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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

.... to be so upset about DS's 21st birthday

318 replies

Ladydriver110 · 06/05/2024 21:05

I am menopausal which is probably affecting how I feel about this but I am so upset and need to write it down to hopefully stop myself from going over and over it in my head.

I am an only child and a single parent to a DS who turned 21 today. I live half a mile from my mum who has given me a huge amount of support raising my DS right from birth. He's got a bedroom at her house and has always stayed there a lot. For the last couple of years he's stayed there most nights - he says it's because she has much better wifi for his gaming - but I think he also likes that she does everything for him (cooking, laundry etc) being the doting grandma that she is. DS is ND and almost certainly has ADHD so needs a lot of support and 'management'. He also has a tendency to be thoughtless and irresponsible so maybe my expectations are too high.

In preparation for DS's birthday I spent an enormous amount of time, thought, effort and money planning birthday gifts. I filled a bag with a combination of small bits (like toiletries), special things related to his special interests (some of which I had commissioned to be specially made), and a box containing a decent amount of cash, all lovingly wrapped. There was also a very large and extremely heavy unwrappable gift that wasn't going to be a surprise because DS had chosen it himself, really expecting that it would be his only gift because of its cost. I took the bag of wrapped gifts to my mum's house yesterday ready for us all to get together today, and I put it out of sight.

Present-unwrapping has always been a Big Thing in our small family. Even on Christmas Day, we'd wait for my DM to come over before opening our gifts. Generally we only do token gifts for adults, so events have always been centred around my DS. I was really looking forward to giving DS his surprise gifts, making sure that the best ones were saved for last, seeing his face when he opened the special ones, explaining why and how some of them were designed and made, wanting to see him excited and happy, and taking a few photos of it all. It was especially significant because I'd pushed the boat out for DS's special birthday, and it could well be the last one where there would be real substantial gifts.

DS went out last night and wasn't sure about when or if he'd be coming home. I thought that if he didn't come home, I'd go to my mum's for lunch as usual and take the final heavy gift with me. It appears that he stayed out and went directly to DM's house, with a friend in tow, some time this morning.

At noon I got a phone call from DS asking me if I was coming over for lunch soon. "Happy birthday" I said. "I'm on my way" I said. "Can't wait to see you open your prezzies" I said. "Already opened them" he said. "Nan said I could" he said. I thought he was having me on, but no. He really had opened everything without me being there. I was terribly upset and didn't believe that my mum would have okayed this at all - and I made this very clear to him.

I dragged the big gift down to the car and set off, only to see DS driving away in the opposite direction. He refused to acknowledge me when we passed. At DM's house I walked in and asked (quite angrily, I admit) if she'd told DS he could open his gifts. She responded equally angrily to say yes, what was she supposed to say - no? We had a short but rather loud exchange where I pointed out that I was only five minutes away and all I needed was a phone call, and she told me not to shout at her in her own home and to get out.

I don't think it was right for my DM to give DS my gifts, and it was more than thoughtless of both of them to sit around (with mum's partner and DS's friend), having a jolly time opening gifts and admiring the special ones without me. I am tremendously upset on two counts:

  • after all my anticipation, I missed out on the joy and pleasure of watching my only child receive all the things I'd carefully planned and bought. I missed the whole essence of the birthday experience (DS wouldn't hang around afterwards, he doesn't do 'social', he'd be back in his room on his xbox minutes after gift time).
  • my presence was so unimportant that I just wasn't missed. No-one cared enough to make a quick phone call. I feel so hurt.

AIBU?

OP posts:
Letmehaveabloodyusernameplease · 06/05/2024 21:56

You are absolutely not being unreasonable, OP, dreadful and thoughtless behaviour on your mum's part, I'd be fuming.

Iwasafool · 06/05/2024 21:56

Nanny0gg · 06/05/2024 21:07

You have every right to be upset. What was your mum thinking? Does she think she's the parent now?

I'm so sorry

He's 21 not a toddler, he doesn't need parenting.

Ladydriver110 · 06/05/2024 21:59

Redhothoochycoocher · 06/05/2024 21:24

Gosh I am really surprised at the PPs saying you're treating him like a toddler. I'd be upset too OP. Never mind the cost but you'd put time and thought into making it a special occasion for him and it really is a joy to see someone open presents you've carefully chosen for them. And from what you've said the family tradition here is to open presents as a family.

I think it's really sad tbh and hurtful that your mum didn't back you up.

However, I'd park it now that it's done and can't be undone. Just remember to be explicit around planning things, don't assume your mum and son have the same understanding of plans as you. Clearly there's a difference in experience regarding opening presents all together.

Thanks, you get it.

