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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU for blocking two mum friends without warning or explanation?

84 replies

Tiredboymum22 · 15/03/2026 07:07

Is it ever acceptable to just block people with no explanation or warning?

This is what I’ve done and I feel guilty although I don’t think I’m the bad guy here.

I formed close friendships with two fellow SEN mums last year. Let’s call them Sue and Jane. I opened up to Sue about how difficult I find parenting without a village (and a diagnosis of ADHD and OCD). She shared her struggles and we became close. She offered to babysit my youngest a few times but I turned her offer down. I know she tries her best in many ways but she has a very “hands off”, latch key child approach as that’s how she was raised. I tactfully told her that DH and I were going to hire a babysitter but I appreciated her offer and she stopped speaking to me for three months as apparently I didn’t think she was good enough to care for my child.

During this time I became friends with Jane. Jane takes a polar opposite approach to parenting and is definitely a helicopter. She’s quite an intense person and would message me every day, give me hugs (to my surprise), and would talk about our children growing up together, etc. We’d meet up regularly (to the point where it became routine for our autistic kids) and she’d even refer to me as their “auntie”. During this time, Sue apologised to me and I accepted it. Jane had a lot to say about Sue’s parenting style and spoke in a very derogative way about her (I actually defended her a few times) although their children are close friends.

A few months ago, Jane rang Sue up desperate for a lift (I don’t have a car) and Sue ended up taking her to a food bank and helped her bring stuff back to the house. The two became closer and Sue helped her clean her house and shift some broken furniture (I had offered but I have my toddler home with me during the day so could only do an hour). The two became closer and began meeting up without inviting me which I didn’t mind, but I honestly feel like Jane dropped me like a sack of sh1t. She began referring to Sue as the kids’ auntie, giving her hugs to say bye without so much as glancing at me. I know it sounds quite childish but I felt hurt considering I had opened up about my marital issues, allowed my child a sleepover at her house (I’m not usually one for sleepovers).

The other week, the three of us and my DS were sat in Sue’s courtesy car and she told me off like a child for giving DS crisps in the car. I apologised and the next day she gave me and my toddler a lift to her house where she drove over twice the speed limit toward a blind corner then told me, while we were drinking coffee in her kitchen, that she had told her 6-year-old to be more grateful as my son doesn’t have as a good of a life as he does and go on multiple holidays abroad each year or get to go to as many cool places. Because I’m clearly a pushover, we still agreed to meet for breakfast in the week where she cancelled without any prior warning.

I’m aware I’ve rambled so to debrief, I’ve cut them both off and blocked them on all social media. Now Sue is demanding an explanation and I don’t want the confrontation or drama, I just want to be left alone which makes things awkward at the school. My mum and Sue have a friendship and she thinks I’ve behaved harshly as it’s never okay to just cut someone off.

AIBU?

OP posts:
THEDEACON · 16/03/2026 02:30

You all sound very immature

crossedlines · 16/03/2026 08:16

BeenThere2Often · 15/03/2026 22:02

Me too. Life is far too short.
That said its got to be easier if you never have to see that person! I’ve never blocked anyone and had the misfortune to run into them again! 🤣
But I have never ever regretted blocking the people I’ve blocked. Contrary to what others think, blocking has caused all the drama/ nastiness to disappear like a puff of smoke.

The OP sees these women at the school and worries it will be awkward so hardly comparable. I’ve blocked a person who I never see but for historical reasons was linked with on social media when they started posting extreme right wing shit and sharing conspiracy theory stuff. I wouldn’t block someone I’ve been friends with and will continue to see on a regular basis - that’s just a recipe for perpetuating the drama.

it all sounds very intense and unhealthy.

RhiWrites · 16/03/2026 08:29

Buffs · 15/03/2026 18:36

Slow fade better than blocking.

Slow fade is always the way. Unless someone is abusive. Slow fade is just easier all around.

Waitingforthesunnydays · 16/03/2026 08:29

It all sounds like a lot of drama. Do you actually like either of them? Do they bring value to your life? If the answer to both of those is yes then I would politely tell them to grow up and ask them why the 3 of you (fully grown women!) can’t just get along?!

If you’ve definitely decided you don’t want them in your life anymore, no you don’t owe anyone an explanation if you’d prefer not to have the confrontation. However, if your kids go to the same school and you’ll be seeing them a lot, I think blocking them without explanation just looks really childish and is actually adding to the drama of this whole shit show. If you don’t want to confrontation, explain that. Send a well thought-out text to each of them briefly explaining why you think it’s best you’re not friends anymore, ask them to respect that and wish them well.

Endorewitch · 16/03/2026 19:22

You all 3 sound as bad as each other. You overreacted blocking them. Would have been better to just ignore them and let the frie dship die a natural deeath .

Wingingit73 · 16/03/2026 19:32

This is all horribly childish. You sound like s judgemental trio.

Mykneesareshot · 17/03/2026 07:14

When two friends who were your fri nds get together without you that's the end for me. Yeah, block and move on, life's too short.

LaurelSorrel · 17/03/2026 10:25

Mykneesareshot · 17/03/2026 07:14

When two friends who were your fri nds get together without you that's the end for me. Yeah, block and move on, life's too short.

That’s a very strange attitude, and in the long term I suspect you will end up quite lonely if you carry on that way.

I get together with different individual friends or different small groups of people all the time - it’s not an insult to or rejection of other friends, but sometimes we want to chat about particular topics, or we want a quieter day, or it’s more convenient to arrange for 2 to meet than for 3. I’d find it very odd if somebody took offence that I’d met a mutual friend without them.

Fundays12 · 17/03/2026 12:54

I am a SEN mum. I have one child who is very high level needs (specialist school placement etc) and another who is often very unwell. You all sound exhausting, hard work and intense. However I have noticed this is quite common in parents with SEN as they often lack other out let's. Personally its one of the reasons I keep my distance. In this instance I would have backed off personally. I have blocked a couple of people before a couple for abusing me in my own garden and one woman who sent me random nasty drunk messages.

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