Photo:Getty
Getty
A woman is at odds with her friends after they chose to not support her husband in a charity event.
In a post on theU.K.-based forum Mumsnet, the woman wrote that she was pretty “hacked off” because none of her friends responded to her multiple requests to sponsor her husband’s charitable efforts.
Detailing that it was a “huge challenge in April” tied to motor neurone disease (MND), the woman wrote, “Someone in the local community has MND who we are friendly with, and some of our friends also know him.”
MND, according to theNational Health Service, is a disease that affects the motor neurones, which are the nerve cells that control muscle movement.
“The sponsorship has been live for months, and I’ve sent the link out twice, and not one of them [have] sponsored him,” the woman continued, referring to her friends.
“None of them are badly off — they just can’t be bothered, I reckon, and I’m pretty annoyed,” she added.
The woman then said she was especially upset, given she has been charitable to others' causes many times before.
“In the past, I’ve sponsored friends' kids for things like walking around the playground at lunch time, sponsored silence, etc., you get my drift, but there’s been loads over the last few years, and I always give £10-20.”
Concluding that she will now think twice before donating to any of her friends' charitable efforts, the woman asked the forum if she was being unreasonable, which prompted many to go against her.
Another echoed that sentiment, stating, “It’s bad enough sponsoring kids! I dislike the whole premise [to be honest]. I’ll cough up for kids because I don’t want to disappoint them, but adults should know better, really. What’s the point in reminding them more than once? They’ve had their chance to donate if interested.”
That response prompted another person to comment, “Um, no. Just because people don’t donate towards your husband’s challenge doesn’t mean they don’t believe in giving back! That’s ridiculous 😂 I definitely give back, just not towards grown adults asking for sponsorship.”
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Another person told the woman that she sounded “breathtakingly entitled,” adding: “And you sound very angry that people aren’t doing what you think they should be doing. Life isn’t transactional, and you don’t do something, or give something, and expect — indeed demand — that people ‘pay you back.’ "
source: people.com