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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to eat ice cream everyday and refuse to offer to DD

254 replies

olafandme · 21/06/2025 11:35

Yesterday I picked 7 yo DD up from school. It was a hot day and unusually it’s just us 2, no DS. I cheerily suggest we stop and get an ice cream on the walk home. To which she shouts at me “NO! I HATE ICE CREAM” (she loves ice cream and and eats them often)
to this I said “or an ice lolly or a cold drink, something cool” she screams that I don’t know her at all because she HATES COLD THINGS and runs away from me dramatically. Proceeds to walk 5 steps behind me entire way home. I stop off and buy myself an ice cream just to prove a point.
This type of thing happens often. For example few days or so ago it was torrential rain and i brought her umbrella to pick up. She screamed at me in front of whole playground because she did not want it (I was holding it - folded down and was not trying to make her hold it). That’s just this week.
I have spoken to her calmly and length about, 1) not shouting at me and also 2) about seeing the intent behind what someone is doing. Asking yourself is the person trying to do something nice or something nasty - if it’s nice try to recognise that and something along the lines of “no thank you” is what you say.
I’d say we have this talk once a week. anyway.
The ice cream incident must have tipped me over the edge. Because talking isn’t getting through to her. My plan is to not offer her ice cream for the time being at least. Anytime we have ice cream / ice lolly, she will not be having one. I think I could do a year or the summer at least. Maybe I’d reconsider after a change in behaviour and a sincere apology.
I tried this last night (same day as the incident) and did not offer her one and made one for everyone else. Despite me asking him not to - DH offered her one.
am i a psycho for thinking like this?
AIBU?

OP posts:
mumofsixfluffs · 22/06/2025 19:54

Autistic potentially ? Once out of school she can take the mask off and just let it all out?

SDTGisAnEvilWolefGenius · 22/06/2025 20:06

BertieBotts · 22/06/2025 19:51

"My feet wouldn't have touched the floor" is an expression to mean the parent smacked the child.

That is not considered right today.

I have always thought it meant ‘I was whisked out of there so fast my feet didn’t touch the floor’, @BertieBotts.

BertieBotts · 22/06/2025 20:38

Maybe I've misread it but that's what I always felt the implication was. I suppose being whisked away makes more sense!

TesChique · 22/06/2025 20:55

BertieBotts · 22/06/2025 20:38

Maybe I've misread it but that's what I always felt the implication was. I suppose being whisked away makes more sense!

I was never smacked, to be clear

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