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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To not want to answer people's questions?

72 replies

rainbows40 · 15/11/2025 23:49

There have been times where people have asked me personal questions and I can't find the right words to say. The truth is I don't always want to answer their questions but when being asked a direct question by someone I find it extremely difficult to say "I don't feel comfortable answering that" which actually sounds like I'm hiding something. Truth is I'm a very private person and I fear judgement.
I live my life 50% carefree and 50% hyper aware of everything and everyone and super sensitive.
I will give you an example of how I find myself in an awkward moment where I am asked a question:
I will go about my day as normal. There will be someone who I tolerate and am very nice to, but inside I don't particularly like them. My trains for this example are that I notice how they pick out student nurses for tedious tasks that they should be doing by themselves. They have been caught doing this and have been 'shut down' by senior staff when asking a certain student to help her do something tedious, and they told her she was busy.
Anyway, I tolerate her but don't particularly like how she works for this reason.
She caught me off guard and asked me outright how old I am. I felt somewhat taken back and didn't want to tell her. I felt as though my privacy was being invaded. I made up something roughly around my age.
She then asked how old my kids were.

Why didn't I just tell her I wasn't happy answering her questions? The answer is because I feared coming across as rude.

Another example, there is a person who I have worked with, is a bit of a strange character. Extremely shy and sensitive on the outside. Always taking huge offence to things people say and apparently do and disappearing frequently mid meeting because something was said that triggered something for them. Having spent moments with them chatting after work, I have seen them switch from this shy persona to suddenly being utterly aggressive and shouting at passers by who may have bumped into them by accident as they were walking by.
I have seen them under another light when they brought up a story about a colleague who was new and had made a mistake and seemed to take delight at their failings. I have also noticed that they take pleasure in attempting to have one-upmanship on people. All of this, for me, has cast this colleague under a certain light and I am now very wary of them but very polite when interacting with them.
They have ignored me out in public, as that's part of their odd behaviour, and then the next they try and make conversation with me, which baffles me. This sounds ridiculous me saying this but one time we travelled for a meeting to a remote place. On my way there in the early morning, someone sped walked past me and only after they had fully passed did I realise it was them. They passed by without saying hello or even acknowledging me. I wasn't entirely surprised as again, this is part of their odd behaviour.
Anyone with eyes would have known they would have passed me as my coat is unique and bright. So they definitely would have seen me. Also, I was the only person bar one or two, on that street at that time, so hard to miss.
When I arrived at the meeting, as I was taking my place she was already seated looking at me. She suddenly perked up from a few rows away and loudly asked me how I travelled there. I knew full well that they knew they had just passed me in the street. I didn't want to answer her question. I didn't want to give her the delight in saying how she had also walked and had gotten there ages ago! For some reason she had pissed me off a bit, so I smiled politely and asked her "why?"
She got pissy and loudly infront of everyone declared it was just a simple question!! So I told her I flew and sat down. Pathetic I know, but I have a habit of feeling intimidated or put on the spot and I never know the appropriate response.

How do I get through these moments??

OP posts:
CioCio · 16/11/2025 00:05

Honestly, OP, you’re the one coming across as a total oddball here. All these reams of justification for your dislike of colleagues. You sound deeply paranoid. You can’t possibly know that your colleague saw you on the street and pretended not to so she could humiliate you by saying how long in advance she’d made it to the destination.

If you don’t want to answer questions, don’t, obviously, but I don’t think asking someone their age or how they got to a meeting are particularly personal, so there’s nothing to blame the askers for. Just decide whether you prefer the discomfort of answering them to the discomfort of not answering them.

ShesTheAlbatross · 16/11/2025 00:12

CioCio · 16/11/2025 00:05

Honestly, OP, you’re the one coming across as a total oddball here. All these reams of justification for your dislike of colleagues. You sound deeply paranoid. You can’t possibly know that your colleague saw you on the street and pretended not to so she could humiliate you by saying how long in advance she’d made it to the destination.

