Meet the Other Phone. Flexible and made to last.

Meet the Other Phone.
Flexible and made to last.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To not want to attend this event!

80 replies

lenalove · 01/05/2025 10:29

Hi everyone!

I am genuinely not sure if AIBU about this so would welcome some feedback.

An old friend of mine (we used to be very close but in recent years don't see each other as frequently, still get along well though etc) is having a milestone birthday party this summer. It will be a joint party hosted with someone I have not met before, taking place at a venue/accommodation that has been rented out for a long weekend (3 nights). We have been asked to contribute £100 for venue hire, regardless of whether attending 1, 2 or 3 nights. I have around 4 close friends who will be attending.

The venue is a c. 4 hour train trip or car ride from where most of us live. This means that realistically attending for 1 night would be pretty knackering and not cost effective. I would therefore have to go for 2 nights. My main issue is this: I have a DD who at that point will be 15 months. I am extremely fortunate in that my DM is very happy to babysit and regularly helps with childcare, and of course my DH would be around too. However, I would really rather not leave DD for 2 nights for something that honestly doesn't really appeal to me that much, and could really do without spending up to £200 on accommodation and train fares.

For additional context, I am the only one with a child (had her fairly young) and at times feel a bit misunderstood when I try to explain the reality of how this impacts planning and finances.

Do I just suck it up and go? Friend has made it pretty clear she would be very upset and disappointed by close friends not attending.

Do I make up an excuse? Do I just tell friend honestly and bear the consequences to friendship?

Thanks for reading if you got this far - looking forward to input.

OP posts:
Whatwouldnanado · 11/05/2025 05:18

Send a nice card, perhaps include a voucher, with a note explaining you won’t be joining her this time but hope they all have a great weekend and look forward to catching up sometime soon. The end.

MrsSkylerWhite · 11/05/2025 12:47

AliBaliBee1234 · 01/05/2025 12:23

Agree with this, your child is over a year old and
nobody would understand you not being willing to leave her a couple of nights with her Dad

I wouldn’t have wanted to be away from either of our 1 year olds 🤷‍♀️

AliBaliBee1234 · 11/05/2025 12:53

MrsSkylerWhite · 11/05/2025 12:47

I wouldn’t have wanted to be away from either of our 1 year olds 🤷‍♀️

That's quite unhealthy imo

MrsSkylerWhite · 11/05/2025 12:59

Not in mine. Great that we’re not all exactly the same, isn’t it?

howshouldibehave · 11/05/2025 12:59

You used to be friends with her, but haven't seen her much over recent years and you say that you are the only one of your friends who has a baby, and you had her young?

When were you friends-primary school? I think it's fine to say no if it doesn't suit you? She can be disappointed if she wants to.

New posts on this thread. Refresh page