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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Have I stolen friend's job

272 replies

LucasBall25 · 09/03/2026 13:27

A bit of background: I’m part of a friendship group of women in our mid-40s. We’ve known each other about 4–5 years through a sports club and most of us have kids.

For most of the time I’ve known them I’ve been self-employed, but I didn’t properly go back to work after my second child. I do a bit of graphic design for a couple of clients, but my DH has a very full-on job with lots of international travel, so that arrangement has worked for us. However, there’s always been a bit of an assumption that I’m basically a stay-at-home mum doing very little whose always done very little, which isn’t true. Before kids I worked in an agency and was at senior/executive level.

One woman in the group let's call her Sara, has been unhappy in her job for as long as I’ve known her. It’s a serious corporate role, fully remote and very well paid. They do though asI understand have huge financial commitments — four kids in private school (one boarding) and a big house build that went over time and budget. So leaving not an option but she often talks about wanting to do something different and has lots of “dream” business ideas — jewellery on Etsy, interior design, a gift shop, co-working space, etc.

Last year I decided I wanted to do something more myself, but it needed to fit around the kids and my DH’s travel. We live in a small market town so options are limited.

I randomly applied for a part-time job at a small antiques shop/interior design studio. I haven’t worked in retail for years, but my mum owned a bridal boutique when I was growing up and I previously worked with lifestyle and interiors brands, so I had a bit of relevant background. It’s only part-time and not much above minimum wage.

The odd thing is that the reaction from the group hasn’t been very positive.

A few weeks after I started, I was in the car with this friend when her husband called. She mentioned she was with me and we were on speaker. He hung up, then called back saying he actually wanted to speak to me. He said congratulations on the job, then added that my friend would have loved that job, that it would have been her dream job, and that I’d “stolen it”. Then he hung up.

It was incredibly awkward. She looked mortified and we just changed the subject. It’s never been mentioned since.

But since then her husband has been noticeably frosty with me, and none of the group ever ask about my job. If I mention it, the conversation quickly moves on.

Have I really “stolen” anything? She’s probably earning close to £100k, so I can’t see how a small part-time retail job would ever realistically have been an option for her anyway.

OP posts:
whittingtonmum · 10/03/2026 18:05

Ridiculous behaviour. I would not speak to Sara or her husband again unless they apologize for the outburst.

Zerosleep · 10/03/2026 18:25

I’m sorry OP but those aren’t your friends. Friends don’t behave that way and they are proud of you for your achievements. If she wanted the job, she should have applied, if she did and wasn’t successful, that’s not your problem. I have never heard anything so pathetic and I would lose my shit if someone’s husband spoke to me in that way. Run OP run!

Ifyouknowthough · 10/03/2026 18:32

My translation is Sara is married to a bit of a twat. Sara would rather not have the house builds, private school and important job. Sara would like a simpler life and a job like yours. Her dh knows this as she has probably told him many times but they are over spending. I would ask Sara about her husbands bizarre rant but my guess is they are both jealous of your lifestyle. You may need to back away slowly from this friendship.

FairKoala · 10/03/2026 18:40

I wouldn’t bin the friendship group just yet. I would wait for this friend to complain about how cash strapped they are
Then when you are having a one on one conversation with one of the group, if the conversation turns to this friends financial woes or you stealing her job I would be saying that it was a good job she didn’t apply for the job because if she had got it then it would have been so much worse given the disparity in the take home pay.
It will all get better for her when her dc leave boarding school.

Triskellion75 · 10/03/2026 18:44

The fuck is this guy all about? Find your rage, don't take any more shit off this clown in future. Madness.

FairKoala · 10/03/2026 18:45

Personally if someone else had got that job would her dh be ringing them up to say they had stolen her job

The dh and her both sound unhinged. I have met these type of people who are earning a fortune but not actually moving their finances forward. They complain about how broke they are but have not a clue what to do about it They live in hope that when both sets of parents die they will inherit their way out of the debt
Whilst an afternoon sorting their finances out and putting them on a generous budget would do the same thing

Unless this couple are going to be removing their children from private boarding school then how the F would they have managed on the salary this “dream” job paid if she had even bothered to apply.

Although I think that logic would be too much for their tiny brains to process
If they can’t see that the math wouldn’t be mathing then you have to question their hold on reality

I think sometimes where friends are concerned, they believe anything any other friend tells them and don’t apply any critical thinking
Sometimes all it takes is someone to point out the flaw in the truth they were told for the tide to turn.

francy99 · 10/03/2026 18:52

Just ignore them. He sounds like a complete tw*t. She probably never shuts up at home about wanting to change careers and he’s annoyed she never applied for it. From what you say about your previous experience with your mum’s bridal boutique, even if she had applied, you would have still got the job anyway.

WilCh · 10/03/2026 18:56

That’s crazy! Why didn’t she apply for the job! Ridiculous & childish behaviour from people they need to grow up!

