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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to assume we’re no longer invited to child’s party?

266 replies

SassyLogan666 · 14/03/2026 19:56

First time poster, long time lurker. Names changed for anonymity.

I’d really appreciate some outside opinions on whether I’m being unreasonable. I’ll start from the beginning but it’s a bit of a long one.

When we moved to the small town we still live in, our son (then 3) started nursery. One of the other mums, “Sophie” (36), made a beeline for us at the school gate. She was keen to make friends with other “boy mums and dads” as most of her friends have girls.

Sophie is very much the type who gave up work when she had her child and now everything revolves around how amazing her son is, what stage he’s at, etc. There’s a lot of one-upping and unsolicited advice about what you “should” be doing as a parent. I clocked this fairly early and decided not to engage in that game. I would smile, nod and keep things positive. I’ll admit to my husband that I jokingly referred to her as “Supermum” because she was always telling me what I should try with Alvin.

Over time she invited us, and another couple (the Romans – 32M, 33F and their 5M), to various things – farmers markets, fêtes, birthdays etc. Her fiancé “Henry” (35) was usually there too.

Sophie’s son “Greg” and our son “Alvin” sometimes clashed. They could play really nicely for a while and then fall out. Usually it was just verbal arguments but occasionally it became a bit physical. If Alvin was in the wrong we always dealt with it there and then, even if we were at someone else’s house – time out, apology etc. Interestingly, Alvin has never had these physical altercations with the other boys.

Later Sophie befriended another family (the Victors – 35M, 32F, 11M and 5M) and they joined the group.

Because Greg and Alvin could clash, we told Alvin that if he felt frustrated he should just walk away. We told the other parents this too.

We actually really liked this group. We had a small Christmas get-together and again the boys argued a bit, but it’s really just Greg and Alvin who seem to rub each other up the wrong way. They’re fine with the other two boys.

Earlier this year there was a children’s sushi-making event at our town’s community hub. Sophie mentioned it in the group chat but we were the only ones interested. My husband went along with Sophie and Greg and afterwards they took the kids to the park.

While there Sophie started talking about the children in the boys’ class (Greg and Alvin are in the same class). She listed several children she doesn’t like because they apparently hit Greg or are too rough. She said she doesn’t like play fighting and it’s too much for Greg.

However, most of the boys seem to play fight at that age. One boy, “Thomas”, whose mum Sophie is friends with from when she first moved here, apparently play fights all the time but that’s fine because he’s a “great kid” (which he is).

But another boy, “Jack”, who Alvin is very close to and whose parents we are good friends with, was described by Sophie as a bully. She also said a few other boys were basically “the devil”.

My husband basically shrugged and said kids will be kids – we can only parent our own child.

After that we did distance ourselves a little from Sophie. We really like Jack and his family and felt Sophie was being unfair. Jack is a bit boisterous, yes, but absolutely not a bully.

Not long after, Sophie texted to say Greg would be having a huge birthday party and to save the date because we “had to come”.

The next time we saw her was at the Victors’ son’s birthday party. I was talking to my husband and mentioned I was surprised Jack wasn’t there. Sophie interrupted and said it’s because he’s not liked as he’s a bully.

I’ll admit I lost my cool a bit. I said that he absolutely isn’t a bully and that a bit of play fighting doesn’t make someone a bully.

Then she said Jack pushes Alvin over and bullies him, including “the other day at school”.

I was honestly gobsmacked. I told her that was not true and she was out of order and should focus on her own child. She then claimed someone called “Susan” had told her and that she’d seen it herself. (I have no idea who Susan is.)

I was furious but tried not to cause a huge scene.

On the Monday another parent I barely speak to approached me at school and said Sophie had been telling people Jack is bullying Alvin. I told them that is absolutely not true.

I then spoke to Jack’s mum straight away to make it clear it wasn’t coming from us and that we adore Jack. Thankfully another parent had already told her about the rumour and she knew it wasn’t us.

There have since been words between Jack’s parents and Sophie and Henry and they are no longer speaking. Sophie hasn’t apologised for calling Jack a bully, which could have ended the whole thing. Instead she’s been hovering around Jack’s mum at school trying to get back on side.

