Meet the Other Phone. A phone that grows with your child.

Meet the Other Phone.
A phone that grows with your child.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

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:
Scout2016 · 09/03/2026 14:28

Maybe he's being weird around you because he knows he acted like a dick, and you know he acted like a dick and he's embarrassed. He thought he was Standing Up For His Woman but actually he misjudged it.

But otherwise I think you got the blame for them being unhappy in their circumstances, and they are jealous that you took action to improve yours because it highlights that she just moans but never does anything about it.

BauhausOfEliott · 09/03/2026 14:29

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.

Yes, if the husband of one of my friends behaved like this to me, I would definitely speak privately to my friend - not to say 'Your husband's fucking nuts', although that's what I'd be thinking, but to say 'I was a bit confused about what your husband said - has there been some misunderstanding between you and I about my job that I don't know about?'

ThatCyanCat · 09/03/2026 14:29

Thinking about it, I wonder if Sara confided in her husband that she feels jealous because you've now got the kind of job she wishes she could be free to pursue, and he's responded to that by charging in like the big I Am to make up a bollocks accusation that effectively punishes you for it.

He's talking cobblers, obviously.

Morepositivemum · 09/03/2026 14:32

You need to talk this out properly with both of them (so weird he’s involved too but I’d guess you know him and she’s been going on about it). You need to ask the question ‘had you seen the job or applied for it?’ Actually you need to talk to your friend group too, the friendships all sound over though. I’m so sorry op

Aphroditesangel · 09/03/2026 14:34

I think it’s probably the old green eyed monster at work. She would love to have a job like that but can’t afford it- you can and it’s annoyed her bonkers husband who probably feels inadequate that they are not in a financial position to have her do something similar.
It’s a them problem. You have done nothing wrong. Move on and enjoy your new job.

Aluna · 09/03/2026 14:34

BauhausOfEliott · 09/03/2026 14:29

Yes, if the husband of one of my friends behaved like this to me, I would definitely speak privately to my friend - not to say 'Your husband's fucking nuts', although that's what I'd be thinking, but to say 'I was a bit confused about what your husband said - has there been some misunderstanding between you and I about my job that I don't know about?'

Noo don’t bring the loopy DH up. If anything just say you had no idea she had applied for the job and had no intention of treading on anyone’s toes.

Of course she didn’t so she’ll feel like a tool.

Nowpause · 09/03/2026 14:34

This reply has been deleted

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

Untalkative · 09/03/2026 14:34

OP, bluntly, by far the weirdest thing about this thread isn't (1) Sara longing for a little job in a shop or (2) her loopy husband accusing you of stealing said Little job In A Shop from her, or (3) your friends thinking it's terribly bad form on someone's part, it's (4) you asking, the best part of a year later, on the internet, whether you had in fact stolen Sara's job that that she didn't apply for!!!

Why didn't you address it at the time? Or even post on here saying 'AIBU to think my friend's husband is a total loon?'

TreadSoftlyOnMyDreams · 09/03/2026 14:34

Is there any chance they think you've bought the business and are working in it PT? Rather than just working in it PT? That's the only reason I can think of such a batshit response.

Is your husband aware of this and the odd atmosphere? Why can't you talk to him about it [when you say you have no one to talk to about it?] ?

purplecorkheart · 09/03/2026 14:35

I swear I know toddlers more mature than that couple.

I would contact her directly and ask her had she applied for the job and if she hasn't ask her why her husband thinks you have stolen her job. If she had applied you can tell her that you were unaware of that but that it was on the owner to decide who they employed and not you.

Aluna · 09/03/2026 14:36

Morepositivemum · 09/03/2026 14:32

You need to talk this out properly with both of them (so weird he’s involved too but I’d guess you know him and she’s been going on about it). You need to ask the question ‘had you seen the job or applied for it?’ Actually you need to talk to your friend group too, the friendships all sound over though. I’m so sorry op

When I was young I thought one had to have mature conversations about things.

I discovered that rarely ends well thus learnt to ignore everything.

Driftingawaynow · 09/03/2026 14:36

These people are psychos. Run away from them at full speed.

LucasBall25 · 09/03/2026 14:38

@Driftingawaynow 😂

OP posts:
Xiaoxiong · 09/03/2026 14:38

@Untalkative I don't think it's that bonkers. Obviously it's 8 months later and the OP thought it would have blown over since then, was a misunderstanding at the time or whatever, so she (quite sensibly) ignored it.

Events this weekend have made it clear that there is something still going on, hence her making the post.

BauhausOfEliott · 09/03/2026 14:39

TreadSoftlyOnMyDreams · 09/03/2026 14:34

Is there any chance they think you've bought the business and are working in it PT? Rather than just working in it PT? That's the only reason I can think of such a batshit response.

Is your husband aware of this and the odd atmosphere? Why can't you talk to him about it [when you say you have no one to talk to about it?] ?

It would be just as weird a response even if the OP had bought the business, though! Unless she’d somehow knowingly gazumped Sara using information Sara had given her in confidence or something.

Nowpause · 09/03/2026 14:41

This reply has been deleted

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

LucasBall25 · 09/03/2026 14:42

@Nowpause no I see Sara all the time just not her husband for anything length of time this has been the first thing since the summer where it has just been our group of friends and family for any length of time.

OP posts:
CustardySergeant · 09/03/2026 14:43

LucasBall25 · 09/03/2026 13:45

No she never applied as far as I know.

I got states the job at the end of the summer, phone call happened about a month later.

What do you mean by "I got states the job etc."? It can't be a typo for 'offered'. 😕

Jeschara · 09/03/2026 14:43

Is her husband having a breakdown or burning out? This sounds very weird behavior. On the other hand is he just an entitled prick?

Saying what he has to say then hanging up is incredibly bad behavior, ignorant, and rude. Who does he think he is? He has a mighty big opinion of himself when in real life he is a dick.

goz · 09/03/2026 14:43

How can you steal a job from someone who doesn’t even want it enough to apply?!

LucasBall25 · 09/03/2026 14:44

@Jeschara this is what I am trying to understand!!!

OP posts:
outerspacepotato · 09/03/2026 14:44

Sara's dissatisfaction with her life choices is not your problem to solve.

Your "friend" group has been gossiping about you behind your back and you were way too nice to that asshole husband. But, he just said what they're thinking, so now you know. Plus they're treating you differently and you can't discuss your job.

You did not steal a job, that's fucking stupid talk, you applied and they offered you the position. End of story. If she thinks she could have gotten it, she should have applied. She's been bitching about you behind your back to anyone she can and you might want to distance yourself from this bunch of backstabbing assholes.

Nowpause · 09/03/2026 14:44

This reply has been deleted

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

ChapmanFarm · 09/03/2026 14:45

I think that when you see him, ensure you are in no way apologetic.

No 'sorry you see it that way' for example.

If he says anything just have your response ready 'I don't think you can get a job that you don't apply for' or 'I haven't developed the psychic powers to know someone wanted to apply for a role in a completely different field".

Any weaknesses from you will be taken by him (or others) that you have something to apologise for.

Front this one out for the sake of moving forward. Hopefully you don't need to see him much but you shouldn't be pushed out of your group.

Nowpause · 09/03/2026 14:46

This reply has been deleted

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

Swipe left for the next trending thread