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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To feel like I'm 'lesser' than others for living in a very small house?

270 replies

VenusPlanet · 29/03/2024 11:01

I live in a very middle class area.
But my house is one of the few that are very small. Tiny.
And I feel bad about it in comparison to others in my area that are living in much bigger, much more expensive houses.
It's an awful feeling.
I'm really sociable by nature but I never invite any friends round because all my friends live in big 4 or 5 bedroom detached houses and I'm embarrassed for them to come to mine. I have a mix of my own long term friends, and lots of mum friends who live in my area that I've made friends with from school, and every one of them lives in a large detached home, and lots of them are planning large kitchen extensions with bifolds when their kitchens are already 4 times the size of mine to start with, many of them have lovely loft conversions to create another room with ensuite, and some of them have second homes on top of this too.
My DD has made a new friend, we both got invited round for a playdate, sat in their colossal sized kitchen and the mum told me all about how they'd put a huge extension on the back of their house and created an extra bedroom with en suite in their loft "because the kids are only going to get bigger", but they already had a big house to begin with.
Then I went to collect my DS from a friend's house a few weeks ago, Ahh I thought as I walked in, at last, a house that is the same size as mine......only for the mum to greet me with the news that they are having a 6 metre rear extension and a loft conversion "because the size of this house (the same size as my house) is much too small for a family of 4". Meanwhile I live in my same sized house as a family of 4.
My house measures 18 ft wide by 25 ft deep. That's the whole footprint. My kitchen is tiny. We have no hallway. The 3rd bedroom is a tiny box room measuring 6ft wide by 9 ft.
Our next door neighbour, who we are joined on to, have a humongous rear extension, it's honestly huge, and now they are getting a double story side extension as well because "The kids are both getting bigger now (they're both in KS1 at primary school) so we need more space". They are a family of 4 like us, living in an already extended house making it much bigger than ours, yet they still think their house needs further extension.
A neighbour up the road has had a massive double story side extension to create a 4th bedroom and bigger kitchen.
A mum friend, whose house is way bigger than mine and detached with a huge garden etc., has a kitchen that is not that much bigger than mine, I mean it is about 50% bigger than mine, but not 4 times the size like other friends kitchens are. Yesterday we met up and she announced they're getting a big rear extension because of their "poky little kitchen" which will become a utility room and the 5 metre extension will become their new kitchen. But their 'poky' kitchen is bigger than mine. So why say this to me?
We will never, ever be in the position to extend, or move to a bigger house.
We could have bought a bigger, more spacious house, in a cheaper area. But we put lots of consideration in to location, and decided to buy a small house in a very expensive area that's a wonderful location.
But I didn't expect to get these feelings of unworthiness about how small our house is compared to everyone else's.
If they've all got huge houses or are getting their similar sized homes massively extended, then they must look at us in sympathy, surely? And I hate that thought, i really do.
A very old friend from childhood bought a house the same size as our house, at the same time, in a different area. After 2 years they moved up the ladder and bought a much bigger house. Recently she came round to visit with her kids and asked "Have you got any plans to move to a bigger house?" almost in a feeling sorry for me way. "No" I replied bluntly. I thought "We're struggling enough trying to pay the mortgage on this house! Let alone a bigger mortgage on a bigger house!".
Another old friend from Uni sat on my sofa moaning about the small size of her house and how they're looking to move because they can't cope with the size of their house, she currently lives in a house much bigger than mine, has the same sized family, same age kids, and she sat and moaned about the lack of 5 bedroom detached houses available in her area and how they are going to have to reluctantly settle for a 4 bedroom detached house instead, and she looked really genuinely fed up about it. I was incredulous and thought "How can you sit there moaning about your big house when you are sitting in my house which is half the size of the house you currently live in and are moaning about it being too small?!".
A mum friend came to collect her child from a playdate at our house, I was in the kitchen making her a cup of tea, and she stood in my kitchen and said "How on earth do you manage in such a small kitchen? There's only enough room for 1 person in here!".
Another mum friend came round to see me when I was ill, offered to make me and her a cup of tea, which she did, then gave it to me and said "Actually when I was making our tea I realised that there is actually space to make dinner" I was too ill to respond but I had never, ever mentioned my kitchen to this friend. Never. It was as though she'd been having a conversation in her own head about it, or as though she'd been having a conversation with someone else about my kitchen.
And another mum came round to collect her child from a playdate, and was head swivelling all over the place looking at my home. She didn't say anything. I don't know her well. But I do know that she was staring at every inch of my home in every direction in rather an exaggerated way, and I do know that she lives in a double fronted detached house with multiple rooms.
So all of this makes me feel like crap for underachieving in terms of my affordability to buy a bigger, seemingly thought of by others as what would be thought of as a 'better', house.
Am I going mad to be bothered by living in a small house and interpeting that as feeling bad about myself and feeling bad for my children that I haven't given them a big house to grow up in?
Why am I coming up against such house snobbery from people when they come to my house?
I never mention my house size, or anything about it, to anyone! I don't even comment on it to others!
My children have started making comments about how big their friends houses are when they get invited round to play, in a matter of fact way, but even they are noticing how much bigger other friends houses are compared to ours.

