Woman brings 3-year-old toddler to 29-year-old friend's child-free birthday party: 'She used her child to get her way'

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    "AITA for telling my friend she couldn't bring her kid to my "child-free" birthday dinner?"

    I (29F) recently hosted a birthday dinner at a nice restaurant with a group of close friends. It was meant to be a small, child-free evening-nothing wild, just a quiet, adult-only dinner with good food and conversation. I made it clear on the invite that this was an adults-only event so that everyone could plan accordingly.
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    One of my friends, "Laura" (31F), has a 3-year-old daughter. When I first sent out the invite, she asked if she could bring her child since she didn't have a babysitter. I sympathized but told her that, unfortunately, I really wanted to keep this an adult-only event, and I totally understood if she couldn't make it. She said she'd figure something out and never brought it up again.
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    Fast forward to the night of the dinner. Everyone is arriving at the restaurant, and Laura walks in, holding her daughter's hand. I was immediately caught off guard but tried to stay calm. I pulled her aside and asked, "Hey, I thought we talked about this? I really wanted this to be child-free." She shrugged and said, "Yeah, but I couldn't find a sitter, and I didn't want to miss your birthday."
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    At this point, I was frustrated but still trying to be polite. I told her I understood, but I didn't think it was fair to the rest of the guests who also made arrangements for childcare, expecting an adult environment. I asked her to leave and come back another time to celebrate separately. She got upset and said I was being ungrateful and ridiculous, that her daughter was "well-behaved" and wouldn't cause any trouble.
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    But the whole point was the principle of the thing-I had set a boundary, and she just ignored it. Laura ended up leaving in a huff, and later, she sent me a long text about how I "humiliated” her in front of our friends and made her feel like a bad mom for bringing her daughter. A couple of our friends think I overreacted and should have just let her stay. Others agree that it was unfair of her to put me in that position.
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    Now I feel torn. I didn't want to make a scene, but I also feel like I shouldn't have to justify a boundary I was clear about from the start. AITA for making her leave when she showed up with her kid?
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    Informal-Arrival678 NTA. A boundary is only as strong as your willingness to enforce it, and you did exactly that.
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    As this person noted, the friend just set herself up for humiliation by bringing the kid along

    4me2knowit She humiliated herself
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    eeeeeeeeEeeEEee... NTA you set a clear cut, defined and reasonable boundary. And she decided to test it, and when you very politely stood by your boundary, she made herself the victim and tried to invalidate your boundary. Super disrespectful of her, O doubt in her mind that she
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    would absolutely get away with it and that's why she reacted so strongly, because instead of buckling and just appeasing her to save face you reinforced your boundary, her only remaining option was to attack you personally. Let me put it this way, there were multiple steps she could have reasonably and easily taken.
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    園
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    She could have brought it up again "hey I'm having a really hard time finding a sitter, are you sure I can't bring my kid" To which it would have been no I'm guessing. And then the night of "hey the sitter flakes and now I have my kid, are you really sure she can't just come, I promise she will behave"
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    To which I'm guess you would have stood by your boundary. No, instead, she chose willingly to circumvent those no's by challenging your boundary, directly and publicly, in order to illicit guilt in the expectation you would buckle under pressure or those around you would back her up making you the bad guy if
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    you didn't buckle, thus increasing the strain already. I mean look, your already torn about whether you did. the right thing by standing by a boundary you clearly and politely set, and then clearly and politely reinforced in a seriously f ed up position to be out in, on your celebration.
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    plantprinses NTA. She brought this on herself. She thought she could force you into having her kid present by bringing her kid with her. She used her child to get her way, she used her as a human shield. That's some right there. parenting

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