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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To be embarrassed to live in a terraced house?

415 replies

Whysosad · 07/11/2018 21:14

I know IBU and sound snobby. I'm prepared to be flamed for this post but please read entire post!!

This is an insecurity i have never spoken openly about (although touched on it in counseling). So i may not articulate myself well!!

I grew up poor to a single mother with 5 kids. The houses we grew up in were always terraced houses. Not the nice big town houses or the lovely 3 storey victorians. Think more coronation street. The fact they were massively cluttered and cramped didn't help. My mum decided to send me to senior school in a affluent village away from the poor area we lived. All my friends lived in big detached or semi detached houses or new builds. Their houses were always decoated nicely and were so modern with decking in their back gardens and a nice conservatory. Even my friends who werent so well off and didn't have the latest clothes or go on holidays still somehow lived in a nice house. I was the only person i knew who lived in a terrace house surrounded by terraced houses. I knew one or two people in my year that lived in terraced houses in the village but they were cottage terraces so still nice and smart. The people i grew up with were never aware they lived in what i thought to be 'nice houses' as it was just the norm to them i suppose. Everyone lived in a new build, detached, semi or cottage. The housing association flats on the outskirts were new builds and very modern inside.

I know it sounds bad, but i would be embarrassed to have my friends stay over or see where i lived, even as young as 11. I always wondered what they were thinking as they left their lovely clean minimalised semis or new builds and pulled up outside my terraced house on my grim street. I remember when my mum decided to sell her house to move closer to my school i begged her to get a 'new build' or semi. Or if it had to be a terrace, then a terrace where it was only 1 of 5 terrace houses like the little cottage terraces. To make matters worse my friends dad was an estate agent who sold new builds and when he saw my mum was selling asked my mum to come view the houses he was selling. I remmeber being mortified inside knowing we could never live there. Instead due to costs my mum bought another terraced house on the 'grim' outskirts of the village which was considered a deprived area. There were mattresses and sofas outside peoples houses and i was even more embarrassed. I feel awful writing this as i know she did her best so don't blame/resent her in anyway at all. I remember that in my young teenage mind i couldn't understand why everyone else could live in nice houses and we couldn't. I couldn't understand why even my friends whos parents were shop assistants or worked in a factory were able to live in a nice house but my mum who had a good job couldn't.

Anyway, fast forward to now. I was always adamant and fixated that i would live in a new build or semi or detached. Its been a dream for me (weird i know). Due to growing up skint I've always been very good with money and a saver not a spender. I've got a professional job and a good salary. When it came to buying my house despite my longing, my sensible head decided to override my wishes and i decided on a small 2 bed terraced house as i was buying on my own with no kids.
My mortgage is TINY and i don't need anymore room for just ne. It makes such financial sense.

However, despite being an adult and in my twenties with plenty of time to move up the property ladder, I'm still embaressed about where i live. All my work colleagues live in new builds, semis or detached houses. Literally EVERYONE. My friends who rent, rent nice houses. My friends who own, own nice houses. My single friends live in nice modern flats in the city centre. No one else lives in a terraced house like me. I feel the exact same way i did at school.

In my line of work a lot of our clients live in houses just like mine. I think i find it quite difficult because my colleagues, the 'professionals', all have these nice big houses and then our clients who often live in poverty, live in houses the same as mine.
I keep assuming people think I'm scruffy and somehow inferior. Its illogical thinking.
My friends came to view the house with me and all said it perfect/lovely/cosy. But i know for a fact they themselves would never live there!! It felt almost patronising for them to be praising my little terrace on a shit street when they all lived in their nice detached houses with garages and drives. Its so hard to go from having drinks at their houses with their dining rooms and hallways to then my house.

Don't get me wrong, i love my little house. Its perfect. I've decorated it beautifully if i say so myself. I just wish i could pick it up and place it somewhere else. I'm not even materialistic. I have a 20 year old banger car which i love even though i could afford a new one. Im not bothered about designer clothes or any of that stuff. So I'm not bothered about being showy. Its just this weird complex i have about terraced houses.

Has anyone ever dealt with this? If so how do you get over it?