OP posts:
WithACatLikeTread · 29/03/2024 11:45

At least you live in a nice house and not in a hotel or other temporary accommodation.

squashyhat · 29/03/2024 11:46

Blimey this is really bothering you isn't it? What's the name of the popular property show on Ch 4? And what did you say the best thing about your house is? There's your answer. DH and I (no kids) decided 25 years ago that our small house in a great location was our forever home. Job done.

WithACatLikeTread · 29/03/2024 11:47

spudnik1 · 29/03/2024 11:11

Similar situation. Our house is small compared to all my DS friends' houses. My kitchen can only fit an oven a sink and 2 cupboards. That is it. All the appliances are in the garage.
We are expecting our second, and it will be a squeeze.
We looked at upsizing, but it would mean a mortgage of at least 150k.
Nope, it's not happening.
We are on track to retire at 55. We don't have a mortgage, so spend what we want when we want. Our child has a healthy house deposit of his own.

All this because we stayed in our first house.

I think too many people are dragged into the housing ladder rubbish.
If they ask when you are moving, just say I am going to retire early instead, plus my house doesn't take as long to clean.

Wouldn't you be better off buying a bigger house than giving your child a deposit for a house? I am sure they would appreciate more space as they get older.

VegetablesFightingToReclaimTheAubergieneEmoji · 29/03/2024 11:48

I’m the same. Don’t have room for a table, so never invite people over. Only enough seats for us.
id love to have people over for a roast or dinner.

eatreadsleeprepeat · 29/03/2024 11:48

It sounds like you and the children have friends in the area and are settled so I would work on appreciating the advantages of a small house. Cheaper to heat, quicker to clean, smaller areas to decorate so can go for more expensive wallpaper etc. Lots of clever solutions for storage and making life run smoothly. Fall
in love with your house yourself then practice responses to other people, small but perfectly formed and other cliches are useful!

Octavia64 · 29/03/2024 11:48

I have lived in a big detached house.

I bloody hated it to be honest. It took forever to clean. It was cold (oil fired heating). My then H wanted it because he liked to show off how much money he (didn't) have.

After we got divorced I now live is a small end terrace house with three cats. Much cheaper, much easier to clean, and not trying to show off to the bloody world.

I don't judge people on size of house (except nitwits like my Ex who only have a big house to show off).

Catza · 29/03/2024 11:52

This is quite an unhealthy level of obsession. So much so that I couldn't get to the end of your post.
We live in a small house, moved from the larger one which I absolutely hated as it was a full time job to clean and maintain. When someone has nothing better to talk about than their new extension, I just think them very boring. I don't get distressed by it.

5128gap · 29/03/2024 11:53

That's life, isn't it? Always someone wealthier, more successful, better looking, happier with a better job, nicer car and a bigger house. If you're the sort of person who 'compares up' and is bothered by that then you'd have been better off living in a less expensive area where your house wouldn't have been the smallest. However, hind sights 20/20 so if you can't or don't want to move, you will need to find a way to come to terms with it. Off loading all these rude individuals who comment disparagingly on the size of your kitchen would be a start.

