Meet the Other Phone. Flexible and made to last.

Meet the Other Phone.
Flexible and made to last.

Buy now

Please or to access all these features

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

I don't like how my friend is around my boyfriend

130 replies

Sillysandy · 03/06/2021 10:40

This is too long to give all the details so I will try to paint an overall picture without dripfeeding.

I am with my DP five years. In the two years before I met him I became close friends with a woman I knew through a mutual friend. We got on great. We were both single and both open about the fact we wanted to meet someone. I did an awful lot of dating, OLD and otherwise. She did very very little.

I met my DP and it got serious fairly quickly. I was conscious not to be one of those women who vanishes as soon as a man appears. She seemed keener to spend time with us as a couple. They share a hobby so that is a common ground for them to talk about.

So here is my 'problem'.

She would openly do herself up when he was arriving - even asking to borrow my makeup bag so she looked ok for him and then talking to him like he was the only person in the room.
She mocked me when I said honestly I wouldn't like them meeting up alone (or him any any new woman friend) for their hobby. My argument was they both have lots of people to train with, why would they seek out to train together? She has repeatedly asked him to do so despite him saying no for years. She often does this as soon as I leave their company but has said it in my earshot too often with a sarcastic "if that's allowed" thrown in. He always says no, busy.
She asks him to come to her house to do DIY projects. He did a couple for her but brought his daughter to the first. I came (unexpectedly for her) the next time and was horrified to see that she was extremely done up. He has said no since then for favours, I had to intervene and say we had too much to do at home. She asked him again after that which I really felt was pushing it.
They have ended up in the same training group for their hobby. She made some unnecessary remarks about him 'being the worst' for eyeing up other women all the time. I felt humiliated and unsettled as i have not seen this side of him and also don't know if it's true. Of course it could be but I can't imagine how she would be able to tell and really, I don't want to know. Myself and DP ended up having an argument about it. He said she's a troublemaker and he doesn't know why I don't tell her to f off.

One night in our earlier dating days she had too much to drink. She was telling me how lonely she felt and how she craved a solid relationship. All fine, I sympathised and understood. Then she went on to talk about how there would have been some challenges if the timing had been different and she had met my DP first. She babbled on about what would have worked between them and also what would not have worked - she talked about it in detail, the pros and cons. I was so stunned i just sat there. I assumed (as I'm sure anyone reading this has too) that he expressed some interest in her at some stage either directly or indirectly but I'm now sure this is not the case having talked openly with him about it.

It looks like a simple fix - meet them both separately but it's not that simple. For one thing, they have become connected by their hobby. He is exasperated by her (the stuff I've outlined above is an example of what goes on a lot) and has offered to just not be in the group but he has friends there, it's local and i don't want him to be training alone when he enjoys the group and I do now (I was wary initially) fully believe he's done nothing wrong.

So this brings me to the bit that I find a bit more sinister. When DP and I met I also had my own fitness related hobbies so our weekends were largely spent doing these types of activities. I became very ill a year and a half ago and have undergone gruelling treatment. It left me bald, physically very limited and very overweight - all temporarily. My friend is extremely thin which I've come to realise she is quite obsessional about.

There are too many to list here but I've had this unnerving sense of her using it against me. The comment about him eyeing up other women was oddly timed. I was dressed up, had a new platinum wig on and was getting lots of compliments and funny comments from the men. They all knew I had been through it and it felt very good natured and kind. That's just one example but there are lots of incidences of her bringing up 'my weight issue' in company with no context. I don't deny I have a weight issue as in I openly state I gained a lot during my treatment and am keen to get back exercising. But it feels designed to put me in my place, remarks about what I should be eating, how I need to be careful.

The night she was upset about being lonely I was pre-illness and getting a lot of very unwanted attention from a table of drunk men. She said to me with a perfectly straight face that something strange was going on, normally she would be the one getting all the attention and maybe she had done a bad job with her makeup. That's good she feels like that but I could not understand why she would need to say that to me. In hindsight this feels like a pattern - she gets a dig in and I can't help thinking she was then trying to sow doubt talking about the bad timing with her and my boyfriend. But I could be seeing what I want to see.