If you don’t want to answer questions, don’t, obviously, but I don’t think asking someone their age or how they got to a meeting are particularly personal, so there’s nothing to blame the askers for. Just decide whether you prefer the discomfort of answering them to the discomfort of not answering them.

I agree. How did you get here/how was your journey is a completely normal question if going to a different location. Also, she walked past you in the street outside? So even if she did see you (which you really don’t know, some people are in their own worlds), she wouldn’t know if you were walking from a train station, a bus stop, a nearby car park, if someone had dropped you off etc. She might have rushed past you because she needed the loo!

suki1964 · 16/11/2025 00:14

Ok, so Im reading this as someone who is taking normality out of context

I myself am forever getting slated for not acknowledging friends on the road - Im like Im driving, I'm not looking at onward cars

I think you have to acknowledge how and why you feel these feelings and look at yourself.

Nothing you have posted screams that they are out to get you

A lot screams to me, as your reaction

ShamrockShenanigans · 16/11/2025 00:18

How do I get through these moments??

My advice is to chill out, stop overthinking and start to realise the world is not against you.

howshouldibehave · 16/11/2025 00:18

Anyone with eyes would have known they would have passed me as my coat is unique and bright. So they definitely would have seen me.

I couldn't tell you what the coat of people who I work with looks like! I think you sound rather paranoid.

HeddaGarbled · 16/11/2025 00:21

In the first scenario, I would have just replied factually. Your age and your children’s ages, whilst technically “personal” information isn’t personal personal and in my opinion isn’t “invading your privacy” because it’s not information that most people feel any need to keep private. Telling her you didn’t want to answer would have seemed weird to me.

In the second scenario, I think your answer of “I flew” is witty and a good answer under the circumstances (because she was being weird).

angelikacpickles · 16/11/2025 00:34

Surely it's far more likely that the second person didn't see you than that she deliberately walked past you and then asked you how you got there? Why would she have done that?

Topseyt123 · 16/11/2025 01:03

You are coming across as an oddball and an overthinker in your post. Most of what you have written in such detail about is stuff that would barely register with me.

Mangomammy · 16/11/2025 01:04

Q; “How old are you?”
A; “not 21 anymore” “old enough” “in my 40s”

Q; “how old are your children”
A; “they’re in primary school” “adult” “In university”

Q; “how did you get here”
A; “ I walked” “I took the bus”

you say they ignored you, did you say hello to them? Or did you “ignore” them too.

BetaTwoAgony · 16/11/2025 01:08

Being inside your head seems like hard work.

It might be worth talking to someone about your feelings?

Apollonia1 · 16/11/2025 07:24

There have been many previous threads on how to avoid answering questions. Some examples of things to say were:

Why do you want to know?
My own mother wouldn’t ask me that!
Are you the Gestapo?
Give a vague answer (eg for the age question, say “21 and a bit”)

rainbows40 · 16/11/2025 07:26

Haha thanks everyone. I suspected I am a bit of an oddball. I am a very anxious person to be fair. Always have been. I think the problem lies with me afterall. I should learn to be more forthcoming.

OP posts:
rainbows40 · 16/11/2025 07:27

Apollonia1 · 16/11/2025 07:24

There have been many previous threads on how to avoid answering questions. Some examples of things to say were:

Why do you want to know?
My own mother wouldn’t ask me that!
Are you the Gestapo?
Give a vague answer (eg for the age question, say “21 and a bit”)

Great answers thank you

OP posts:
rainbows40 · 16/11/2025 07:28

Mangomammy · 16/11/2025 01:04

Q; “How old are you?”
A; “not 21 anymore” “old enough” “in my 40s”

Q; “how old are your children”
A; “they’re in primary school” “adult” “In university”

Q; “how did you get here”
A; “ I walked” “I took the bus”

you say they ignored you, did you say hello to them? Or did you “ignore” them too.

