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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to contact widow to share memories and photos of deceased friend?

29 replies

Hedgehoggin · 11/04/2026 02:49

My head is a bit all over the place. I had a very close friend at school. We did everything together and were very close. In our twenties our friendship ended. I had been mentally unwell as a result of some pretty heavy personal circumstances and spent some time in hospital. Thankfully I recovered and I’ve been well since, but sharing the news of my hospital stay and circumstances with my friend resulted in her being upset that I hadn’t told her about what had happened to me sooner and her then spreading my personal information to mutual friends and then ghosting me. It was incredibly hurtful, she was totally unsupportive and we didn’t speak again after she didn’t admit to how she really felt about me and then didn’t invite me to an event but invited everyone else we knew. I was just erased and it was clear she didn’t want me in her life anymore. Like I was dirty because of what I had gone through. Our mutual friends also dropped me like a stone. Writing that makes me feel horrible in all kinds of ways.

Fast forward 20+ years and as time has passed I have often thought of her, remembering her on her birthday and I have wished her well privately. I had considered reaching out to her one day but held back, hoping she would make the first move. I am still hurt by her rejection of me when I was vulnerable and unwell but had thought maybe time had made her realise she had treated me poorly and maybe she was sorry.

Well, any reconciliation is now never going to happen. I found out today that she passed away a few years ago in tragic circumstances. So whenever I have thought of her over the last few years she has actually been deceased.

It’s left me feeling all kinds of ways and I’m not articulating it well. I am incredibly sorry for her and her family. She had children who will now grow up without their Mum. I have so many photos and good memories of our friendship and I was wondering if it would be unreasonable to try to make contact with her husband to offer my condolences and find out whether he would like these, to share with their children as appropriate. I don’t know if he even knows about me at all, and if he does, how this offer will be received. I wouldn’t be discussing why our friendship ended, it would just be to do as stated - offer condolences and share memories. AIBU? God I just feel awful about it. I’m shocked by it, all kinds of feelings have resurfaced and I have realised she died only a few weeks after my Father, at the same hospital. I didn’t even know she lived locally to me (for years she had lived away, as had I). I have cried and feel totally awful.

OP posts:
Imisssleep88 · 12/04/2026 09:06

Like you say keep the reasons you parted ways private l, but I am sure he and their children would love to hear and see pictures of them when they were younger.

As sad as funerals are, this is the one part I like of a funeral, hearing the stories from all different people at the wake, usually with alot I have never heard before. So sure they would love to hear about her, maybe write to introduce yourself, offer condolences and say you have many stories to share and give contact details if they wish to make contact then the ball is in their court

ChiliFiend · 12/04/2026 10:12

I lost my mother 12 years ago, and one of the things that makes me sad is knowing I've seen all the photos I'm ever going to see of her. Your former friend's children are young and when they are older I would bet they will cherish every photo - yours might answer some questions too about what she looked like at x age.

Having said that, obviously it's very sad for her children that she is gone, but her death doesn't change what she did to you. She made your original trauma all about herself by being angry that she wasn't "in on the gossip," (I presume, given she had no logical reason to be angry) and then betrayed you by telling everyone else and isolating you at a extremely vulnerable time in your life. Some people would not have survived that experience. She's had decades to realise how appallingly she treated you and to reach out to apologise but she didn't, and now it's too late. I think therapy would be a better move than reaching out to her family. Surround yourself with love and leave toxic people in the past where they belong.

Hedgehoggin · 18/04/2026 06:59

ChiliFiend · 12/04/2026 10:12

I lost my mother 12 years ago, and one of the things that makes me sad is knowing I've seen all the photos I'm ever going to see of her. Your former friend's children are young and when they are older I would bet they will cherish every photo - yours might answer some questions too about what she looked like at x age.

Having said that, obviously it's very sad for her children that she is gone, but her death doesn't change what she did to you. She made your original trauma all about herself by being angry that she wasn't "in on the gossip," (I presume, given she had no logical reason to be angry) and then betrayed you by telling everyone else and isolating you at a extremely vulnerable time in your life. Some people would not have survived that experience. She's had decades to realise how appallingly she treated you and to reach out to apologise but she didn't, and now it's too late. I think therapy would be a better move than reaching out to her family. Surround yourself with love and leave toxic people in the past where they belong.

Really appreciate your words. Thankyou. I’ve had a week to think on this and honestly I’m feeling better and more stable, think the news just knocked me for six. I’m glad I didn’t make moves to contact her family straight away - I think now that doing so would have been the wrong thing. I don’t think I will be doing so at all and will just be putting my energy into my own family. I am positive her children will have enough photos of their Mum to look back on, along with memories of her family and friends, which I know I haven’t been for almost 20 years. I’m at peace with it. If we were meant to reconnect, we would have done. I will wish her family well in my own way, and sincerely hope her children grow up knowing how much she loved them, which I’m sure she did. Thanks all for your replies.

OP posts:
OvernightBloats · 18/04/2026 07:13

I really think you have made the right choice. It is upsetting finding out news like this but you had not seen her for a long time. Also the friendship ended in a negative way.

In this digital age, most people have plenty of photos on their phones etc. The family will have plenty, I'm sure.

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