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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

to be a bit put out about having to keep my birthday secret in this way?

182 replies

SecretBirthday · 08/07/2024 15:46

Hi,

Just wondering if I am BU here. I have been with my DP for a while now, he has two children (age 8 and 10) whom he co-parents with their Mum. I have a good relationship with the children and we all get on great. I celebrate their birthdays with them, put effort into getting them lovely gifts that they’ll love, the other weekend I took them to the supermarket to get stuff for a Father’s Day breakfast for DP, taking care to make sure that it was all stuff they can safely prepare for him themselves as I was on shift all day at the hospital on the Sunday, I then came home from work and cooked a Sunday dinner for DP, my dad and the children. On Mother’s Day I helped the children make something for their Mums gift - a flower arrangement in her favourite colours, etc. If DP and I take the kids away or out for food, generally we halve the expense of it, when we go and do a big shop for a weekend when they’re coming to stay, I generally go halves on that too.

We now roll around to my birthday which is next weekend, discussed with DP about what we might do, and we agreed he’d message their Mum and ask if she could have them on the Saturday night (my actual birthday - I’ve had a very difficult year so planning to have a few friends over on the garden) as it’s his usual contact weekend, we would still have the on the Friday as usual, and get them back on Sunday morning. We could also do another day to compensate. Kids mum text back and said “yep, that’s fine, in fact I’ll keep them all weekend for you”. She is great and very flexible, and DP is the same in return.

It was then mentioned that kids Mum was going to take them away that weekend so that all worked out nicely. I asked DP if we would plan to take the kids out for food or something around my birthday to celebrate and he said that he didn’t want to tell them it was for my birthday, as he didn’t want them to think that’s why they aren’t coming to dads house that weekend, etc. I asked if anything along this theme has ever been brought up before, and he said no, just that he didn’t want to plant seeds.

So I’ve asked if we’re now having to keep completely schtum about the fact I’ve even had a birthday at all and it seemed that might be the case, so I backed off from the convo really as I found the implications a bit hurtful. I also don’t want to accidentally mention my birthday in front of them and they think that I’ve actively avoided celebrating my birthday with them.

I dunno, it just feels off tbh. Like I’m useful to celebrate everyone else’s birthdays and Mother’s and Father’s Day, I’m useful for my safe adult presence, I’m useful for my cash contributions sometimes, but my birthday is being strangely minimised and glossed over, and I’m not too proud to admit that it hurts a little bit, and to add insult to injury I’m going to have to actively lie to them or omit things from our chit chat so as not to let on. The youngest one is a prolific maker of birthday/thank you/just because cards for people, they even designed a thank you card to the car hire place, and yet I won’t get a little hand made birthday card!

Before anyone starts having a go at me purely because in this scenario I’m in the “evil stepmother” role, please just give it a rest. I know some of you will deem me to be getting ideas above my station, daring to have birthday, never mind expecting acknowledgment of it. I’m not an evil stepmother, I couldn’t be more engaged, giving and considerate of the wellbeing of these children and their father (and mother) than I currently am.

AIBU?

OP posts:
tomketchup · 08/07/2024 16:32

and doesn’t want to exacerbate it

CantDealwithChristmas · 08/07/2024 16:35

I understand why you're hurt and I'd talk with your DP about it. Just say how you feel. If you keep schtum it will just fester inside you.

pikkumyy77 · 08/07/2024 16:35

But he is proposing to celebrate her that weekend so how he tells the kids is the issue. How long she has been his gf is absolutely irrelevant. I don’t see why you are harping on it except to somehow diminish the OP’s status? But whatever—its not relevant to the parenting issue which remains pretty basic: don’t lie to your kids or ask other people to lie to them. It is bad parenting.

TinyYellow · 08/07/2024 16:36

Your DP is right. I wouldn’t tell my children that I was missing a weekend of seeing them because wit was my partners birthday either.

If you want the children to be part of your celebration, don’t ask for them to stay elsewhere while your celebrating and then expect an extra meal out on top.

