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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU for being sad and upset about people's behaviour at my church

206 replies

babyblueskies · 25/05/2026 01:47

I (32) am a single mom to my dear son, 14 years old.

Background: We moved to a new town (230 miles away) because of my job's demands. Life has been very difficult, but we managed. We have been living here for 1.5 years now. More than a year ago, we found this church. My son and I are happy to find a community, though we miss our old church dearly.

But we love this new church. People have been kind, always praying for us etc.

My son has been very active, playing the guitar for the music team and would always show up at every practice even for when he is not playing (he plays once a month). We also attend every Sunday.

Our friends Friend A and Friend B, (I don't know now if I can still call them that) from church who are in their 50s invited us to their child's 9th birthday party. My car is at the garage and they know it. I would think they'd offer a lift because they offered everyone else and there is a lot of room in their cars, but they told me and my son to walk and even said "it's not that far" when it's a 40 minute walk away (it's a small town with no taxi, no Uber and there's no bus going there because it's in a very secluded area, so it is only accessed by driving).

Now, they expect us to be at the party at 1PM and we all know how hot it has been. And they expect us to walk in the scorching heat for 40 minutes?

So I said, okay, we will just walk, and we did!

We survived, we managed and we made it, even while carrying the gift for their child.

At the party, everyone was already there, everyone from church. I was already in a bad mood because I felt upset about what happened.

Now, I did not have any energy to say hi to people. And I noticed how only a few acknowledged me and my son's presence. A lot of them who would normally say hi, ignored us. They walked past me. Then it hit me. That I was always the one going out of my way to say hello to everyone. But when it's my turn, people treated us like we're invisible.

Of course my son did not notice, but I was hurting inside.

Then I realized something.

We have been going to this church for a year now and the youth there (there's around eleven kids age 14-24) have never spoken a single word to me.

One time I walked past one of them, his name is E. He is the son of a good friend of mine there.

I said, "Hi E." He just ignored me.

He is 17 years old.

I said, "Oh maybe he's just shy." Etc but it's been a year now. I don't mean no harm by being at least civil.

This happens all the time. For example, every Friday whenever we have Bible study, this is the scenario, I would be sitting on the couch with the other moms (ages 40+, I am the youngest) and the kids (age 14-24) would walk in, greet all the other moms and ALWAYS skip me, not talk to me, no eye contact like I didn't exist. And this has been going on for a year.

When I got home I actually cried. I just realized how little I mattered to these people when I saw them as family. It's not like I am requiring them to acknowledge me. Maybe even just a civil because I am tired of every interaction being awkward.

I asked my son about it and he said he does not mind, he says he likes hanging out more with the adults anyway.

But I did not reveal to him how I felt.

I am just glad he does not take it to heart because I do.

OP posts:
FlippantlyShe · 28/05/2026 12:54

Malinia · 28/05/2026 12:49

The thing is, these people will say they are your friends, they will call you "sister in Christ", they will say we are a church family. But they are lying. It's not the same as a hobby because at a hobby people aren't actively claiming a relationship with you that they then drop as soon as you move to a different hobby club.

For me, I didn't think I was friends with everyone in my church, but I did face a group of people I thought were my friends because they told me that they were. And then they dropped me when I left the church. That's the difference.

But 'Sister in Christ' just means 'We are both believers.' You're both interested in the same thing and you manifest that interest at the same place, whether that's Jesus or golf.

Malinia · 28/05/2026 12:56

FlippantlyShe · 28/05/2026 12:54

But 'Sister in Christ' just means 'We are both believers.' You're both interested in the same thing and you manifest that interest at the same place, whether that's Jesus or golf.

Did you miss the bit where I said they tell you that you are friends?

Are you a Christian? Because you don't seem to understand church culture

mamajong · 28/05/2026 15:06

The things you have said seem relatively minor. People are not obliged to offer you a lift because they have offered others and a 40min walk is really not that far. Could you have cycled? That would have been quicker or you could have just sat that one out. By your own admission you were hot and grumpy and didn't feel like saying hi to anyone which people probably sensed.

As someone new to a social group you do have to make a bigger effort where friendships and relationships are longer standing and if your son hasnt noticed/isnt bothered by it perhaps you are reading too much into it.

On the other hand if its not the right social setting for you maybe find a different church that suits your needs better.

Deboragh · 28/05/2026 17:03

Ah christians eh!

FlippantlyShe · 28/05/2026 17:10

Malinia · 28/05/2026 12:56

Did you miss the bit where I said they tell you that you are friends?

Are you a Christian? Because you don't seem to understand church culture

I don't think that the kind of gushy, over-the-top 'Sisters in Christ' rhetoric means anything at all. And in your case it was a situational friendship, like with a workplace or club. Unless it's moved on to the point where you've begun spending time together with no reference whatsoever to the sport/faith/whatever, then those friendships generally don't survive one person moving on.

shhblackbag · 28/05/2026 17:40

Never2many · 25/05/2026 04:23

IMO church types are some of the most unwelcoming, judgemental hypocrites out there. Sweet to your face while they stab you in the back.

There's no love like 'Christian' love.

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