It sounds dramatic but I feel like I'm being controlled and bullied at times. Like she has formed an alliance in her head with my partner and I am the poor fat dead weight who needs to be reprimanded.

I am not sure if I have explained it well. It's hard to pick out relevant examples as it's more of an ongoing thing.

If you've got this far - thank you!

To try to pre-empt a few reactions.

I don't think my DP played any part in this or enjoys the attention. This had been explored and I'm satisfied he is blameless.

She has been a very very good friend to me otherwise.

I don't know if I'm being extra vulnerable due to my illness.

I don't think she is after him - who does that? But I feel she wants to feel that he would be with her except for the unfortunate circumstances of having met me first and bizarrely wants me to acknowledge this.

I feel vulnerable after what I've been through and not really trusting my judgment. I don't know if I'm actually paranoid or if I'm right to be wary. I feel like she has played on my insecurities because she has been finding her own life hard and I should distance myself from her.

Then another part of me thinks 'ugh don't be that awful woman who finds a man and all of a sudden single women friends are the enemy and must be kept away."

I'd be really interested to hear any perspectives but please be kind. I feel silly and petty already.

OP posts:
Bancha · 03/06/2021 12:52

This woman sounds really nasty, I’m so sorry she’s treating you like this. This is not friendship.

sallievp · 03/06/2021 12:57

You sound a lovely person who deserves better! Why do you put up with this!? Cut her out! She is a nasty low life!

Howshouldibehave · 03/06/2021 13:04

She has been a very very good friend to me otherwise

She honestly sounds like an appalling friend-you must set your bar extremely low!

I don't think she is after him

I do.

mewkins · 03/06/2021 13:07

She is absolutely no friend of yours. Ditch her and tell her why. Then ignore all of her attempts to back pedal. She is awful and unsupportive and has very very many issues that mean she has pitched herself as in competition with you. Your partner has clocked this very quickly and you should do the same.

lolacola77 · 03/06/2021 13:10

She's a toxic cunt. She's really pathetic and a terrible friend. I'd cut her out of your life, she has many issues.

Gamerlady · 03/06/2021 13:13

She is not your friend please let her go.. she is obviously trying to steal your man off you and destroying your self-esteem.. no real friend would behave like this towards you .. listen to your boyfriend and cut her off

BetterThanKleenex · 03/06/2021 13:15

That is not how real friends treat you or your partner. If she was a genuine good friend she would put any ridiculous feelings to the side and actually be nice to you. My friends all have lovely partners, I'm not after them though. She should just be happy you're happy! She's pathetic and you deserve better.

ZenNudist · 03/06/2021 13:17

Don't feel guilty. Drop her! Ask dh to stay away from her. I would be really concerned she has already had at him but you seem confident that is not the case.

goldfinchfan · 03/06/2021 13:28

She is not your friend!

Why not take back control and stop talking to her?

Why do let her upset you? Ignore her....she is not a friend to you.

IEat · 03/06/2021 13:29

You can’t reasonably say to you do he cannot see a person alone. I think your insecurities that she will get him will eventually eat at your relationship with you dp. You have to trust your dp, your insecurities will it be attractive and will only spur this woman on

tellmetellmepleasetellme · 03/06/2021 13:30

I know you said she has been a good friend to you otherwise but the stuff she does that bothers you is pretty awful. I would cut contact because it is going to eat away at you and you should protect your mental health and your relationship. It will probably be very awkward for some time but I think too much has happened and your friendship is beyond repair.

MustardRose · 03/06/2021 13:36

He said she's a troublemaker and he doesn't know why I don't tell her to f off I don't know why either.

Your DP is absolutely spot on with this remark.

dottiedodah · 03/06/2021 13:43

FFS She is no way your friend! She is like a sad woman "Trying it on" with her friends husbands .I tell you what would have happened had he met her first ,absolutely nothing at all! He is with you, he loves you ,and your chemistry is spot on .She is jealous of your happiness together .Bin her off ASAP! Your DH may need a new "hobby" !

