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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:
Eliza9917 · 07/11/2018 21:47

If you want honest opinions, I've been in one and I wouldn't want to live in a coronation Street terrace.

I wouldn't look down on or judge anyone that does though.

TheGonnagle · 07/11/2018 21:50

We live in the tiny little semi we purchased 16 years ago. All our friends live in big houses with equally big mortgages. I love our little house and I love having disposable income!

GabsAlot · 07/11/2018 21:51

ive lived in all sorts

from council flat on an estate to on river thames in a very expensive bulding-its in your head you wont ever be happy unless u get rid of this feeling

oh i now live in a 50s terrace

Mishappening · 07/11/2018 21:51

"i love my little house. Its perfect." - well there you are. Does it really matter what anyone else thinks?

Terraces are quite trendy now anyway.

Wauden · 07/11/2018 21:51

Well done for managing your finances sensibly. I suspect that some people in larger houses have over stretched themselves and change their cars regularly.

EK36 · 07/11/2018 21:52

I grew up in a terraced house and bought a terraced house. I sincerely don't understand your angst. As long as you have a roof over your head and it's warm and safe, nothing else really matters. I love my little house, I hardly have anything left to pay on the mortgage. I'm very lucky. I think you should practice some mindfulness techniques. Everyday think of what you have and have much you appreciate them. Some people have nothing!

Whysosad · 07/11/2018 21:53

Your posts have already made me feel 10000x better.

I know its weird to think like this. I'm grateful to own my own home and bought it entirely on my own. So that gives me joy.

Bluntness - you kinda hit the nail on the head. I think I'm just more bothered about what other people think. My house itself is lovely. I have quiet neighbours and I'm about to reconstruct the bathroom which im excited about. I'm happy here. I think it's because I'm bothered about what others are thinking.

I do wonder if its because my mum wasn't at all house proud. My friends houses were all modern and clean with cream carpets or laminated floors. Either show homes or lovely little cosy character houses. My house was heavily cluttered with crap and there were holes in the sofas and dog hairs. Plus she would smoke 20 a day in the house so it smelt bad. Therefore maybe i associate terrace houses with that? Still makes no sense though!

Think its harder that i have no one in my social circe in the same type of housing. All the first time buyers are getting detached new builds or semis. I know i shouldn't compare!!

I anger myself by how i feel!!

OP posts:
DianaPrincessOfThemyscira · 07/11/2018 21:53

I live in a Coronation Street type terrace and while I'd love a bit more room, I love it! I grew up in a 4 bed detached in a very affluent area, with my own room and a large garden. We have a small yard and my kids share their room.

I'm sorry your background is making you unhappy but I certainly don't condemn it, I have a friend who feels just like you.

HPFA · 07/11/2018 21:53

I live in a terraced house. My only worry is if we ever got noisy neighbours - you do get some protection in a detached.

But other than that it's fine.

LadyHooHa · 07/11/2018 21:53

Oh, OP. Please don't worry about where you live. I grew up in a massive house with land, garages, etc, etc. XH and I had similar. Then we got divorced (because he was abusive to the DC). I now have - guess what? - a tiny Coronation-Street type terraced house. But it is my house, and I love it. The lack of space irks me sometimes, as I am used to having so many spare rooms that I didn't know what to do with them - but I have to hold on to the fact that it is mine. I wouldn't swap it for a modern detached house for anything in the world. Terraced houses are good, solid, 'proper' houses.

I know this isn't relevant to you yet, OP, but my DC are at the kinds of schools where their friends have huge houses with swimming pools (in DS's case, even their second homes have such things). However, all these friends are just as happy to come to our house. If it's a nice, cheerful place (ours is a tip, but they overlook this), your children's friends will want to be there.

FWIW, I think you have done brilliantly to be in your 20s with only a small mortgage. Enjoy your lovely house!

MattBerrysHair · 07/11/2018 21:53

Op, you're assuming that all your friends and colleagues view the world the way you do. Just because you care a lot about the type of houses people live in does not mean that anyone else does. In fact, they probably don't give a shiny shit.

I suspect that you may have problems with feeling inferior which has nothing to do with houses, it just manifests that way because of your childhood associations. If you actually lived in a semi or a new build you'd find something else to be embarrassed and feel inferior about.

Sowhatifidosnore · 07/11/2018 21:54

I grew up on an estate. A ‘notorious’ one in a little 2 up 2 down. I wasn’t embarrassed.
I had friends all around and parents who loved me. We moved eventually to our own house, not much bigger but not on an estate. Many of my secondary school friends lived in massive houses. I still wasn’t embarrassed. My home was open to friends, warm, loving supportive. It’s not the size of the space you have, or the neighbourhood that it’s in that makes it what it is.

Seren96 · 07/11/2018 21:54

You really need to sort out your values and get a grip.

