Meet the Other Phone. Child-safe in minutes.

Meet the Other Phone.
Child-safe in minutes.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Struggling over handling a houseguest rebuff

220 replies

MsAmerica · 16/03/2026 19:36

I’m not really asking about reasonableness. But I think that people unfortunately use AIBU as a catchall, especially for etiquette posts in the absence of an etiquette forum – so that’s what I’m doing. I’m just curious as to how you would have handled this.

I have a younger half-sister with whom I’ve never lived, but when I was in my teens, we saw quite a bit of each other, and had a nice big-sister/little-sister relationship. In adulthood, although we had a good time if we happened to be having dinner, she otherwise ignored my attempts to reach out to her. I don’t think she was deliberately snubbing me or being rude – she just didn’t care. Even when we were living in the same city, it wasn’t any different. If I sent her a birthday present, she didn’t acknowledge it. If I invited her to something, she didn’t RSVP. At one point several years ago, she stood me up for dinner, which we’d set up in advance, and I didn’t even hear from her until days later, when she said she hadn’t picked up her messages (which were the messages pinning down the time and place to eat). She apologized and said she’d make it up to me – but I never heard anything further, ever.

However, last year we happened to be lunching in the aftermath of the death of our family patriarch, so to speak, and she expressed a wish to be closer. Fine. I feel that she’s never been much on family, but maybe this death sparked some re-assessment.

Then a week or two ago, she left a message to say she had a business event in my city and wanted to stay with me for three days. I left her a polite message saying no, sorry, but I couldn’t.

Let me explain. First, I’m not a hostess type. Guests staying over make me very anxious, partly because I have no facility for whipping up great meals at the drop of a hat. Also, not only am I a bad housekeeper, at the moment my place is utter chaos, with mountains of paperwork piled high, and a bunch of things that need fixing, like leaky faucets and leaky toilets. Also, although I didn’t say it, I’m horribly allergic to cats, and she has two – and in case you didn’t know, cat owners inevitably carry the cat dander with them. This isn’t just my feeling - there are statistics showing that. So once she’s here, my place may be permanently contaminated. I thought it would be even more hurtful to tell her that, but maybe I'm wrong.

Meanwhile, she’s left two more messages, plaintively asking, why, why, why can’t she stay? After all, she said, we were going to try to be closer.

I understand that she’d like to save money on a hotel, but she has a solid income, and the trip is tax-deductible for her. And part of me is wondering if her sudden wish for closeness was due to her knowing she would be wanting a place to stay. Sorry if this sounds uncharitable, but after decades of her ignoring me, I don’t know that I’m suddenly obliged to provide accommodations.

So, I’m curious if any of you are good at delicate etiquette maneuvering, how you would handle something like this? Miss Manners says that when someone asks you “Why not?” you should just keep repeating, “Because I just can’t.” But I can’t come up with anything to say that would solve this kind of thing.

Ugh - sorry this is so long.

OP posts:
Jellybelly80 · 19/03/2026 04:41

MsAmerica · 19/03/2026 03:48

Oh, gee, I post about a little family tussle, and your reaction is to suggest mental problems in my family? Thanks a lot.

Your posts also made me think about the possibility of Neurodivergence in your family.

As for ‘mental problems’ - I’m pretty sure that in the spirit of good etiquette you could Google the term and find alternatives to use to such an ugly choice of words.

Jellybelly80 · 19/03/2026 04:44

CassandraCan · 19/03/2026 00:47

Absolutely.

I am so fed up of the ND card being thrown up. The prevalence of ND is actually very small and that includes the endemic rates of overdiagnoses. So given that <5% of the population has ADHD, and only <1% are autistic, why do 90% of mumsnet threads mention neurodiversity?

Sources
https://digital.nhs.uk/data-and-information/publications/statistical/adult-psychiatric-morbidity-survey/survey-of-mental-health-and-wellbeing-england-2023-24/autism-spectrum-disorder?utm_source=chatgpt.com

You can be as offended as you like when people who suggest the possibility of ND are living it day in and day out either with themselves or their family and extended family and can usually spot it a mile away.