JediGnot · 03/06/2021 13:48

@MustardRose

He said she's a troublemaker and he doesn't know why I don't tell her to f off I don't know why either.

Your DP is absolutely spot on with this remark.

Thinking again he said "troublemaker" not "nasty" of "horrid" or "selfish". What "trouble" could she be possibly making?

I wonder whether the DP wanted to say "she's thrown herself semi-naked at me half a dozen times now and I am absolutely sick of the disgusting traiterous *%$&^" but wanted to spare OP the pain of hearing it. Perhaps he is trying to get OP to ditch the friend without the extreme pain of hearing quite how deliberately she was actively trying to screw OP (or OP's DP, dependent on which meaning of screw you're using).

dottiedodah · 03/06/2021 13:48

If she has been a "very good friend " to you then I would hate to see what a very bad one looks like! She is after your DP,is nasty to you when you are ill (hope you are feeling better now) and is just unpleasant .Time to bin bin bin!

PussGirl · 03/06/2021 13:49

I had a friend like this - she started dropping round on the way home in her old nurse's uniform, you know, the one that was a size too small, plastered in make-up, hair perfect etc etc

My stupid DH had an affair with her - He "couldn't help it" as she had served herself up on a plate.

He's an ex now - that was the icing on the cake of a bad marriage

BlueButtercups · 03/06/2021 14:05

@Sillysandy

have you posted about this Friend before...

this all sounds very familiar 🤔

Nancylovesthecock · 03/06/2021 14:07

If you trust your DP you do not need to be watching all the time. Just drop her like a hot potato. She's a twat.

MissJeanBrodiesprime · 03/06/2021 14:08

I wonder in what way she’s been a good friend to you? From what you’ve described she definitely doesn’t sound like your friend. I would be very wary of her, sounds like your dp already is. I used to have a friend who couldn’t understand why her sister managed to have such a hot husband, this same friend had an affair with my own XH, last thing in the world I expected to happen, but it did. I’m not saying your dp will be tempted but this friend definitely sounds like she’s trying to prove that she’s hotter than you. You sound like a very together and balanced person. Trust your instincts.

Pantheon · 03/06/2021 14:09

I had a 'friend' like this and we didn't remain so.

TurquoiseDragon · 03/06/2021 14:11

[quote BlueButtercups]@Sillysandy

have you posted about this Friend before...

this all sounds very familiar 🤔[/quote]
This situation is sadly very common.

CandidaAlbicans2 · 03/06/2021 14:20

He said she's a troublemaker and he doesn't know why I don't tell her to f off

I agree with him, and can't understand why you would have a friend like this Confused

TheyIsMyFamily · 03/06/2021 14:30

She's not your friend. She views herself as 'higher' and 'better' than you, and can't cope when you get more attention and the fact you are with a man she wants and can't have so far.

She's not your friend.

katy1213 · 03/06/2021 14:30

She must be gutted you survived your illness! Imagine her at the funeral - slinky black outfit, lots of lippy and a cute little veil - three weeks of condolences and casseroles and she'd be home and dry!
I'd drop her.

Brindisi32 · 03/06/2021 14:30

"One night in our earlier dating days she had too much to drink. She was telling me how lonely she felt and how she craved a solid relationship. All fine, I sympathised and understood. Then she went on to talk about how there would have been some challenges if the timing had been different and she had met my DP first. She babbled on about what would have worked between them and also what would not have worked - she talked about it in detail, the pros and cons. I was so stunned i just sat there. I assumed (as I'm sure anyone reading this has too) that he expressed some interest in her at some stage either directly or indirectly but I'm now sure this is not the case having talked openly with him about it."

She's been honest with you, this is how she feels and how she's acted towards you when your partner is around. I wouldn't trust her. Her refs to your weight are spiteful and unsupportive - you've been ill and she's turned it into a one upmanship game. If you want to stay friends then maybe meet up without your dp? But i'd be running for the hills from this person.

Swipe left for the next trending thread