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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

to envy my friends stripped back life?

458 replies

lifeontheotherside · 05/11/2018 15:25

I am just back from visiting my friend over the weekend and was struck by how lovely her life is compared to mine. She lives in an excouncil house in a semi rural area, with beautiful woods and countryside on her doorstep, she doesn't have a job but works from home part time on a hobby that also provides her an income. Her husband has a professional job, earns a good wage and they live well below their means so they always have money for treats and luxuries like a couple of holidays a year, nice skincare, books etc without buying into a lifestyle they don't want. She has quite a stripped down social calander and only makes time for people and things she really likes.

She seems to have the time to bake cakes, cook from scratch daily, read, exercise, have quality time with her husband. She looks about 15 years younger than me and I am the same age! I live in the city and juggle fulltime work, a 5 year old, my relationship, my social life, parents etc all on the fumes of my empty tank. My rent is very expensive for a pokey flat and even though I live in the city I spend hours a day commuting to and from work!

When I get home I don't even want to think about food so my diet is crap and I have no time for the gym. I feel like I am missing my son growing up and the stress of everything I have to do means I often don't enjoy my life very much. I can feel a sense of satisfaction if I meet a deadline or if my son seems happy but its mostly short lived as there is always something else to cope with!

My husband and I don't spend a lot of time together. I tend to veg out infront of some crap telly while he is on his laptop. We both like to be social and put pressure on ourselves to always be out doing something and challenging ourselves but again we just end up dragging ourselves through things we are meant to enjoy rather than truly enjoying it.

For many years I felt my friend was living a very limited life but now I can see that she was trying to make a life that would satisfy her and be a life she could actively enjoy instead of running around always on the go, too busy to really experiance it.

When I look around at my friends and workmates it seems like most people are just always on the go, exhausted, using or food to cope, not having the time or energy to enjoy their loved ones and children or to just be. I envy my friend her ability to see all that at a young age and take her life in a different direction but I think i'd be too scared to follow suit. I know I depend on my job for my identity and self worth, I worry that if our lives slowed down my marriage would fail or that I wouldn't have the inner recources to make a life for myself outside the mainstream life script.

I thought i was succeeding but now at 40 I wonder if I really made any choices at all. Does anyone else feel like this?

OP posts:
Mummadeeze · 05/11/2018 17:56

My life sounds like yours but I like it like that! I love my job. I don’t care about baking or homely pursuits. I find the countryside boring compared to the city. I would be out socialising more if I could. If you love the sound of her life (which definitely doesn’t sound ideal to me but totally understand why it would to others), then can you make changes to find a path more similar to hers?

AmateurSwami · 05/11/2018 17:56

I’m a bit confused. Living in The country, working part time while husband works full time, living mortgage free isn’t my
Idea of a “stripped back lifestyle”. It’s just being well off surely?

Babyroobs · 05/11/2018 18:00

following this thread as I have recently cut working hours and realised that having some time for me is precious. Life is still hectic but a stressful job was making me ill and I have changed jobs and cut working hours .

RomanyRoots · 05/11/2018 18:07

babyroobs

A friend did this last year and she hasn't looked back. She has lots more time with the kids and for the kids iyswim.
Good luck to you.

OP, if they had stripped back their lives neither of them would be working ft, they'd be living off a pt wage and living accordingly.

DonnaDarko · 05/11/2018 18:15

OP, to me it sounds like focusing on family quality time could be beneficial to you both. I personally find that I always feel more content when I've had some time with my DP and DS. don't let others take over your time together.

Also I don't think her lifestyle is that stripped back. She just happened to find someone who earns enough to allow her to work part time.

ineedtostopbeingsolazy · 05/11/2018 18:27

Your friend has a husband whose income allows her to live that life.

Mrskeats · 05/11/2018 18:30

It’s about living below your income. We could get a big mortgage and move. We chose not to.

harshbuttrue1980 · 05/11/2018 18:39

All she's done is married a rich bloke, its not some sort of achievement. She will be in financial problems if he gets fed up with supporting her and decides to leave. As someone who has no kids, I doubt the divorce courts would have much sympathy - her life of leisure is actually making her vulnerable.

GrabEmByThePatriarchy · 05/11/2018 18:43

I don't think the friend does live in the country amateurswami? OP talked about a semi-rural area, sounds like it could be on the outskirts of a town or in a suburb. Plenty of cheap housing to be had in places of that description.

