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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:
fashionqueen0123 · 09/03/2026 14:12

This reply has been deleted

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

It doesn't sound like she has got over it!

TheOtherBear · 09/03/2026 14:13

If the husband is still being weird about it now (8 months later), then you can definitely still ask about it.

Hurryuphumphreygeorgeiswaiting · 09/03/2026 14:13

Seriously, totally bonkers OP. These people arent your friends. The husband is weird. To say you have stolen his wife's ideal job for a job she hasnt applied for and then hangs up. They have been talking about you behind your back. They are not nice friends. Making you feel uncomfortable when you are in a group setting. They are all so childish.

I know what it is like where you feel everyone know everyone in your town. I moved to a tiny village and it is exactly the same plus have dc's in private school so I totally get how people can be. Had the same happen to me a long time ago so keep these people at arms length.
Congratulations on your new job.

LucasBall25 · 09/03/2026 14:14

@SeaBaseAlpha no thinks it's very much the other way I do think she would love to quit but they would be in the absolute hock if she did.

OP posts:
LucasBall25 · 09/03/2026 14:16

She has spoken about having a shop in town but she's also spoken about, being a landscape gardener, an interior designer, hand making jewelry, writing children's books, having a calligraphy business, the list is quite varied and endless.

OP posts:
Moveoverdarlin · 09/03/2026 14:16

I’d speak to him next time he is frosty and say ‘Why didn’t she apply for the job then Duncan? There’s loads of local shops and businesses, was I not allowed to work in any of them? Or just this one? I have known Sarah for 5 years and in all that time she has spoken of getting a new job, but she doesn’t. I’m a SAHM, she’s probably on mega bucks, it wouldn’t have occurred to me that Sarah would want this job and if she did, like I said, she should have gone for it.

Xiaoxiong · 09/03/2026 14:17

It almost sounds like they're just jealous that you're not in the same bind that they're in where she hates her job and feels there's no way out.

It's not in any way logical or reasonable to think that you've stolen her job or that your friend would even want this job.

RhiWrites · 09/03/2026 14:17

The change in vibe might not be so much about the job as the lifestyle. Maybe these friends think you have it easy and a fun creative job but no real serious responsibilities while they are trudging on with dull corporate jobs, they be envious of the life they see you as having without actually wanting your job for real themselves.

TessSaysYes · 09/03/2026 14:18

He's just an arse. Ignore his bad manners. Bit of an eye opener though.

NoTouch · 09/03/2026 14:18

Best approach is honesty.

Speak to Sara one to one and say you have been having a very uncomfortable feeling lately after her dh's odd call, and people in the group seem to be awkward around discussing your job and you are not sure if you have put 2 and 2 together and come up with 5 but you wondered if something is going on you are not aware of or if you have unintentionally done something to upset her? Then take it from there.

Be clear you are sorry if she is upset (caused by stress in her own role and her dreams), but you have done nothing wrong.

ThatCyanCat · 09/03/2026 14:18

I wonder if he's one of those men who absolutely has to find a woman to blame for literally everything, and if he can't blame his wife for her unhappiness at work or whatever that's translating into at home, he'll just make up some insane shit to throw at another woman.

Honestly, you know this is cuckoo. Now I feel even more sorry for her. Trapped in a job she hates and married to that absolute nut job?

Figcherry · 09/03/2026 14:19

LucasBall25 · 09/03/2026 14:16

She has spoken about having a shop in town but she's also spoken about, being a landscape gardener, an interior designer, hand making jewelry, writing children's books, having a calligraphy business, the list is quite varied and endless.

I imagine Sara’s dh knows that realistically she can’t take a low paid job and is ‘blaming’ you for taking her job because it deflects from their situation.

Ohwhatfuckeryitistoride · 09/03/2026 14:20

LucasBall25 · 09/03/2026 13:50

Oh I forgot I forgot, he's also said 'Sara has always wanted to work in a shop?!??! Bonkers

He wants Sara to work in.a shop, he resents her high flying job and wants her to be a "lady that has a nice job in a lovely little shop" he's a nutter.

ImFinePMSL · 09/03/2026 14:21

LucasBall25 · 09/03/2026 13:48

@QPZM I just feel so terrible, this is the thing seeing the husband at the weekend got me thinking about it again as seriously no one has gotten over it.

It was the maddest maddest thing. Her husband also has an incredibly dry/serious corporate role.

Why do you feel terrible?

I’m sorry I just don’t understand at all why you feel terrible about getting a job….

If you’re letting this random bloke make you feel guilty for getting a job because his wife “has always wanted to work in a shop” then you really need to work on your self esteem.

You also need to cut out all of these childish and mental people from your life. Life is way too fucking short to allow something as silly as this to affect you.

Thistooshallpass. · 09/03/2026 14:22

Jealousy. They resent you for having the option to have that job .. yes she would love that job but their lifestyle choices don’t allow it - they can’t afford for her to live her dream of working in a shop ?!
So they resent you for having what they cannot .

