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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:
nothingsforgotten · 07/05/2024 07:24

Alwaysalwayscold · 06/05/2024 21:10

Jesus Christ OP.

First of all he's 21 years old. Do you intend to treat him like a toddler until he's 50?

Secondly, did you choose the gifts because you thought he would like them or for your own enjoyment? You've made the whole thing about you.

This! What a lot of fuss. He's not a little boy, surely he can open his presents when he wants to, he doesn't need your permission. You are talking about him as though he is a young child.

If you really needed to watch him open his gifts then you should have taken them with you, not left them with your DM.

Metoo15 · 07/05/2024 07:41

I would be upset too but mostly at him driving away. I’d also be livid with your mum, especially as you waited for her to arrive at your house at Christmas, we did this too.
You have gone way over the top though imo is this usual ? Maybe he feels a bit suffocated and embarrassed. Men that age usually aren’t too bothered about lots of presents. I do feel for you though it’s upsetting.

Polishedshoesalways · 07/05/2024 07:53

This is not about the presents, it’s actually about the relationship op has with her son.

LiquoriceAllsorts2 · 07/05/2024 07:56

notanotherrokabag · 06/05/2024 21:18

He has essentially lived with your mum for two years? That's the bigger picture. Why did you allow that? Maybe some of the effort on presents should have gone on day to day parenting.....

Edited

What do you mean by why did the op allow that - The two years were between the age of 19 and 21, he doesn’t need permission from his mum on where to live at that age (unless it’s in her house)

EverhopefulPB · 07/05/2024 08:00

Yes it's all a great shame and it sounds like your dm whilst being a bedrock pillar of support to your ds and you has unfortunately stepped over some boundaries anyway...

I'm not sure at this stage what you could do and your dm being angry with her only dd over her dd sons bday doesn't sound very nice.

I would be mortified if I had done this and I would be apologising to you and being the diplomatic bridge between you and son (even if its innocent mistake).

I totally understand your ds wants to be with friends but it's also showing disrespect to you.

OhmygodDont · 07/05/2024 08:02

I mean you shouted at him on his birthday because he didn’t open his presents how you wanted him to. Think about that.

Of course he drove off. If he stayed yet more of his birthday is ruined by you being angry and shouting at him.

If your menopause is that bad go see a doctor. Rather than using it as an excuse to berate your adult son for daring to do his birthday how he wasn’t rather than be moaned and shouted at by a parent he doesn’t even live with.

His probably mad now that you also shouted at his clearly much loved nan too because you didn’t get your own way.

Polishedshoesalways · 07/05/2024 08:03

Is your mother undermining your relationship with your son op?

YouAreLiveOnTelevisionPleaseDoNotSwear · 07/05/2024 08:11

Lifesd · 07/05/2024 00:45

I’ve voted you are NBU because that was incredibly shit of them both but your son sounds spoiled and mollycoddled and I fear for any future partner if the man won’t so much as make a cup of tea!

Yeah this!

M340 · 07/05/2024 08:13

TiaKofi · 07/05/2024 03:13

God bless any partner your son ever has. You sound very controlling of him. He is 21. Not a small child.

Imo if you’ve already dropped the gifts off, you’re not asking someone to wait for your arrival to unwrap them…

Yep!

Plus he sounds spoilt and ungrateful.

Not exactly qualities a potential partner would look for.

BettyBardMacDonald · 07/05/2024 08:21

YANBU to be upset.

But tbh you are bending over backwards to accommodate his rudeness.

In your shoes I would have kept all the gifts at my home rather than lugging them around for his convenience. Let him visit you for the celebration and gift opening.

He sounds more like 15. Age 21 is old enough to be considerate of one's mum, birthday or no.

BettyBardMacDonald · 07/05/2024 08:22

OhmygodDont · 06/05/2024 21:18

His 21 and the presents where in the house he is living in… I’m shocked he asked to open his own already delivered gifts tbh.

But they weren't delivered TO him. They were merely stored there pending the family celebration. OP had not yet presented the gifts to her son.

Mannikin · 07/05/2024 08:24

I can totally understand your upset - present openings are a big thing in our house too and we also do them together and like watching people open gifts. So I sympathise and feel for you.

BUT. I think you needed to swallow your feelings and save them to vent later, not take it out on your mum and son. The shouting and anger was not good and I think you owe them an apology - explain you were upset but also admit you were wrong. My main worry reading this would be your son driving off in a distressed state - not how I would want someone I loved to be driving.

Maybe time to do some texting people, apologise and suggest something nice you can all do together to celebrate a bit late? Either cook a special meal at home or treat them to a meal out depending on finances? It’s what happens next that counts and how you all move forward - do your best to avoid this sticking in everyone’s mind as a memory of you shouting and angry on a special occasion, be the bigger person and try to fix things.

savoycabbage · 07/05/2024 08:25

Great post @IAmThe1AndOnly.