OP also says her mate could support herself financially with her own income harshbuttrue.

librarylover53 · 05/11/2018 18:54

The glorification of busy is to our detriment.Yes, some (too many) have to slog those long hours in order to meet basic needs, but others do just to accumulate 'stuff' that will never make them happy. Not many will wish on their deathbeds that they'd spent more time in the office or bought another luxury handbag!

to envy my friends stripped back life?
Mrskeats · 05/11/2018 18:55

That’s very insulting harsh I can and have supported myself for years.

butterflysugarbaby · 05/11/2018 18:57

@harshbuttrue1980

All she's done is married a rich bloke, its not some sort of achievement. She will be in financial problems if he gets fed up with supporting her and decides to leave. As someone who has no kids, I doubt the divorce courts would have much sympathy - her life of leisure is actually making her vulnerable.

WOW, bitter much?! 😂😂😂

Good for her if she is having a wonderful, carefree life. The type many women would envy - and you DEFINITELY do! What a catty post!

Deadbudgie · 05/11/2018 19:03

I have a 10/12 year plan to move into your friends life. After both physical and mental health issues I’m happy to tread water in my current professional job. In this time my DS will have left school, the mortgage will be paid and we will be debt free with savings. We will move to the coast.

Mrskeats · 05/11/2018 19:03

Agreed butterfly and misses the point too.
It's about the decisions we make. My dh takes a smaller car as a company car rather than a flash one to save on tax.
My ex has a 60k car.
Different priorities.

butterflysugarbaby · 05/11/2018 19:05

Exactly! @mrskeats Smile

DishingOutDone · 05/11/2018 19:07

.. isn’t my idea of a “stripped back lifestyle”. It’s just being well off surely?

This.

Pickupthephone · 05/11/2018 19:08

Her life sounds lovely, but I don’t think you should kid yourself that she’s done anything particularly clever or original that you should have done - really all it comes down to is that she’s married a man who earns well.

So she’s got the gift of time, but it’s at the expense of someone else’s time.

I do know what you mean though. A few weeks ago a friend and I (we’ve been friends since uni) went out for drinks and were cursing our respective decisions to marry for love, not money. And tbh - we were only half joking. We have plenty of friends from uni who did, and they have absolutely lovely lives - gorgeous houses, no stress, lots of time with kids, etc.

Mrskeats · 05/11/2018 19:09

What's well off mean? Massive house, flash cars etc?
it's about what you value.

Mrskeats · 05/11/2018 19:10

Plenty of people are flogging themselves to buy stuff they don't want or need.

EssentialHummus · 05/11/2018 19:13

I'd love to hear her DH's POV - does he also feel like she does? I ask because to some extent I have your friend's lifestyle and happiness (certainly in respect of work/hobby and free time) but my DH works full-time in a demanding role, and I know I wouldn't be able to do what I do if it wasn't for him. And, yeah, housing costs can vary massively (stating the obvious there).

Racecardriver · 05/11/2018 19:16

I think different people need different things and what they need changes as they age. I’m sure ten years ago you were living the dream but you just failed to move on from that.

Bananasinpyjamas11 · 05/11/2018 19:21

The good thing about having diverse friends is that you can see options being lived in reality. It’s very useful to compare, and if you wanted, it could be where you want to be in 5 years or less.

I’ve lived different lives, busiest was a single parent, mortgage, city, very good career, young child. Sacrificed the job and house to be around for my son and have a social life. Financial security was much less though.

Now separating, two kids, one special needs, no possibility of restarting career. But I’m around for the kids, and have time for hobbies and walks.

RiddleyW · 05/11/2018 19:22

My DH has your friend’s lifestyle and I work a demanding job to pay for everything. I love him and I’m happy with our life but I think I’d have to raise an eyebrow if someone congratulated him on his paired down life.

Petalflowers · 05/11/2018 19:24

Can you make changes to your lifestyle to facilitate more family time? Plan to do things at the weekend, such as going to the park, cinema, have a movie and popcorn at home.

Maybe plan to cook a meal where you all sit down together once a week.

A favourite mn phrase of mine is comparison is the thief of joy. She may be envying you living in the city.

Also, you have a child, she doesn’t. Maybe she has problems conceiving.

Is her strip back lifestyle her choice or her dh? Does she enjoy not socialising so much, and being a housewife.

You never know what goes on behind closed doors.

Orchiddingme · 05/11/2018 19:25

We grow our own veg, take simple holidays where we try to be as adventurous as we can but don’t spunk money on five star all inclusive, send our kids to the good local state schools, shop at Aldi with a bit of Waitrose thrown in, cook from scratch and try not to get into debt by living within our means

This sounds nice- but normal. Not stripped back. Most people send their kids to state, shop in Aldi with some treats and have the odd cheapo holiday.

Even your friend has 1 1/2 incomes in the household. Not exactly rejecting the rat race.