rude or not. She should have said "that's no way to speak to your Dad" and backed the Dad up not mollycoddled her because she was upset that her dad was angry she'd called him a prick!

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