Jellybelly80 · 19/03/2026 04:46

Sugarnspicenallthingsnaice · 19/03/2026 01:38

I thought that poster was also, tactfully, alluding to some ND traits in the OP.

I would agree with this.

Shedmistress · 19/03/2026 04:54

Not wanting cheeky fuckers taking the piss is now an allusion to neuro diversity is it?

I'd say this was a trait of being completely normal.

ThatFairy · 19/03/2026 05:01

MsAmerica · 19/03/2026 03:48

Oh, gee, I post about a little family tussle, and your reaction is to suggest mental problems in my family? Thanks a lot.

In Britain neurodivergence isn't stigmatized or thought badly of and loads of the population have autism or ADHD

LAMPS1 · 19/03/2026 05:12

You need to remain polite -but much firmer OP.
Hi again dear sister,
Its really lovely that you want stay with me on your work trip and I am very happy to meet up with you of course, but no, I won’t be changing my mind about having visitors to my home.
I’m just not set up for hosting and am unable to change that fact for now. It’s just the way it is.
Please let me know when you are free and I will look forward very much to meeting up.

DoneAndNotDusted · 19/03/2026 05:29

CactusSwoonedEnding · 19/03/2026 00:11

Yanbu.

It's not an etiquette thing. She's not the dowager duchess and you don't need to perform to her satisfaction. She's your sister and you can be honest with her because if you can't be honest then there's no point.

How about - "I can't deal with hosting at the moment and my home is in no fit state for visitors, I am not having anyone around until I can get the leaks fixed and the junk sorted and I personally feel more robust. I would really love to have a meal out with you while you are in town though - let me know where you will be staying and I'll find somewhere nice we can go - my treat"

The only problem with this is, she may well keep on at you to find out when the leaks etc. are all fixed then she can come and stay! Don't give any indication of time frames, she can't stay and that's that.

The suggestion of a meal out is fine though.

Womaninhouse17 · 19/03/2026 06:01

RoseField1 · 19/03/2026 04:18

That post is pretty stupid but it's also very rude of you to describe neurodivergence as 'mental problems'. Suggestions of ADHD and neurodiversity aren't an insult.

They are not helpful either so it's tiresome that people keep trotting out their amateur diagnoses as some sort of excuse for bad or odd behaviour. And OP didn't suggest it was an insult - it's not insulting to say someone has any kind of problem.

nomas · 19/03/2026 06:35

Jellybelly80 · 19/03/2026 04:44

You can be as offended as you like when people who suggest the possibility of ND are living it day in and day out either with themselves or their family and extended family and can usually spot it a mile away.

I’m ND, I would rather chew off my right arm than harass my sister into a night’s stay when I haven’t made any effort with her.

Ilovemsrachel · 19/03/2026 06:36

MsAmerica · 19/03/2026 03:48

Oh, gee, I post about a little family tussle, and your reaction is to suggest mental problems in my family? Thanks a lot.

We don’t call ADHD a “mental problem” here in the U.K. I am assuming you are American? I’m continually surprised by retrograde attitudes to this sort of thing from Americans, and it seems to be getting worse in the Trump era.

I expect the poster mentioned ADHD because people with ADHD don’t miss people who aren’t there in the same way. We are all wired differently and the way people behave isn’t always personal. That doesn’t mean excusing thoughtless behaviour all the time, but it can aid us to understand that the way people behave doesn’t always adhere to the same social norms.

Daisymail · 19/03/2026 06:36

Hatty65 · 16/03/2026 19:40

Yanbu. I'd probably be vague and say, 'I've got all sorts going on at the moment and I'm not able to have people stay. I could perhaps meet up for a meal at your hotel one night if you are over here, but that's the best I can do'.

And leave it at that. Ignore any other messages; she ignored yours.

This.

Catcatcatcatcat · 19/03/2026 06:38

I agree it’s bloody tiresome to see cheeky fuckery explained as ND. Also the “Gen Z” bullshit. My Gen Z DC wouldn’t be so rude. It’s lazy and inaccurate stereotyping.

Anyway OP, in such situations I revert to “it’s due to personal reasons.”