BlueJava · 07/11/2018 21:55

I never think anything of other people's houses. Some are big, cluttered, messy, bungalow, maisonette, minimalist... it doesn't matter as long as they are happy. I assume people just buy what they like for their budget and job done. For me more to the point would be nice neighbours that don't make masses of noise and a nice cooker!

LadyHooHa · 07/11/2018 21:55

@Seren96 That is an unkind comment.

EssentialHummus · 07/11/2018 21:55

OP, the greatest gift you could give yourself is learning to be happy with what you have (at least some of the time...not sure all of the time is so easy!). I used to live in Area A, and was desperate to move to Area B. Now I'm in Area B in a flat that I never imagined I'd be able to afford - but I remember soon after moving in looking out my window and seeing one of my neighbours who had a whole house for their family, and immediately getting jealous. I try really hard to remember what I have to be grateful for, and where I come from.

viccat · 07/11/2018 21:57

It must be very specific to the area where you live then? Because at least in my area nearly everyone lives in a terraced house - that's just what nearly all the streets are here. (Some now being converted into flats.)

I've never considered it an issue at all. I find mine quite safe - it's a long row of terraces with gardens backing onto other gardens - and low maintenance.

Johnnyfinland · 07/11/2018 21:57

You do sound like a horrific snob. This’ll probably make you feel better though.

I grew up in a terraced house with no wallpaper because my parents couldn’t afford to decorate. Was I embarrassed as a child/teen? No.

I now live in a grotty flat in London with no living room, gang crime on the doorstep and electric and gas on a pre-pay meter. Am I embarrassed now? (I have a professional decent job btw) No, I am not embarrassed.

Do any of my equally professional and employed friends live in newbuilds or detached houses? No.

Do I judge people on where they live? No, and I wouldn’t associate with someone so narrow minded

FellSwoop · 07/11/2018 21:59

I love my northern terrace!
I grew up in a drafty bungalow on a hill in the arse end of nowhere and dreamed of one day living in a red brick terraced house with.....neighbours!
Also often muse at how rich I'd have to be to buy the equivalent house in London.

Angharad07 · 07/11/2018 22:00

At least you got to choose where you live! If you really care that much then move.

I’d feel awful if I knew my friends ever thought like you. I can’t afford nice furniture or a nice place- nothing matches because it’s all second hand/whatever I could get my hands on! I can’t help it and times are difficult. According to your standards I have a shit house but that’s not a reflection of me. Please drop your snobbiness, surely you should understand having been in a similar predicament growing up.

I know you’re judging yourself and your own insecurities in this post but in essence you’re putting down everyone who has to live in these so-called rubbish houses.

didyouseetheflaresinthesky · 07/11/2018 22:00

I'm probably unreasonably defensive about this, but I'm afraid your post has made me feel rather angry. Fuck me, I'm glad you're not my daughter.

^This. I live in a rented terraced house and consider myself bloody lucky. If you were my child, I'd be ashamed of you and wondering where the hell I went so wrong in raising you that you ended up so materialistic and up your own arse. This thread is snobbery at its worst.

Leobynature · 07/11/2018 22:00

OMG are you me.
In brought a 2 up 2 down terrace when I was 24. I was so embarrassed by it but I brought it because it was affordable, low running costs and a very low mortgage. With each promotion I threw money on top of the mortgage and paid it off when I was 31! I have sinced renovated a semi and have just started really entertaining. I rent the terrace.

Tbh it wasn’t until I moved out I can appreciate the potential it had and how cheap it was to maintain. My semi needs a lot more regular upkeep.’

Appreciate your little house.

Dixiechickonhols · 07/11/2018 22:00

If it is suce an issue sell and move to a similar price newbuild flat.
My grandma always had an inferiory complex as she lived in council house. It was a lovely house - newly built when she moved in, big rooms, garden. But she felt it was inferior to the small terraces that relatives lived in as they owned.
She rarely let people in. It was so sad at her wake after her funeral at her house seeing friends and neighbours genuinely noticing and commenting how nice her house was as they had never been in.

Puffinhead · 07/11/2018 22:01

I can relate to your experience a bit OP. I grew up in a council house on a small housing estate and I was embarrassed by it. Not till I was at secondary school though and mixing with kids from rich, middle class families who lived in enormous detached houses. The parents all seemed to have professional/academic jobs too while my dad worked in trade and was proper working class. I look back now and feel ashamed by those feelings - my parents worked hard and we had a lovely home. My friends weren’t bothered by it either. It was all in my head. Funnily enough my younger siblings never felt this way.
Enjoy your home OP. It really doesn’t matter where it is or what style it is. It’s yours and you own it. Be proud!

notanurse2017 · 07/11/2018 22:01

Your mum bought up 5 kids single handedly and you are going on about being ashamed of the house you lived in?

You're a snob.

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