CakeMeHomeIveSeenEnough · 09/03/2026 14:23

It sounds like your friend vented to her husband about your job and how it was her dream job🙄and so on and so forth, and he decided in a moment of madness to pass along the complaints to you. Very embarrassing for both of them. And she's probably done the same to the other friends, which is why they feel awkward around the subject and try to avoid it. Again, embarrassing.

You've obviously done nothing wrong to deserve such treatment. I'd consider bringing it up again and putting forward you side. Otherwise, try to just ignore it, but don't be put off mentioning your job whenever you normally would. Be oblivious to any awkwardness and try to normalise it as something that can be discussed, because it is. (Exposure therapy for this set of weirdos!) It's not as though that's the only shop job in the world. Your weird friend is free to look for another one, if that's what she really wants.

KatsPJs · 09/03/2026 14:23

Yeah that would be the end of the friendship for me OP: how fucking dare they behave like that towards you? I would not be able to let this go and would have to send both her and her ridiculous husband a message, and would also send one to the group asking what the problem is. What childish behaviour.

LoveWine123 · 09/03/2026 14:24

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.

and then…maybe 4 years as SAHP has softened me too much OP I think if you want people to stop assuming you are a SAHP then don’t call yourself that. You are (or were) a business owner.

That aside, your friend’s husband is an arse. And I think so is your “friend” who has clearly gone home to complain to her husband about your new job. I would rethink my friendship with this person.

HandfulOfMoths · 09/03/2026 14:24

I’d be frosty right back with the absolute weirdo of a husband. You didn’t steal anything. He’s batshit, and anyone who doesn’t think he’s batshit in your group of mutual friends is also batshit.

BauhausOfEliott · 09/03/2026 14:25

Your friend's husband sounds insane.

When you say the reaction from your group 'hasn't been positive', what do you mean? Do you mean they've all been openly hostile and critical, or just that they didn't react with tremendous excitement?

If it's the latter, then I wouldn't think anything of it - I wouldn't expect much more reaction than 'Oh, that shop on the high street? I know the one' or at most a 'Oh, nice' sort of thing. But if they're all scowling and rolling their eyes about it, that's weird and mad.

ThatCyanCat · 09/03/2026 14:26

Ohwhatfuckeryitistoride · 09/03/2026 14:20

He wants Sara to work in.a shop, he resents her high flying job and wants her to be a "lady that has a nice job in a lovely little shop" he's a nutter.

But if what OP is saying is true, they'd be financially stuck if she did. Very few households wouldn't notice a reduction of nearly £100k...

Happyjoe · 09/03/2026 14:26

God, there is some really weird people around nowadays. Sigh!
Ignore them OP. Of course you didn't steal the job.

Parsleyforme · 09/03/2026 14:28

How ridiculous, she didn’t even apply for the job! And probably doesn’t have any relevant experience. It sounds like all her chat is pipe dreams, especially as it seems she’d rather own a shop than be on close to minimum wage working at one. Anyway, more than one person can have the same job and it sounds like she has lots of ideas. If it comes up again I would remind friend or husband that friend didn’t apply for the job so it would’ve been filled by someone else, and the pay is about enough to keep you going but (I’m assuming) nothing like what you were on before. Her inability to be happy for you, interested and using this as an excuse to also do something less corporate is her pwn problem, not yours

NeedAdvice6432 · 09/03/2026 14:28

I think she would love to take a step back and have that kind of job. But she can't and likelihood is that she's not only killing herself in a corporate role she doesn't like, she is also carrying 100% of everything at home. So she sees you having the life she wants. And her dickhead of a DH, instead of working with his wife on how to make things better, he's deflecting from the tensions at home, and decided you're the problem. It's some twisted envy, pure and simple.

My exDH was like this BTW. Wanted money and the lifestyle and really, really looked down on people that, in his opinion, didn't work hard enough. But also HATED that I was making a lot more money than him and essentially funded this lifestyle he (we both) wanted. His manlihood was threatened and he took it out on everyone basically.

Agrumpyknitter · 09/03/2026 14:28

Moveoverdarlin · 09/03/2026 14:16

I’d speak to him next time he is frosty and say ‘Why didn’t she apply for the job then Duncan? There’s loads of local shops and businesses, was I not allowed to work in any of them? Or just this one? I have known Sarah for 5 years and in all that time she has spoken of getting a new job, but she doesn’t. I’m a SAHM, she’s probably on mega bucks, it wouldn’t have occurred to me that Sarah would want this job and if she did, like I said, she should have gone for it.

Agree. Absolutely call him out on it. If your friend really wanted to pursue a creative job there are ways and means, she could have started to document her build on her house and interior design on YouTube and Instagram, has she done any of these things to start building a following? She could then get partnerships etc which all takes time and effort. But it would have started the ball rolling.

A lot of people who start knitting document their makes on YouTube and Instagram and start building a following. Some of which makes enough to pay for the yarn for the hobby. Some of these people then go on to design knitting patterns, or document their life & knitting journey and going on patroen for support. My point being some people really want to pursue a creative life and actively look for opportunities to do so, starting small alongside their day job or family life.