This is not a lie and it shuts the door firmly. If they persist, you can repeat it, it’s personal. Beyond that, I would simply ignore her. She’s being very rude.

Ilovemsrachel · 19/03/2026 06:41

ThatFairy · 19/03/2026 05:01

In Britain neurodivergence isn't stigmatized or thought badly of and loads of the population have autism or ADHD

I never really thought the US and the U.K. had much in common but when it comes to attitudes to disability we are absolutely streets ahead.

It’s insane because a lot of great research comes out the US and there’s some brilliant early intervention stuff. But on a population level the ignorance around disability is stark.

It might be that her sister is just rude but her response to the suggestion was quite telling imo.

RoseField1 · 19/03/2026 06:45

Womaninhouse17 · 19/03/2026 06:01

They are not helpful either so it's tiresome that people keep trotting out their amateur diagnoses as some sort of excuse for bad or odd behaviour. And OP didn't suggest it was an insult - it's not insulting to say someone has any kind of problem.

She absolutely responded like she had been insulted.

catipuss · 19/03/2026 06:45

Jellybelly80 · 19/03/2026 04:44

You can be as offended as you like when people who suggest the possibility of ND are living it day in and day out either with themselves or their family and extended family and can usually spot it a mile away.

Everyone is ND no two people are the same.

RoseField1 · 19/03/2026 06:47

catipuss · 19/03/2026 06:45

Everyone is ND no two people are the same.

That's not what neurodivergent means. It means neurologically diverging from the 'norm' or typical neurotype.

Hotcrossed · 19/03/2026 06:47

she is using you
just arrange to meet up

Whyherewego · 19/03/2026 06:50

I mean if you want to, you can reply to say "my place is not suitable for visitors at the moment but happy to meet up for lunch or dinner instead"
But ultimately no is no.

catipuss · 19/03/2026 06:53

My Pit Bull doesn't like strange people. Live in lover with three children. I could come and stay at your hotel if you pay, broke at the moment. Or just no, not possible, how about lunch one day. Of course if you do meet up she may spend the whole time asking why she can't stay with you.

Foodylicious · 19/03/2026 06:54

"Without meaning to sound rude, I don't need you to understand why. You just need to accept that Ive said no, this doesn't work for me"

It won't land well, but I dont expect anything will.

Ophir · 19/03/2026 06:55

Could she be worried about you? The situation with the state of your home sounds a little extreme, surely you could tidy up for a guest? Things don’t need to be perfect

SparklyGlitterballs · 19/03/2026 06:58

JMSA · 19/03/2026 04:39

I’ll be honest, I have no time for people who say that having guests makes them anxious. We are grown adults and that is just something to get over. And if someone’s house is too messy for guests, that needs tackled.
HOWEVER your sister has rebuffed your kindness and efforts over the years, so I don’t blame you at all for not wanting her to stay.
YANBU.

That's a poor attitude to have. Anxiety has all sorts of different triggers and isn't generally something you can just "get over". You sound lacking in empathy.

I too hate having house guests. Does it make me anxious? Yes, to a degree, but mostly I hate having other people in my personal space.

toffeeappleturnip · 19/03/2026 07:06

Just say it to her like you said it to us:

I’m not a hostess type. Guests staying over make me very anxious

Sugarnspicenallthingsnaice · 19/03/2026 07:13

Shedmistress · 19/03/2026 04:54

Not wanting cheeky fuckers taking the piss is now an allusion to neuro diversity is it?

I'd say this was a trait of being completely normal.

Worrying about your home being 'permanently contaminated' with cat dander carried in on a visitor is a little more unusual. Among other little things.

But OP has since come back and emphatically assured us she's not ND, so it's a moot point. And I don't actually know if that's what the pp was alluding to anyway, it was just a guess on my part.

Alittlefrustrated · 19/03/2026 07:17

Sugarnspicenallthingsnaice · 19/03/2026 01:38

I thought that poster was also, tactfully, alluding to some ND traits in the OP.

Yes - and I had exactly the same thought.
Also, anyone currently working in early years or education would challenge PP's statistics with their own!
I immediately thought that both sisters sounded "unusual".