Does anyone else live in a terraced house and really not care?

Also can people be really honest and state what their opinions are on terraced houses and whether or not they would live in one?

Its such a bizzaire complex i have that i want to get over!!

OP posts:
Loonoon · 08/11/2018 14:23

This thread has been on my mind all morning and it’s really made me think.

We live in a ‘naice’ detached house with all the luxuries and extras associated with high end new builds. We have friends who live in similar properties. We also have friends and family who live in even nicer houses including one couple whose house is so posh they charge for guided tours on certain days of the year and in laws with a duplex penthouse overlooking Central Park. At the other end of the scale we have friends in terraces and HA flats and one (professional, middle class) couple who through a terrible series of events were homeless for 18 months but who (thank god) have recently been able to secure a long term let.

As I’ve driven around and brooded I’ve come to realise that although I love my house and occasionally have pangs of envy over friends with even nicer homes, I definitely don’t judge people by where they live. Some of the best times and most fun nights have been in the smaller homes, not the Manor House and I have immense respect for the couple who had the period of homelessness. Equally some of the people with amazing properties are not the ones I hold in the highest regard.

I think the OP like a lot of us is judging herself more than other people do. Our judgement of housing can be internal, that if we were better people in some way we would live somewhere ‘better.

As so many people have said upthread what is important is having somewhere safe and warm that suits our needs and that we can make our own. If we have that we are truly fortunate.

mathanxiety · 08/11/2018 15:23

I love Ikea too.

dontalltalkatonce · 08/11/2018 15:57

Nearly every single thing in our house is from IKEA. Love it! Just about to make another IKEA run.

SilentIsla · 08/11/2018 16:48

including one couple whose house is so posh they charge for guided tours on certain days of the year

🤣🤣

SilentIsla · 08/11/2018 16:52

I might pay to have a guided tour of a large, impressive, historic house in the UK or in Europe. Some of those might actually be palaces or castles; some might even be lived in by a Royal Family!

In the USA...erm...nope. Nothing is old enough for a start.

JacquesHammer · 08/11/2018 17:00

In the USA...erm...nope. Nothing is old enough for a start

How old do you like?! There’s some fascinating older properties in Boston, Salem etc.

SilentIsla · 08/11/2018 17:03

I’m sure there are.

JacquesHammer · 08/11/2018 17:04

Oh guess who it is Grin

You might want to try harder

Loonoon · 08/11/2018 18:15

For the record the posh house that has guided tours is in the U.K. and it is very old, very big and very beautiful. The family aren’t royalty (although certain members might like to think they are) but they are quite grand and well connected. It has belonged to the family for about 300 years so there is a lot of history to it.

TheDodgyDunnyOfDoom · 08/11/2018 18:52

Laughing at but dead right is the PP that said Theresa May and the Chancellor Of The Exchequor live in terraced houses.

BananaDrama589 · 08/11/2018 19:50

Some places in the UK a terraced house costs 1000s. I was very proud when I lived in mine, it was tiny, so the bills were small too. A little bit of peace in the country side. With nice neighbours too

toomanycuddlytoys · 08/11/2018 20:00

We have live in our terraced house for 25 years. Mortgage paid . The prices are still going up as in a desirable area. We are near shops, university, hospitals, excellent buses and tram. Ten minutes away from countryside too 😊

user1466783975 · 08/11/2018 20:15

Ive just downsized from a four bed detatched in a desirable village to a tiny 13 foot wide terrace in the next village. There are about 200 houses which were used 100years ago for the railway. Limited parking and Christ,you wouldn't want to upset anyone here as many have lived here all their life,but its cosy,warm and quirky,with fire places in two downstairs rooms and bedrooms. Ive had to down size for financial reasons but I feel safe here. And the new builds down the road are apparently built on an old swamp and people are complaining about damp rising and their gardens being water logged

Sparkingfizzing · 08/11/2018 20:19

Didn't even make it to the end of your opening post. Got bored by the whining.

You have a (presumably) safe and practical place to call yours and you are moaning about what your friends have? When you were 11 that was ok, maybe.

Now you're an adult, you had the means and opportunities to buy a house and you're still moaning?