Frangle · 10/03/2026 19:04

Muffsies · 10/03/2026 17:47

Hence why ny friend who used to be an accountant with a 1st class honours degree is being passed up for jobs - he had a stroke that's given him a mild physical and mental disability which has caused him to drastically re-evaluate his life. But i guess he's just being written-off as a 'red flag' before he even gets over the threshold.

Unfortunately yes, they probably think he's massively over qualified

SemiRetiredLoveGoddeess · 10/03/2026 19:18

This reply has been deleted

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Wildefish · 10/03/2026 19:25

HenDoNot · 09/03/2026 13:44

I also don’t understand how a group you’ve been friends with for years don’t know that you’ve been self employed the whole time you’ve been friends, and before that had a successful career, and are not ‘just’ SAHM.

I have clients that I see once a month for an hour that know more about my life than these supposed ‘friends’ know about yours.

I know what she means. I’m a childminder and I work from home. Some times 50hrs a week. Even my husband seems to think because I’m home it’s not really work. He’ll say can you pick me up or take the dog to the vet. My sister keeps asking me to go for coffee. No, I’m working🤷‍♀️

Cherryicecreamx · 10/03/2026 21:42

How can you steal a job she has never applied for?! It's all so bizarre. All I can think of is jealousy/resentment that you're able to choose something you like whereas she probably feels a bit stuck and unhappy because she has too many financial commitments to go elsewhere.

Daisyhon · 10/03/2026 22:15

Tell your friend Sarah & the numbskull hubby that if she’s so desperate to work in a shop she can leave her 100K corporate job & go and apply for a job in Morrisons . This whole thing is one of the most hilariously idiotic things I’ve read on here , Her husband sounds like a total dickhead 2 x

Dugongs · 10/03/2026 23:45

IMHO if she wanted it so badly, she should have applied.

Simples!

You owe them nothing.

Fearnotsunshine · 11/03/2026 02:21

I think it's your supposed friend that you need to have a talk to. Her DH is just repeating what she's said to him, and obviously the rest of the supposed group of friends. Put your big girl pants on and confront her, watch her squirm. Sounds like she has a jealousy problem & that's just to start with.

Fearnotsunshine · 11/03/2026 02:24

She obviously wants your life - not happy at work, kids away at private school, husband is a dickhead.

Dogpootwo · 11/03/2026 02:59

The reason it sounds mad is because there’s a whole piece of the story missing. Clearly they are talking about it and believe you have stolen her job. Perhaps the story is that she saw the job. Excitedly told you about it. You went behind her back and interviewed and got the job.
im not saying this is what happened but id bet my dollar that’s what’s been said.

Firethehorse · 11/03/2026 03:29

You do need to get this out in the open if it’s STILL causing issues OP. I see why you assumed it would blow over quickly, and it is strange, so directly ask Sara.
If she tries to avoid answering I think you need to push and explain how detrimental this is still being to you within the friendship group.
Your nuclear option is to bring it up with the group, difficult, but you’re not getting past it anyway.

C152 · 11/03/2026 09:59

It sounds like your friend's a dreamer forced to live in reality. I'd be questioning whether this 'friendship' group has outlived its usefulness. How hard is it to congratulate a friend on a new job? It's great you got something local that fits with your family's needs. Your friends are equally capable of changing their lives if they don't like them - sell the massive house, put the kids in state school and stick to a strick NMW budget. Somehow, I think they'd still somehow find something to bitch about and would think someone has shafted them.

You could kill your friend's husband with kindness every time you see him, which he'd probably find infuriating. Or you could be direct and ask him how things are, as you've noticed he's been behaving oddly. I'm not sure I'd have the energy for either...I'd just drop the friendship.

Chiefangel · 11/03/2026 10:16

So you stole a job from your friend. A job that she hadn’t even heard about and neither applied for ! Absolutely crazy. I hope you are loving your job. Hold your head up high and ignore those unhinged idiots.

ConstanzeMozart · 11/03/2026 15:38

This is all really weird. What was her husband playing at? Why are the other 'friends' all now involved and side-eyeing you? Hmm
Is life so dull in a small market town that they have to manufacture their own intrigue?
I've no advice beyond steaming in to the next social gathering like a bull in the proverbial and saying, 'Shall we just thrash out this weird shit about Sara and my job then?', which I appreciate isn't realistic.

agcurceisteanna · 12/03/2026 18:24

OP, is it possible that she was sounding off at home - unfairly but without meaning what she said literally - and he took her at her literal word.

So she might actually be okay with you about the job (just wishes she could do the same) but he is distracted/bone-headed and didn't really extract the proper signal (that she feels overloaded).

So all he absorbed from her chat was 'job - friend - sad wife - friend's fault somehow'. It might explain why she looked guilty and mortified.

Alternatively - they are genuinely bananas.

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