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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To upend my settled family because I’m unhappy in the middle of rural nowhere?

381 replies

OpheliaPlum · 19/11/2022 06:33

We live in a rural area. Lovely house, space, big garden. No public transport, no shops, no amenities basically, and fast country roads with no pavements so we have to drive to get anywhere. We moved here 8 years ago because of DH’s then job and a lovely primary in the next village. I work in a creative industry and there is a shared workspace I drive to. I used to WFH but became so isolated in lockdowns after lockdowns I found a place to work alongside others, but it’s not an office, but shared space for freelance artists etc.

My eldest DC has just transferred to secondary school in September. We all wake at 6am every day and I drive DH to the station and the DC to their schools. Since the secondary transfer, I spend 16 hours every week on school runs. There is a Bus eldest DC could get but it is a 10 min drive from home (impossible to walk, country lanes, 70mph speed limits, no pavements) and in the opposite direction to the station and primary school. From the primary school there’s a backroad to the secondary so it makes sense for me to drive. At weekends my DC have different activities in different places and understandably want to see friends. My DH and I spend a lot of the weekend driving and hanging about in locations far from home. We do this separately so the other can get on with the endless laundry, maintaining the garden, all very practical, but increasingly we have very limited family time.

This June my DH got a new job so we don’t need to be in this area for his work any more. During covid I started doing some online uni teaching of my work. I visited the place I was teaching at in the summer for the first time in person and taught a special summer school. I felt so alive and connected to like minded people and it made me realise how isolated I am in the countryside.

There is a fixed term 3 year contract coming up at the uni. There is a possibility of a permanent job after that but the HE sector seems to be imploding and I am not sure how realistic the permanent contact would be. It would be 2 days teaching and studio space for my own creative practice. It is 3 hours from where we live.

My DH commutes to an office but has said he could transfer to work close to that town or change to a role with more WFH. He has very specialised skills and works in an industry that exists everywhere (like for an energy company, but not quite that).

I’d really like to apply for this job and if I get it, move the family. My children are adamant they do not want to leave. My eldest says he has just done secondary transfer, loves his new school, tells me I can move when the DC are all grown up. My younger DC love the countryside. We have a big garden, a dog, ducks, rabbits, and they love that life. I feel very selfish but also can’t get the fantasy of living in a buzzing town, being able to share my passion with the next generation, even walk to a cafe out of my head. I feel very tied to driving children everywhere and am under so much time pressure since the secondary transfer that it’s brought me to tears. It feels very melodramatic but I feel as if my needs have become crushed living here.

The deadline to apply is very soon. It isn’t a common opportunity at all, but I’m really not sure what to do as it is potentially just a three year role. I can imagine living in the town when the role comes to an end and my DH and I could both work from there. Also we don’t have any family close to where we live now but can visit family either side within a couple of hours. If we move it would be a half day journey to visit family.

Please help me think this through.

OP posts:
MolliciousIntent · 19/11/2022 06:36

Well, you have to decide what's more important, don't you? Your kids keeping the life they enjoy, or your mental health. Is there a middle ground at all? Move a bit closer but not all the way, so the kids can remain at school?

Chomolungma · 19/11/2022 06:37

Oh OP this is a tricky one. To be honest I think I'd go for it. You sound so unhappy, your DH is willing to support you, and I'm sure your kids would adapt.

BeethovenNinth · 19/11/2022 06:39

I assumed DH would be holding you back but it’s your DC?

how much land can you buy if you move? Eg can you keep the dogs and chickens?

I would move personally. We live in a small town and can walk everywhere and it’s life changing- not least for the kids who can walk everywhere too

Beekeeper31 · 19/11/2022 06:41

I would apply for the job and have the conversation when you get the offer. It’s a difficult decision but you only have one life.

YouLookinSusBro · 19/11/2022 06:41

Apply for the job. If you get it you don't have to accept, but it will give you more thinking time.

To me it seems if you don't move now you're going to be stuck. In a few years DC will be doing GCSE, which will make things harder

PermanentTemporary · 19/11/2022 06:42

Could you work away and come home at weekends?

bookish83 · 19/11/2022 06:42

I would trial the job by staying over either 1-2 nights a week. This is not ideal either but you need to try it to see if you like the role and scope what the future is there. I'm guessing you can be WFH during the uni holidays?

This might also give you a little balance back and allow you to experience a different environment for yourself. You may be craving time for you in a new environment and this might help!

This would need to be worked around your family and husbands job but I would not move without trying this way first

carefulcalculator · 19/11/2022 06:43

Can't your DC stay at their current secondary? I wouldn't feel comfortable making them move schools unless genuinely unavoidable.

Moving house is up to you as parents.

Surely you can keep the dog & rabbits.

MarshaBradyo · 19/11/2022 06:43

Apply and think about it.

I’m not sure I’d move my happy dc but maybe there’s another way to do it

Allihavetodoisdream · 19/11/2022 06:44

Please move. You only get one life.

Setyoufree · 19/11/2022 06:47

For balance, I live in a big town. I still spend all weekend and several evenings a week driving the kids around. Journeys that on paper should be short actually aren't because of the horrible traffic. I never go into the city centre itself because half the shops are boarded up.