The only thing that isn't spot-on is the expectation part. We ALWAYS do gifts together, and DS is totally accustomed to being the centre of attention and to be completely spoilt on these occasions. He is an only child to me and an only grandchild to the most doting grandma on the planet.

OP posts:
Cherryon · 06/05/2024 21:59

Letmehaveabloodyusernameplease · 06/05/2024 21:56

You are absolutely not being unreasonable, OP, dreadful and thoughtless behaviour on your mum's part, I'd be fuming.

So it’s ok to shout at your mum who has housed your ND adult child for 2 years in her own home over this? If OP were a single father and the adult child a ND DD, I think we’d be calling that verbally abusive, intimidating and controlling.

lightand · 06/05/2024 22:00

You are over the top. Which you must realise.

Between you and your mum[who is overstepping boundaires], you are both spoiling him.
It is called spoiling, for a reason.

Girliefriendlikespuppies · 06/05/2024 22:02

You are babying your ds, at 21yo surely you just give them money and tell them to have a nice night out with their mates?

I also think it's unreasonable to take gifts over to your mums but for your adult ds not to be able to open them. If it was that important to you you should have held onto the gifts until you saw him.

I think you're probably feeling over sensitive because your ds prefers staying at his nans house to yours which I completely understand must be hurtful.

Ladydriver110 · 06/05/2024 22:04

DS does not arrange any cards or presents for me. DM gives him a couple of bottles of wine to give to me on Mother's Day etc. I don't care about receiving gifts, I get the most pleasure out of giving gifts.

OP posts:
FeatheryStroker · 06/05/2024 22:05

Perhaps he finds it all a bit too much. Maybe he doesn't want loads of presents on his birthday. Toiletries and stuff.

Perhaps scale things back to the meaningful presents and skip all the filler stuff and next year ask him what he wants to do for his birthday. It might be time to start new traditions.

PineappleTime · 06/05/2024 22:05

Cherryon · 06/05/2024 21:59

So it’s ok to shout at your mum who has housed your ND adult child for 2 years in her own home over this? If OP were a single father and the adult child a ND DD, I think we’d be calling that verbally abusive, intimidating and controlling.

Oh give over the nan clearly likes spoiling him (and it shows in his behaviour! Selfish man) and she's been way too accustomed to being another parent which the OP should never have allowed. The nan was totally out of order and the DS is a selfish man.

Alwaysalwayscold · 06/05/2024 22:05

Ladydriver110 · 06/05/2024 21:59

Thanks, you get it.

The only thing that isn't spot-on is the expectation part. We ALWAYS do gifts together, and DS is totally accustomed to being the centre of attention and to be completely spoilt on these occasions. He is an only child to me and an only grandchild to the most doting grandma on the planet.

OP you just don't seem to get it.

What he's become "accustomed to" is what you want him to do because it makes you happy. The first time he's tried to do what makes him happy, you've thrown a hissy fit. I think you owe him an apology.

He may be your only child but he's a grown man now.

ButWhatAboutTheBees · 06/05/2024 22:05

Ladydriver110 · 06/05/2024 21:43

To answer a few questions (hope I haven't missed any):

  1. We're like a small 3-person family living across 2 houses. We're all very close and family events like birthdays and Christmas are generally treated as something a bit special.
  2. Apart from a couple of minor things, the gifts I got were either special for DS, cash (that he really appreciates) or chosen by DS himself. I don't understand why people think I'd give him gifts for my benefit.
  3. DS drove off in a temper because he was cross I'd told him he should have waited for me. He wanted to avoid me.
  4. My parenting is pretty hands-off. I try to encourage him to do basic stuff like cook a simple meal occasionally but he point-blank refuses (as I said, he's ND). Nan does everything for him and panders to his every whim. She really does treat him like a toddler. He definitely does not go there to get a break from me. He told me he would spend a lot more time at home if I got fibre broadband.
  5. I don't think it is at all abnormal to want to watch your only child being happy.
  6. I took the first bag of gifts a day early because the final gift was so heavy I wouldn't have been able to carry everything at the same time - I could hardly lift it. I didn't think it would be a problem to leave a bag hidden at mum's house overnight.
  7. The bag of gifts wasn't sitting out for him, it was a shopping bag tucked away in a corner waiting for me to unpack and give to him when I arrived.
  1. Maybe you see things differently to how they do
  2. Because of the way you talked about wanting to explain all the special presents you had commissioned
  3. Because you'd had a go at him on his birthday and called him a liar!
  4. He tells you that to avoid an argument. Of course he prefers being with her if she cooks, cleans and doesn't nag as well as having better WiFi
  5. It isn't the wanting to watch him be happy, again it's the fact you wanted to talk about how YOU picked the presents
  6. You went in the car? You could have put everything in the car...
  7. It was a bag of gifts, for him, in the front room.
SpringerFall · 06/05/2024 22:05

At 21 it is surely time for the birthday person to be able to do what they want, it is their birthday not yours

MississippiAF · 06/05/2024 22:07

All sounds very intense, tbh. I’d hate so much studious expectation when I was opening presents.

