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Relationships

Mumsnet has not checked the qualifications of anyone posting here. If you need help urgently or expert advice, please see our domestic violence webguide and/or relationships webguide. Many Mumsnetters experiencing domestic abuse have found this thread helpful: Listen up, everybody

Head is wrecked by friend

32 replies

NoTvNoWifi · 05/07/2017 17:26

I am a longtime reader but have never posted before. I am really frazzled by an ongoing situation with my oldest friend (who is also a relative). I am the only one in my family to be friendly with her as she is quite difficult and selfish but due to a difficult childhood she had I have always given her the benefit of the doubt. She is a good person at heart and our children are growing up together. She has anxiety issues and I have helped her through that. I am worried she is too dependant on me. In recent months I have found it more difficult to cope with what I feel is her intrusion into my own family life. She had got into a habit of arriving every saturday evening and staying until the late hours. While we enjoy their company ( her dh and kids) i began to resent catering to them so often when sometimes i just want a quiet time my own family. Her dh is also notoriously tight and it started to irk that he would pick and choose over the drinks on offer and never bring a bottle! ( but that is a small issue). My friend has a very active social life but has sometimes huffed when i have gone out without her. This has become much worse recently. To cut a long story short (!!) I started therapy a few months ago following a trauma that has turned my own family and siblings upside down. My counsellor agreed with an overwhelming feeling i had to focus on my dh and kids in a bid to centre myself. She helped me find a gentle but direct way of telling my friend i needed a small bit of space and also the freedom to see other friends without her falling out with me. I did this 2 months ago and the fallout has been huge. She reacted with rage, then tears, then silence for weeks. I made contact with her last week as am sad about the impact on my kids who miss her kids, while also relieved i have not had to see her. I have been so shocked by her reaction. In the beginning she was so angry when i said dh and i were going to have a dinner ourselves one saturday as i wanted a bit of bonding time - trying to make a tiny bit of distance went down like a tonne of bricks! During a heart to heart that followed i explained i was struggling after a tough year and wanted to focus on my own wee unit. She is upset that doesnt mean her - while my own dsis was fully supportive. Anything I mentioned about my state of mind she turned around to how it would affect her. She admitted, during our 1st contact at the weekend, made by me out of guilt, she didnt like the fact I was not available as I was her rock. She said she would choose me over her husband, which seems so unhealthy. Other than admissiin she was quite nasty during this conversation and says her dh is very hurt by my behaviour and I have wrecked so many friendships by what I have done ( which was to try to make a boundary - obviously badly!!! I am so sorry to ramble but my counselling has finished and i have no idea how to see this through. I worry about losing such an old friend but I also feel so uneasy about the dynamic. My dm and dsis believe i should move on without her as feel she is controlling me. I am an intelligent enough woman but this is really making me question my judgement. Should I try to make amends or keep my boundaries and potentially lose her? Ironically the distance in recent weeks has hugely helped my marriage but im mid 40s and value old friends so much. I would appreciate any advice if you can make any sense of my post Blush

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NoTvNoWifi · 06/07/2017 15:02

Yes ratspeaker, the relief took me by surprise. Also I only discussed her towards the end of 3 months of weekly counselling and was shocked by my reaction to opening up. I shook like a leaf talking about her over 2 sessions (including my last one). I hadnt realised so much of my anxiety was tied into her. I also admitted out loud fpr the 1st time that I feel she took some sort of weird pleasure out of my family's trauma last year. It is not the 1st time i have seen it in her - it is almost like she gets excited by horrible things happening, like she loves being at the heart of a drama.

She has reacted particularly badly to a friendship with another couple my dh and I have developed in recent years and I have found it so tough separating the wood from the trees. I have been feeling guilty for this friendship in particular as she has told me she and her dh are jealous. Yet my rational brain says she should be happy we have extra support in our own town - she lives some miles away. As I said before she has a buzzing social life and many friends but she really resents us having this other social outlet - or even seeing my dhs relatives without her. She has also homed into small details of our heart to heart several weeks ago and built them into huge issues.
Head is pickled, ahhhh. Thanks folks

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NoTvNoWifi · 06/07/2017 15:34

Sorry MathildaTheCat I misses your post. She was there on the phone etc at the time, however it was our other friends who bowled us over by their practical generosity (time and effort) with our dcs as it was Christmas time. Many of my old friends who I see less often buoyed me up emotionally.
To be honest her reaction to the accident and thrill of being at the centre of a big drama cut very deep. She told me horrific details of the state of my dad (knocked over) as told to her by a paramedic friend. She told is how he smiled and tried to stand up while asking to phone my mum. We had been told he had no chance of survival when she told us these details as if it was a titbit of gossip for us.
So while she had daily phone updates, I fear they were so she could then update neighbours. I dont like to say that but I know what she is like about other peoples' misfortunes. She seems to get excited it is not her ?!

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NoTvNoWifi · 06/07/2017 15:37

Im currently feeling like no contact but I will chat to dh and dsis first. Really wary I could be skewing this with my own staunch view!

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0ccamsRazor · 06/07/2017 17:24

She sounds like a controlling, abusive, manipulative partner!

She is unlikely to change as she does not seem from your posts to have much in the way of emotional intelligence.

Op blocking her from your life and protecting your family from her is I should think the number one priority here.

Emmageddon · 06/07/2017 18:11

I'd take her horrific comments about your dad with a large pinch of salt. I'm pretty sure paramedics aren't allowed to gossip to friends about patients they have treated, it's a breach of confidentiality. Either way, what in insensitive cow she is.

ElspethFlashman · 06/07/2017 18:47

Yeah I'd be amazed if all that were true. Paramedics aren't exactly chatty cathys by and large.

NoTvNoWifi · 06/07/2017 19:10

I believe the paramedic comments are true as coincidentally my friend who is a GP and knows my dad happened upon the accident. When I phoned her distressed about this info I had been given she confirmed it - in a very kind way. My dad was being apologetic and pulled himself to nearly standing - despite his back and neck being broken and awful other injuries. Despite the awful prognosis at the time I am so grateful he defied every odd and survived.

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