GogAndMagog · 08/07/2024 16:36

Ideally he would say to the kids 'Secret is having an evening birthday do that weekend you are at your mum's but we'll do somethig special to celebrate her birthday shall we?' Then he would organise some cards, cake etc from them.

Lets hope he has something planned, given how you have planned events for his kids.

By the way, maybe step back, as lovely as you sound, why are you paying half for them? They are his kids. Don't be taken for granted.

tomketchup · 08/07/2024 16:36

pikkumyy77 · 08/07/2024 16:35

But he is proposing to celebrate her that weekend so how he tells the kids is the issue. How long she has been his gf is absolutely irrelevant. I don’t see why you are harping on it except to somehow diminish the OP’s status? But whatever—its not relevant to the parenting issue which remains pretty basic: don’t lie to your kids or ask other people to lie to them. It is bad parenting.

Edited

of course it’s relevant

a girlfriend of many years… no doubt the children would want to be there or at the very least he’d feel more comfortable with them know why he wasn’t seeing them

he has made the op his priority this weekend and that is fair enough

he doesn’t want his young children to know that, which is also fair enough

macaroniandcheeze · 08/07/2024 16:37

Trickabrick · 08/07/2024 16:06

This for me, he sounds like he’s just trying to make sure his children don’t feel unwanted while you celebrate with others. I don’t see it as anything other than a good sign he’s sensitive to his kids feelings.

I agree to a point that’s probably hIs intention but he’s going about it clumsily / in a black and white way.

You can’t just pretend someone didn’t have a birthday, it makes more sense to go for a birthday meal with the children one other day that week, with the attitude of “I hope you had a brilliant time away with your mum at the weekend, it was X’s birthday so we are going to celebrate all together on Whateverday because it just isn’t a proper birthday without you guys, let’s pop to the shop and buy her something special!” But then he’d actually have to make some effort himself wouldn’t he

AGodawfulsmallaffair · 08/07/2024 16:37

tomketchup · 08/07/2024 15:52

how long have you been with him

either way… entirely his prerogative what he chooses to tell his children

Also po’s prerogative not to lie.

SecretBirthday · 08/07/2024 16:37

tomketchup · 08/07/2024 16:31

ok so fact he isn’t adopting this

means he, as a parent, is concerned about how his children are feeling about someone living in their home who they’ve known as their father’s girlfriend for less than a year

I don’t know if anyone has ever told you this, it seems they haven’t, but it’s really rude to step in and completely dominate a conversation when another person has asked for help and advice. I think that applies here, the same as it does in real life. You’ve said your piece, you don’t need to spend any more time here trying to dissuade other users of their valued perspectives.

OP posts:
tomketchup · 08/07/2024 16:37

it’s the op paying for half when they come at stay has got me wondering why this chap is happy to take his girlfriend’s money for his kids

tomketchup · 08/07/2024 16:38

good luck op

tomketchup · 08/07/2024 16:38

tell your friends that you pay half for his kids when you go out with them

watch their reaction

DeliciousApples · 08/07/2024 16:39

You sound like a great step mom. Wish I'd had you than my one lol!!

However it feels like he's trying to protect them from thinking you don't want to see them on your special day. I think he's mistakenly doing this for you.

So try not to be too hurt.

However some men need told what to do as they are innately stupid.

I think the whole not celebrating at all thing is a deal breaker for me.

I'd tell him you want to celebrate your birthday with the kids at McDonald's on Tuesday (or whatever/whenever) and I'd suggest he tells them now "we are celebrating xxx's birthday on Tuesday so make cards if you want" so they can make cards. (Note I didn't say it was the birthday day itself).

I'd also tell him I don't need presents from them but if he could help them choose a small bunch of flowers for me and a birthday cake to celebrate back at the house after McD's (and help them put candles in safely, he carries lit cake through from kitchen etc etc ) that would be perfect.

Sometimes you need to spell it out.

If they ask 'is it your birthday today' you can say no it was the other day but we weren't seeing each other then so I wanted to celebrate with you today'

All bases covered. What you want spelled out. Kids expectations clear.