With us she ignores us and gives dirty looks, which honestly suits me fine. I don’t want to be friends with someone who spreads things about a child that aren’t true, especially in a small town where reputations can stick from Reception to Year 6.

Interestingly, the rest of the group still speak to us and Alvin is still invited to their parties.

So my questions are:

Back in October Alvin was verbally invited to Greg’s birthday party. Proper invitations went out two weeks ago (another parent asked if Alvin was going) but we never received one. Jack also hasn’t received one.

I don’t know the exact time or place but I assume it’s the same venue as last year.

Am I right in thinking we should assume we’re no longer invited and just not go?

Also, I already bought Greg a present that I know he’d love. Would it seem passive aggressive to give it to him after school one day?

Finally, Sophie and Henry are clearly ignoring us and I suspect they’re still spreading rumours. Should I just ignore it and carry on?

OP posts:
SplendidUtterly · 14/03/2026 22:35

Do the children actually eat the Sushi or just make it?

GreenCandleWax · 14/03/2026 22:37

There are some real, terrible problems going on in the world. Did you not notice? Kindly, it might give a bit of perspective. 🤔

Eyesonprize · 14/03/2026 22:38

Gave up after a few paragraphs. You have FAR too much time on your hands, and (sorry to be blunt)- I wonder how sheltered and uneventful your life has been so far, if you are giving so much time and headspace to something like this!

nomas · 14/03/2026 22:39

Crunchymum · 14/03/2026 22:35

I must confess to missing that in the first post!! Funnily the guff actually detracted from the important information.

It was long winded yes but some times people just need to write to it all down.

Wowwhataworld · 14/03/2026 22:40

SplendidUtterly · 14/03/2026 22:35

Do the children actually eat the Sushi or just make it?

They can take it home with them and get a recipe card too

hoarahloux · 14/03/2026 22:41

Sounds like, very simply, by not completely deferring, and by defending Jack to Sophie, you are out of her good graces.

If she's so very influential, whoops! You've blown it.

Start your own influential mum group with the lovely children who definitely aren't all pushing and shoving each other around at all times and then fibbing about it when asked.

Alvin's not invited to the party. Don't invite Greg to Alvin's next party and watch Sophie implode about it.

TipsyPeachSnake · 14/03/2026 22:42

Why did you give the ages of all the parents? Is it relevant?

AgentPidge · 14/03/2026 22:42

NigellaDelia · 14/03/2026 21:56

I know many PP's are intrigued by the sushi party !!!!! but I can't get my head around this bit ~

"Later Sophie befriended another family (the Victors – 35M, 32F, 11M and 5M) and they joined the group"

How have the Victors managed to have children 6 months apart?

They're 11 years old and five years old, both male.
Both have blue eyes and brown hair, they are 4'3" and 4' 6" tall and take size 3 and size 5 shoes. Their favourite foods are hummus and naice ham.

Cgos21 · 14/03/2026 22:44

SassyLogan666 · 14/03/2026 20:46

Nope we are Uk - Just outside Newcastle.

I am more so invested in this now you have said where you live. When you say just outside Newcastle....are we talking about a small Northumberland town here? I'm trying to gauge an understanding of how likely this is to now drag on as an ongoing school issue...
Interesting that you feel she is a very influential mother in the school group yet the other parents are still happy to be your friend and invite your child to parties

Onlyhereforthebatshitneighbours · 14/03/2026 22:48

Well I for one liked reading the back story - sure we all like a bit of drama here?

ForeverDelayedEpiphany · 14/03/2026 22:51

Sushi? 4 and 5 years old? A theme for their birthday party?!

Wow. Jelly, ice cream. Pineapple sticks and pass the parcel in my day...😳😅

Moment of astonishment from me here... and it was probably the longest winded post about the biggest load of unnecessary detail ever.

SunshineAndSandalsMakeMeHappy · 14/03/2026 22:51

In a few years time this will be a non event, you probably won’t even remember it. Live your life, parent your child and ignore the drama llamas. It’s no big deal.

CheddarCheeseAndCrispSandwich · 14/03/2026 22:52

SassyLogan666 · 14/03/2026 20:46

Well thank you for the summary. very sorry to post my very unimportant life.

