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AIBU

Adult daughter. AIBU?

(41 Posts)
Ziggy62 Sun 24-Aug-25 15:59:16

Please be kind as I'm really upset although I want truthful replies

My adult daughter is 35, neuro diverse, married, no children (through choice) a wonderful understanding caring husband , well educated, good job, own home.
Due to distance we only see each other 2 or 3 times a year. She hates talking on the phone but will if there's something important I need to discuss

Anyway, last week was my birthday, the day before she sent a pic of her badly bruised legs and said my card/present would be late as she'd had a fall and couldn't get to post office. 2 days later I had another message to say she couldn't find present (she's very disorganised). I've heard nothing since. I'm most disappointed that maybe she could have sent another card and maybe messaged my husband to buy me some flowers

AIBU?

A bit of background. The day after her wedding she told me I'd spoiled her day by not talking to her enough!!

MadameFeuveral Tue 26-Aug-25 12:31:28

fancythat

The poster has asked us to be kind.
Could we not have managed this?!?

Yes, birthday, would be more concerned about daughter.

Wedding - not much to go on, but prob yes the DD was unreasonable.

You say yourself there’s not much to go on. I’ve no idea how you come to the conclusion that DD was ‘probably’ being unreasonable.

Dee1012 Tue 26-Aug-25 13:49:07

Ziggy62, you didn't say anything in your post about contacting your daughter to ask what happened / was she ok etc?

If anyone had sent me a message like that...checking in on them would be my first response.

Norah Tue 26-Aug-25 13:56:54

Labradora

BlueBelle

Afraid I agree with the last two posters
She had a nasty fall and you ve heard nothing since !!! And you’re more worried about a missing birthday card ?

Eeerr....... nasty fall ??? What happened and how is she ? That would be my worry about anyone I cared for.

Forget the card.

Don't give a card another thought.

Elsi Tue 26-Aug-25 14:01:24

Send her a present hoping she's OK.forget the card

welbeck Tue 26-Aug-25 14:13:25

Hard to take this seriously

Aldom Tue 26-Aug-25 14:18:01

Send some flowers to your daughter and let her know that you are concerned for her after her fall.

mabon2 Tue 26-Aug-25 14:19:47

Are you not concerned about your daughter's fall? My boys are 56,58,and60 I am still concerned about them.

Knittypamela Tue 26-Aug-25 15:21:02

I'm laughing inwardly. My son "forgot" to give me a Mother's Day gift. He said it would be a Waterstones voucher but was never mentioned again. My daughter gave me a gift on my birthday but said I have two more things for you. Again never mentioned again. I really don't mind. They're busy people and occasions slip their minds.

knspol Tue 26-Aug-25 15:41:45

Have to say I agree with the several posters who say you are being selfish. Your daughter is neurodiverse, she has had a nasty fall but thought enough of you to let you know your card and gift would be delayed even though you know she hates using the phone. She then let you know she had misplaced these items and you admit she's disorganised. I would be more concerned about her health than whether you get a gift for your b'day.

Furret Tue 26-Aug-25 16:36:00

Ziggy I hope that you are able to read what has been written and take it on board. Yes, I get where you are coming from, we can all have ‘poor me’ days, but move on for both your sakes.

Caleo Tue 26-Aug-25 17:53:13

MadameFeuveral

Ziggy is an adult, and she’s in the wrong - why does something as basic as prioritising her injured daughter over a bunch of flowers need explaining to her gently? She’s not a child that needs to be coddled.

When posters ask others to be kind, it’s usually because they know they’re in the wrong but don’t want to admit it. It’s a manipulation tactic. Her behaviour is selfish and self-centred. If she’s fearful of being abandoned- there’s the reason why.

If she doesn’t know her daughter’s behaviour is perfectly normal and needs reassurance on this point, she’s even more self-centred than she portrayed herself as being. You’re doing her no favours in assuming she needs reassurance on this point.

Why the need to treat a fully functioning adult treating her daughter poorly with kid gloves? OP isn’t the one deserving of sympathy in this situation. It’s the injured daughter who has to send photo evidence of her bruises to her mother as proof that she couldn’t manage to get her a birthday present, but her mother’s still aggrieved that it deprived her of some flowers. Talk about priorities… hmm

You make insufficient allowance for different sensibilities. Nobody should apportion blame as nobody knows the whole story. AS another Gran said, perhaps the OP is herself neurodivergent .

Abandonment is a real fear and people may get abandoned through no fault of their own.

Ellie Anne Tue 26-Aug-25 19:03:14

I never get anything from my dd on my birthday. I got a text this year. She lives a long way away too and had mental health problems and a responsible job. That’s all fine with me. Sometimes she keeps in touch, sometimes not so in those times I message her so she can reply when it suits her. Occasionally she gives me something if she has seen something that she thinks I would like. The rest of the family rarely get anything either but we accept it’s how she is. The op knows her dd is disorganised and neuro diverse. And maybe her daughter wouldn’t appreciate a lot of concern about her fall.

Allsorts Tue 26-Aug-25 19:13:26

Hard comments to poster. Her daughter has a partner so she is not lying injured with no one to look out for her. Perhaps poster just feels a bit low herself at the moment. I must admit i had to look up neuro diverse..
I have a very challenging family member who tests your patience to the limit, 99.9% of the time you know this but sometimes i just think I am here too as everything is about him.

FranP Tue 26-Aug-25 19:45:01

I am appalled at some of the frankly nasty comments here!

I am guessing that you are the sort of person who keeps her promises, and are continually exasperated by her continual letting people down by her actions. Yes you do need to be more accepting of the fact that she is the way that she is, but it would not hurt to let her know that she should do what she says she will, and be more considerate.

If she can hold down a good job, then she can is able to commit to actions. She could have given it to her "supportive husband2 to post for example.

MadameFeuveral Tue 26-Aug-25 20:10:34

FranP

I am appalled at some of the frankly nasty comments here!

I am guessing that you are the sort of person who keeps her promises, and are continually exasperated by her continual letting people down by her actions. Yes you do need to be more accepting of the fact that she is the way that she is, but it would not hurt to let her know that she should do what she says she will, and be more considerate.

If she can hold down a good job, then she can is able to commit to actions. She could have given it to her "supportive husband2 to post for example.

The daughter’s had a fall, hurt her legs and sent photos of the bruises, but she should ‘commit to her actions’ and ‘be more considerate’ 🙄

Meanwhile the OP has shown her daughter no such consideration. Not a word of concern about the injuries, only irritation that she’s not getting a gift as a result.