I'd keep an eye on him though as I think he could be problematic in the future as he doesn't seem to put your needs first.

stayathomer · 08/07/2024 16:43

It doesn’t sound like you could be an evil stepmother!! His thought process seems ridiculous

Greenlittecat · 08/07/2024 16:46

I sort of get where he is coming from, in the sense it's still a relatively new relationship and he doesn't want the implication that "dad doesn't want to spend time with us because its @SecretBirthday birthday". However if this is his thought process he needs to communicate it to you.

In your situation, I would celebrate your birthday with friends as planned and then the next time you see the kids do a little celebration with them too - out for dinner, trip to the cinema, however you normally celebrate birthdays.

You sound like a lovely stepmum! It sounds to me like your partner is just navigating this a bit clumsily.

FictionalCharacter · 08/07/2024 16:47

He’s being ridiculous. It would be perfectly possible to let the kids know it’s your birthday without making them feel that they’ve been kept away. He shouldn’t be asking you to lie.

anothernewstart9 · 08/07/2024 16:47

GogAndMagog · 08/07/2024 16:36

Ideally he would say to the kids 'Secret is having an evening birthday do that weekend you are at your mum's but we'll do somethig special to celebrate her birthday shall we?' Then he would organise some cards, cake etc from them.

Lets hope he has something planned, given how you have planned events for his kids.

By the way, maybe step back, as lovely as you sound, why are you paying half for them? They are his kids. Don't be taken for granted.

Second all of this.

GingerPirate · 08/07/2024 16:48

All I would say, don't "cancel" yourself for other people.
They will bite out of you as much as you offer.
They are not worth it.

Runnerinthenight · 08/07/2024 16:49

PrincessofWells · 08/07/2024 16:02

You have a partner problem. Asking you to lie would be a huge, huge red flag for me and I'd be dumping him.

That's a bit of an over-reaction!

pikkumyy77 · 08/07/2024 16:50

Ignore the poster who is badgering you. Your instincts are good, OP. I think your bf’s intentions are good but he’s just really ill informed about how to help kids negotiate living in two households with all that complexity. He needs to think about modeling resiliency and optimism and generosity and turn taking for them. Their needs are being net—the number if people who love and care for them is expanding. Why create a false scarcity and imply that every includion (new partner new celebrations) is an exclusion. A change of plans for the weekend is not an abandonment and shouldn’t be treated like one.

SecretBirthday · 08/07/2024 16:51

FictionalCharacter · 08/07/2024 16:47

He’s being ridiculous. It would be perfectly possible to let the kids know it’s your birthday without making them feel that they’ve been kept away. He shouldn’t be asking you to lie.

The kids are going on a little weekend break with Mum and her DP so aren’t likely to notice in the moment about the contact change - most likely Mum will just say “you’re not at dads this weekend as we’re going away to such and such, remember”.

It will just be the awkward bit afterwards where two adults are trying to avoid accidentally mentioning the elephant in the room who happens to be wearing a party hat and eating a slice of cake.

OP posts:
pikkumyy77 · 08/07/2024 16:52

So dumb! Don’t let him put you in this awkward position.

Scorchio84 · 08/07/2024 16:53

NeverDropYourMooncup · 08/07/2024 16:11

Celebrate with the kids the following weekend as though that's your birthday. They won't remember the exact date.Then go back to normal next year.

Yeah that sounds like a good idea, everyone's happy

LookItsMeAgain · 08/07/2024 16:53

SecretBirthday · 08/07/2024 16:00

I have no idea what you mean? I’ve referred to the actual day of my birthday in my post.

I think this poster was trying to give you a way out of the situation that you're currently in where you have things planned for your actual birthday with friends coming over and doing things with your boyfriend but you could do something with them to celebrate your birthday with them when you have them the following weekend instead? One weekend for adult things, one that the kids can join in on.

Starrynights9 · 08/07/2024 16:54

Utterly ridiculous to keep your birthday a secret,what nonsense. The children are in a situation where all concerned need to learn to be adaptable & this includes the children. Honesty is the best policy here with the promise of a different day to celebrate together. You sound as if you would make a wonderful step-mum OP.

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