6pence · 07/05/2024 08:27

Your mistake was taking them yesterday but I would be really upset in your shoes.
Yes she was expected to say, “wait for your mum”

Figgygal · 07/05/2024 08:31

I understand the disappointment but you've really made his bday and his gifts all about you.
He should be grateful though I suspect he's been spoiled so doesn't appreciate the effort anyway?

ButWhatAboutTheBees · 07/05/2024 08:35

ChiefEverythingOfficer · 07/05/2024 06:06

I am agog that people think it's ok for somebody to open presents from another person when they aren't there.

It is extremely rude. Even a 5 year old would know that.

OP I am not surprised you are pissed off. Is it possible he got muddled and thought they were from his nan and she didn't correct him?

Agog?

If someone drops presents off at the house they are giving them to be opened without them. It's not rude. Unless explicitly stated "these are for when I come round"

ButWhatAboutTheBees · 07/05/2024 08:40

DoreenonTill8 · 07/05/2024 06:21

*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*
That was your first 'happy birthday' to him?
You hadn't called or texted in the morning first? Or actually check where he was first and OK? (Yes aware he's an adult but still)
It does seem to be more about gift giving than 'happy birthday!'.

This hadn't even occurred to me!

Very good point though. She didn't ring the house before then to check if he was there. She was so desperate to give him the present but her plan was "eh if I don't hear anything then I'll just head over anyway".

Instead of checking, she left it to her DS to chase her up about clearly vague plans and then got annoyed they hadn't stuck to these vague plans!

Janiie · 07/05/2024 08:43

It's just crossed wires and usually wouldn't matter. Most people would shrug it off, but it hurts because you feel it represents your relationship ie you're not relevant. Its nan and ds who decide what's what.

He's 21 you can't undo the last few years but try to take back a bit of control, have him round for tea/dinner. Do things together if you don't already and next time give nan strict instructions.

AgentJohnson · 07/05/2024 08:45

All that effort isn’t for his benefit because he couldn’t care less. It all sounds performative and like you haven really come to terms with the fact that he is older now and not at an age where you have had as much control as you once did.

Be upset but for your own sake, step back.

You should apologise to your mother, I get your disappointment but shouting at her in her own home wasn’t right.

VickyEadieofThigh · 07/05/2024 08:47

notanotherrokabag · 06/05/2024 21:18

He has essentially lived with your mum for two years? That's the bigger picture. Why did you allow that? Maybe some of the effort on presents should have gone on day to day parenting.....

Edited

There's no "allow" with a 19 year old.

ButWhatAboutTheBees · 07/05/2024 08:48

EverhopefulPB · 07/05/2024 08:00

Yes it's all a great shame and it sounds like your dm whilst being a bedrock pillar of support to your ds and you has unfortunately stepped over some boundaries anyway...

I'm not sure at this stage what you could do and your dm being angry with her only dd over her dd sons bday doesn't sound very nice.

I would be mortified if I had done this and I would be apologising to you and being the diplomatic bridge between you and son (even if its innocent mistake).

I totally understand your ds wants to be with friends but it's also showing disrespect to you.

So her DM should bend over backwards to apologise and build bridges when her DD was the one who came into her house and started shouting and berating her, disrespecting her?

Polishedshoesalways · 07/05/2024 08:49

ButWhatAboutTheBees · 07/05/2024 08:48

So her DM should bend over backwards to apologise and build bridges when her DD was the one who came into her house and started shouting and berating her, disrespecting her?

What underpins the shouting sounds like a deep rooted resentment that the son has chosen to live with op’s mother and not her. It must feel like a rejection.

ButWhatAboutTheBees · 07/05/2024 08:50

BettyBardMacDonald · 07/05/2024 08:22

But they weren't delivered TO him. They were merely stored there pending the family celebration. OP had not yet presented the gifts to her son.

She took the gifts to his primary residence and didn't communicate that she would be round for him to open them

He doesn't need them "presenting" to him!

ButWhatAboutTheBees · 07/05/2024 08:52

Polishedshoesalways · 07/05/2024 08:49

What underpins the shouting sounds like a deep rooted resentment that the son has chosen to live with op’s mother and not her. It must feel like a rejection.

Her ADULT son chose to live there

I'm sure there must be some resentment that he finds DM's house better but it's no excuse for screaming at the poor woman in her own home and disrespecting her and its certainly no reason for DM to now bow and scrape to OP to make amends

Janiie · 07/05/2024 08:54

'What underpins the shouting sounds like a deep rooted resentment that the son has chosen to live with op’s mother and not her. It must feel like a rejection'

Exactly. Nan should have shown a teensy bit of sensitivity and said let's wait til your dm comes round. Most people on here wouldn't care about what was opened when but the difference here is the living situation. The op no doubt feels second best and pushed out, shit like this reinforces those feelings.