Angeldelight50 · 06/05/2024 22:07

Ladydriver110 · 06/05/2024 22:04

DS does not arrange any cards or presents for me. DM gives him a couple of bottles of wine to give to me on Mother's Day etc. I don't care about receiving gifts, I get the most pleasure out of giving gifts.

… and there it is. He doesn’t give a shit about presents and it’s about how it’s make you feel to give presents.

I think you owe him and your DM an apology.

PineappleTime · 06/05/2024 22:08

Ladydriver110 · 06/05/2024 22:04

DS does not arrange any cards or presents for me. DM gives him a couple of bottles of wine to give to me on Mother's Day etc. I don't care about receiving gifts, I get the most pleasure out of giving gifts.

Wow. You and your mum really have raised a selfish prince haven't you? Why wouldn't you set an expectation from your son that he treats you as well as you treat him on birthdays? You say they are a big deal in your family but he doesn't get you gifts? Does he get them for your mum?

Ladydriver110 · 06/05/2024 22:09

lightsandtunnels · 06/05/2024 21:25

I think you have every right to be upset. I would also be cross at my Mum for essentially giving them to him to open. She should have said hold on I'll give Mum a ring.
Although I would very gently say OP that you have put a lot of expectation on the gifts and I totally get that these gifts mean a lot to you and have been very carefully chosen with so much love and thought. But your DS (and probably most 21 years olds) would not get that. He would not have considered the emotional effort and love that you had put into choosing these gifts for him. It's that old thing of accepting that other people don't always feel the same way about things as you. I bought my DD a gift a few Christmases ago that I absolutely loved, very personal etc., but she treated it the same as her other gifts and I don't think I've seen it since! She just didn't have the same emotional response to it as me.
I would be sad and upset too. Sending hugs and hoping you're able to make things up with your Mum too.

This is really helpful, thank you.

OP posts:
ILoveYouItsRuiningMyLife · 06/05/2024 22:10

I would be upset too. On the face of it, I think you’re right.

But I must admit, I would love to hear the other side of this one 😬

ILoveYouItsRuiningMyLife · 06/05/2024 22:11

Is the friend he was with a girlfriend (or boyfriend) by any chance..?

ButWhatAboutTheBees · 06/05/2024 22:12

I get the most pleasure out of giving gifts.

And there it is. You wanted this to be about you, you wanted the joy from seeing him open all this faffy bits YOU arranged specially for him. It's definitely about you

EllaPaella · 06/05/2024 22:12

Your DS was very rude and spoilt. I also agree you are being angry with the wrong person. Just because he's your only child doesn't mean he gets to trample all over your feelings with no reprimand. He ignored you - that's such entitled behaviour. I wouldn't be giving him anymore gifts after that.

ButWhatAboutTheBees · 06/05/2024 22:14

He ignored OP because she felt it was appropriate to have a go at him over the phone and call him a liar and make his birthday about her instead.

NewShoes · 06/05/2024 22:19

Why doesn’t your son get you a card or present on your birthday?

LightSpeeds · 06/05/2024 22:20

I'd be upset too (but wouldn't have left the presents round there OR would have said don't open them until I got there).

I'm sorry this has happened.

Cherryon · 06/05/2024 22:21

PineappleTime · 06/05/2024 22:05

Oh give over the nan clearly likes spoiling him (and it shows in his behaviour! Selfish man) and she's been way too accustomed to being another parent which the OP should never have allowed. The nan was totally out of order and the DS is a selfish man.

Having your feelings hurt over people not adhering to plans you never told them or asked for them to agree to doesn’t give you a free licence to hector them on the phone or go to their house and shout at them until they ask you to leave when your plan that was only in your mind predictably didn’t happen.

It’s a bit like shouting at your DH because you dreamt he cheated on you.

AccountCreateUsername · 06/05/2024 22:32

Pigeonqueen · 06/05/2024 21:21

I can understand why you’re upset but I think you were daft to take the presents round early and leave them there. It kind of makes it seem like you don’t care if they open them without you. Your Mum should have said to wait though.

Does your Mum feel a bit resentful that she’s done so much? Maybe she feels like she’s his Mum - ie slyly undermining your presents?

Slyly undermining OPs presents? Stately Homes is that way ➡️

OP you’re entitled to your feelings but your son and your mother haven’t done anything wrong really. Don’t let it spoil his day and maybe treat yourself to something too x

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