Good ideas thank you. No I didnt get a chance to ignore or say hello to them as they were speed walking past.

OP posts:
Alittlefrustrated · 16/11/2025 07:58

You might be right about the intentions of the speed walker, as they do sound unpleasant. The question is why do you care so much?
It would be a roll my eyes and move on moment for me, as they sped past.
When asked how I got there "I wslked, what about you? " or "I walked - you sped past me on....... Street"
Your feelins in relation to being asked your age etc, do point to a degree
of paranoia.
Have you sought support for your anxiety/sensitivity/hyper awsreness? I ask, as I expect it is exhausting and taking up "brain space" and time, which could be used more productively/pleasantly.
If not, please consider it. Life is too short to spend 50 %, of it in turmoil.

Mangomammy · 16/11/2025 19:38

rainbows40 · 16/11/2025 07:28

Good ideas thank you. No I didnt get a chance to ignore or say hello to them as they were speed walking past.

So isn’t it possible they didn’t notice you since they were walking fast, maybe not paying attention to the random strangers on the street.

IfyouStealMySunshine · 16/11/2025 19:46

I wouldn’t count the commute issue with her not seeing you, lots of people are in their own head on the commute - headphones in and just want to get to work, sometimes they need to do a job when they get in/grab a coffee/need the loo.
Im a big extrovert but I try not to ‘see’ people until I’m in the office plus I know a lot of people just hate mornings and the journey in to a job some of them don’t want to be at

Elsvieta · 16/11/2025 19:55

Nobody else notices / remembers your coat.

If it's just how you got here, ages of children etc, it's just normal chit-chat; just answer.

If someone is actually questioning you about your sex life / finances / health / religion etc, try "Oh, that's not something I'd talk about" or "Dear me, what a thing to ask a lady", followed by a swift subject change. The trick is to not act like you think for a second that you "have to" answer. You can put your age in this category if you like.

pizzaHeart · 16/11/2025 19:59

Mangomammy · 16/11/2025 01:04

Q; “How old are you?”
A; “not 21 anymore” “old enough” “in my 40s”

Q; “how old are your children”
A; “they’re in primary school” “adult” “In university”

Q; “how did you get here”
A; “ I walked” “I took the bus”

you say they ignored you, did you say hello to them? Or did you “ignore” them too.

This ^
and then distraction technique: What about you/ your children/ your age/ your flight?

Rainbows41 · 16/11/2025 20:14

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

Nickyknackered · 16/11/2025 20:16

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

Don't name change half way through threads. It's difficult to follow because you're no longer highlighted and I believe against MN rules (which is why they make it difficult to do accidently).

SconehengeRevenge · 16/11/2025 20:35

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

I was going to respond (positively, actually, unlike the first few posters).

But now I've seen you're sock puppeting, which isn't supposed to be possible.

Reporting

CioCio · 16/11/2025 21:56

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

Name change fail, OP?

I don’t think your anxiety is the issue. If this is about not wanting to answer completely ordinary questions, why on earth all those reams of unnecessary information about why you don’t like the two colleagues?

rainbows40 · 16/11/2025 22:38

No name change fail at all. Simply Mumsnet playing up for me and throwing me out, which has happened twice today. When I sign back in, its logged me into what I now realise is my old account - an account I completely forgotten I had and didn't even realise existed until around ten mins ago. So, sorry if you or anyone got confused. I also was very confused.

OP posts:
rainbows40 · 16/11/2025 22:42

SconehengeRevenge · 16/11/2025 20:35

I was going to respond (positively, actually, unlike the first few posters).

But now I've seen you're sock puppeting, which isn't supposed to be possible.

Reporting

What's sock puppeting?
See my update. I'm just as disturbed by this sudden "name change" as you. I didn't even realise it had happened until MN notified me that I that had two accounts active. One which I obviously set up a few years ago and completely forgotten all about, I somehow was able to sign into without realising.
Apologies for the confusion.

OP posts:
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