If it makes you so unhappy sell it but please don't moan about how it's so awful that you live in a terrace.

ChimesOnSundayMorn · 08/11/2018 20:30

You can afford to move, then I'd just move.
We all have ambitions and aspirations that are rooted in childhood and want to do the opposite of our own bad experiences.

Assuming you can afford it, I think you should live in a house you love (even if it's no-one else's taste)

Whysosad · 08/11/2018 20:48

The terraces i mean aren't big spacious, high ceiling terraces and bay windows. They are super small. But i do agree with everyone that i am indeed being ridiculous.

I also agree with the inferiority complex. It is something i am addressing through counseling which is why i think im speaking on a public forum about this for the first time. I know its illogical and stupid and i don't want to feel this way.

It's odd because someone i used to be good friends bought a house on a council estate known for stabbings and drugs and there was all sorts of furniture dumped on the streets. Yet i absolutely loved her house. It was beautiful and warm inside and she had a great eye for interior. I always thought how lovely her home was and would have been proud to show it off.
So that tells me the issue is literally about me and how i feel others perceive me and me alone.

This thread has been therapeutic so thank you. I know i may have come across appallingly so completely understand the negative comments and actually agree. I'm being an idiot.

OP posts:
DontCallMeCharlotte · 08/11/2018 20:56

I suppose if Idid the lottery won the lottery, I'd buy a detached house but it's never going to happen so I'm thrilled to live in my Victorian terrace house which I've spent thousands on making beautiful and where my friends love to come.

So many people aspire to have what you have OP Smile

DontCallMeCharlotte · 08/11/2018 20:58

Strike-through fail .

formerbabe · 08/11/2018 21:00

I live in London...terraced houses are expensive...a 3 bed terrace near me would be nearly a million quid..so I see no stigma to them.

I do however see new build type homes as a little bourgeois.

Cherrysherbet · 08/11/2018 21:02

Maybe if you had to live on the streets for a few months it might help you to see things from a different view point?

YABVU

SpottingTheZebras · 08/11/2018 21:39

Maybe if you had to live on the streets for a few months it might help you to see things from a different view point?

In almost any situation there is someone worse. The OP has said she thinks she is being an idiot so this kind of comment is just really unhelpful.

Polkapjs · 08/11/2018 22:20

I hear you. I hated my house growing up as all my friends had bigger houses which were tidied and more spacious where I could chat to my friends. I live in a semi now but it’s still too small. I fear I and my stuff would expand to fill any space and still be untidy. I didn’t have people round as much as I should though as my friends may have felt superior but were always welcome

springydaff · 08/11/2018 23:15

I don't agree you're being ridiculous and stupid.

Just saying.

Prefer · 08/11/2018 23:40

I understand this OP. My group of friends from school were all from well off families and had beautiful houses with tennis courts and lake views. I grew up on a council estate and moved to a semi detached house aged 10 but it was quite run down and needed loads of work. I was always embarrassed about this too. I feel horrible about it looking back because my parents did the absolute best they could but as a child you can’t help it - you just want to fit in with your friends.

This did (rightly or wrongly I’m not sure) make me very driven and determined to own a nice house with a beautiful view one day and I do now, I think if I didn’t I would feel some weird sense of “failure” since it was literally a lifetime ambition so I can understand completely where you’re coming from. In your case you should be proud of what you’ve achieved in your twenties (I’m 32). But I would aim to move up the ladder to a semi/detached house in the next 5-10 years if you think it’s that important to you.

stayathomer · 09/11/2018 08:24

*Didn't even make it to the end of your opening post. Got bored by the whining.

You have a (presumably) safe and practical place to call yours and you are moaning about what your friends have? When you were 11 that was ok, maybe.

Now you're an adult, you had the means and opportunities to buy a house and you're still moaning?

If it makes you so unhappy sell it but please don't moan about how it's so awful that you live in a terrace.*

OP said she felt she wasn't being totally rational. Why come on the thread just to make someone feel rubish for asking a question? And all the 'could be worse' people. There is ALWAYS someone worse off, doesn't mean people can't vent!