But genuinely OP…this is all you needed to say!! All the rest is just mindblowing 🤯

Ocelotfeet27 · 14/03/2026 22:54

OP I'm sorry but your message was honestly painful to read. So long with such unimportant, waste of time detail. On your actual issue it seems clear - your kid didn't get a paper invite, the parents are clearly showing they are pissed off with you all, you are not invited. If you want to give the present then do - after the party. I'd just say - oh I remembered it was X's birthday on the 25th - thought he'd like this. But given they hate you probably best off avoiding. I also would avoid getting so involved and aggressive with people in future - a simple 'hmmm, I'm not sure Jack is like that, when we walk to school he and Alvin seem to get on well' should suffice. Mild much better than a big row.

Mlc79 · 14/03/2026 22:55

That sure was a lot of words.

you haven’t had an invite, you don’t like the mother an she does not like your child.. he’s not invited.

you’re making it far more dramatic & complex than it actually is… which is literally playground stuff

Blessedbethefruitloopss · 14/03/2026 22:55

She’s only influential if you let her be to you. Work on your other friendships.
You are not invited, invite Jack round.

Lougle · 14/03/2026 23:01

SassyLogan666 · 14/03/2026 20:20

Small town politics - she’s very influential.

She's only influential if you let her be...

4wardlooking · 14/03/2026 23:01

@SassyLogan666 yes, Alvin isn’t invited, no, you shouldn’t give Greg a present and yes, carry on as normal.

You never said if you checked with Alvin if Jack was bullying him. You just went straight to the defence of Jack.

Uppitymuppity · 14/03/2026 23:04

You lost me at child sushi making event, wow

Lougle · 14/03/2026 23:11

I suppose we should be grateful that there was no mention of a gift registry.

OutwiththeOutCrowd · 14/03/2026 23:16

I have every sympathy. When you are in the trenches of primary school life, all the social hierarchy jostling and subterfuge can really suck you in. You dwell on it. And then you dwell on it some more. Your mind becomes a twirling merry-go-round.

The good thing is, DC eventually go off to secondary school and you find you no longer give a seaweed sheet about any of it.

Aur0raAustralis · 14/03/2026 23:22

You're not invited, so of course you shouldn't go.

Giving the present could go either way. Given she's still glaring at you, chances are that it will go badly so I wouldn't take the risk.

If Sophie was that influential, all the other families would have frozen you out too. It sounds like Jack's family are the influential ones here - you're jumping to his defence and Sophie has cut you out but is sucking up to his mum at the school gates.

Yes, ignore any rumours and carry on. Most school parents are actually reasonable and don't want to be caught up in drama. They will clock you as the sane one and her as the troublemaker if you're keeping calm and carrying on and she's running around badmouthing you.

Having said that, you should reflect on your own role in this drama. Sophie probably feels aggrieved because she went to the effort of setting up a little friendship group, and defending Alvin when she thought another boy was giving him a hard time, and you've responded by having a go at her. You should have acknowledged her concern for Alvin before stating calmly that Alvin hasn't raised any concerns about Jack.

It's also entirely possible that she is fine with Thomas because although he engages in playfighting with Greg, he knows when to draw the line, whereas Jack doesn't and keeps riling Greg up. Sophie is allowed to have different opinions about two boys who both engage in playfighting.

It does sound like you don't actually like Sophie that much so this isn't much of a loss, especially as she doesn't sound as influential as you're making out. If you do want to make amends or at least lower the temperature, a message apologising for having a go at her and thanking her for her concern about Alvin could help make things easier going forward.

Fishedupso · 14/03/2026 23:27

I dont think you get to say her son isnt being bullied. You can say oh ive found hes a nice kid and nice to mine. Or younve not seen anything.

MutherTrucker · 14/03/2026 23:30

Alvin and jack go for a play date that day instead, preferably something boisterous.
Sophie sounds like a PITA, and best avoided.
no to party, no to present.

TangerineUnicorn · 14/03/2026 23:31

Oh my. You’re not invited to the party and I think save the tasteful educational present for the next time Alvin, Simon or Theodore have a soirée in Darras Hall.

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