Hard to know what the right thing to do is but having space and not being on top of people like rats in a barrel shouldn't be underestimated

Elderflower2016 · 19/11/2022 06:48

i wound work away for the 2 or 3 days per week- then you get to get more of your needs met but kids aren’t unsettled. Sounds like your dh is flexible with his work and you’ll have to pay someone to help with kids if needed. Also I was wondering about your worry about eldest biking / walking to bus stop… there’s no pavements in rural areas… most kids are used to that… is this a fear you’re holding on to as in your old house you were used to having pavements? Hope you can make it work.

MarianneVos · 19/11/2022 06:50

Apply and see what happens.

In the meantime, your DH can switch to the role with more WFH and do more of the school runs.

Personally I think you were crazy to ever contemplate moving somewhere which was 90 mins from a secondary school so I don't blame you for not wanting to stay there.

Watchthesunrise · 19/11/2022 06:50

Your kids will be old enough to have scooters or cars and drive themselves soon.

Alittlenonsensenowandthen · 19/11/2022 06:53

Since birth I've taken the attitude of happy mama happy kids. My kids would like lots of things but the reality is they'll be grown and flown in a few years and what'll be left is dh and I.
So yes whilst I wouldn't deliberately make them unhappy, if there's a job opportunity that forces a move, that's life. Go for it.
Plus I guarantee as they get older they'll he glad they moved to a town where they can do stuff independently ( I say this as someone who moved rural to town with kids)

wombat1a · 19/11/2022 06:54

Don't move, towns are horrible. The countryside is great.

Twiglets1 · 19/11/2022 06:54

Whatever possessed you to move to such a good-forsaken spot in the first place? I get that your husband had a job in the vicinity but surely you could have found a bigger village to move to, one with pavements & basic amenities.
Now you are in this unhappy position, I would make an exit plan to leave. Not mikes away and uprooting the kids but just to a bigger village or town closer to the secondary school so your son (and other children when they join secondary school) can have some independence and you are freed from the school run.

lawofselfish · 19/11/2022 06:55

Allihavetodoisdream · 19/11/2022 06:44

Please move. You only get one life.

So do her children

KangarooKenny · 19/11/2022 06:58

If you’re going to do it, you need to move before the oldest starts GCSE’s.
Town/city living will be better for older teens/20’s , and better for you when you reach older age.
Its fine to listen to your child’s POV, but adults ultimately make the decision.

lawofselfish · 19/11/2022 06:59

I'm staggered at the amount of selfish people here

EarringsandLipstick · 19/11/2022 06:59

Gosh OP, this is hard 🙁

Your feelings and preferences are valid.

However, I feel strongly that chikdren's childhoods are brief and that security and sense of being settled is important.

In my case, following my separation when my DC were small, I could have moved (for more support, a clean break, employment opportunitirues) but didn't because I wanted the DC to be near their father - however; he is largely absent so it was ultimately a moot point.

A few years ago I really started to consider it as I don't like the location I'm in, I've a horrible neighbour, my house needed work I couldn't afford, and I dreamt of a different lifestyle. But my DC, 2 in particular were completely against it. They love their school & sports; they have a network of close friends. I realised that was too important to me after the early upheaval caused by my marriage ending. So I resolved to stay and make the most of it - and once I'd made the decision I was able to see things differently and be happy (enough!) with my decision.

I think PP's advice of exploring a compromise is good. Where could you move to that would allow the DC to stay in their schools? Is there a way you could spend part of the week doing the role away from home?

Also my DC do a lot of sport. I am on the road every single evening & all day Saturday (I typically leave the house at 8 on Saturday mornings & get back about 5 or so) and Sunday mornings. I live in a suburban area. So it might not be much different for you, regardless of location.

Greytea · 19/11/2022 07:01

Watchthesunrise · 19/11/2022 06:50

Your kids will be old enough to have scooters or cars and drive themselves soon.

Er, I don’t think so. The older child must only be 11 and the other is still at primary!

Smallonesaremorejuicy · 19/11/2022 07:02

Definitely move , you older child has only just started secondary education, they will want to go out with friends & more activities before long . That will mean even more driving & waiting around. Good luck with your interview 💐

OpheliaPlum · 19/11/2022 07:03

Lots of good suggestions, thank you. I could try the job remotely myself and travel and see what happens and what it’s like.

For all those asking, when we moved there was a bus stop literally opposite our house. The rural bus routes were closed a few months later and have never reopened because of costs. That is why we now have difficulty with getting to secondary school. If I wasn’t dropping younger DC to primary I could drop the eldest to the (privately run) school bus in the other direction. I’m not weirdly anxious about roads. We’ve had adult deaths on the road. Cars use it as a bypass (again new since we moved, because of other road closures) and they drive very fast. My youngest is 8 so I don’t think waiting until the DC can all drive is an option!

OP posts:
Krakinou · 19/11/2022 07:04

Your kids are still young but in a couple of years time they will probably be frustrated with having to get lifts everywhere and not being able to freely meet up with friends.

If you move to a town you can spend the same (or probably much less) driving time you do now on going to the country for walks as a whole family. I grew up in a big city and that’s how I remember my childhood - cycling/picnics in lovely parks and long walks in surrounding countryside. From 12 I was able to get around everywhere by public transport so had lots of independence, and able to get a job at 16, save money, go out etc. My little sister in contrast grew up in an isolated rural area and pretty much hated it from the age of 13 onwards. My parents ended up being a taxi service for her till she was 20 and she probably got a lot less exercise/fresh air than I did since she couldn’t get around on foot.

Also your kids feelings don’t matter that much here. Your and your husband’s feelings are more important. If they decide at 18 that they preferred that rural lifestyle, they can pursue that in their own adulthood.

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