ByUmberViewer · 29/03/2024 11:54

LenaLamont · 29/03/2024 11:08

No one gives a thought to the size of your house, OP. The second they leave it, it drops out of their heads.

No one looks down in you for it. They are all too busy with the stuff in their own lives. If they are used to a much larger space they might initially comment because it’s outside their experience, but no one is thinking “I must spend less time with @VenusPlanet , she’s clearly unworthy of my time because she lacks cupboard space.”

^ I am obviously exaggerating for comic effect, but seriously, don’t give it a thought.

This. Honestly, no-one cares.

Musomama1 · 29/03/2024 12:01

OP, maybe the cost of living in.an area that doesn't match your family funds is too much. Maybe it'd be better to live in a cheaper area but with more space? I think that if you live in an expensive area then don't be surprised if all your friends have bigger houses.and more money.

My family sent my sibling and I to private school even though we couldn't really afford it. We didn't fit in because we weren't comfortably off like everyone else and I wish we'd just gone to the good local church school.

Where we live is more of a mix than you - some people have bigger houses, some have smaller, some roughly the same. Yes I'm always a bit jealous of the bigger houses!

easylikeasundaymorn · 29/03/2024 12:02

I don't agree that NONE of your friends are thinking/judging your small house, because from the examples you've given it does sound like a few of them are. Plus some people are just judgy/bitchy. It would be silly to suggest NONE of them have noticed your house is small, of course they have. But I also agree that the majority of them won't care at all, and those that do sound very boring and bitchy, so hardly the sort of people I'd be bothered about impressing!

Also, if you say you've never invited most of your friends to your house because you're ashamed of its size then most of the people who have talked to you about their planned extensions (seriously though, I agree with the pp who queried how you know so many boring people who talk about this sort of stuff so often!) probably have no idea about the size of your house, so aren't making pointed remarks, they're just talking.

Your problem is that because of where you live and your social circle, you are only comparing yourself to people who have more than you. If you had more friends who lived in the cheaper/not so nice area you'd feel like the lucky one.

Be honest, have you ever spoken to someone and discussed your reason for living in the 'wonderful location' 'nice' area rather than the cheaper one? Because that person might have felt just as shit as you do because they can barely afford to rent in the not so nice area, and here's you moaning about struggling to afford the mortgage in your posh area....see it goes both ways...

At the end of the day you made a choice, that you were lucky to have the option to make - if having a bigger house is so important to you then sell up and buy in the cheaper area!

ThreePointOneFourOneFiveNine · 29/03/2024 12:04

From the examples you've given I think you've met some very rude people. Good friends do not sit in your small house complaining that their bigger house is too small. I genuinely struggle to understand how anyone could be so lacking in self awareness. I have a big house compared to a lot of my friends. I'm very careful what I say because I'd never want to make anyone feel awkward about it. We host a lot because we've got the extra room and can afford to feed the extra mouths, and not everyone can. I'd never look down on anyone for having a small house. Some people definitely do though, and personally I wouldn't want to be friends with someone like that. I suggest you view your house as a snob filter. Anyone who's going to look down on you for having a smaller house is not worth knowing. Be civil for your kids sake if they have friends with snobby parents, but don't waste your time worrying what they think of you.

FindingMeno · 29/03/2024 12:04

I live in a small house and I'm a renter.
I love it for so many reasons.
Pretty much all my dc's friends had big fancy houses, but they still loved coming to our cosy home.
I have never given a flying fuck about keeping up with the Joneses.
Bear in mind that big houses mean big mortgages and perhaps those people are crippled with fear over making their payments.
There is a lot of happiness to be found in simplicity and contentment.

JerkintheMerkin · 29/03/2024 12:05

I had that envy for about 5 seconds and thought "thank God I don't have to do all that cleaning". My tiny cottage is enough for me to handle and anyone that has visited has always been surprised by the size and very complimentary of it. Be happy for your own little corner of this earth - I know I am. I just go around nicking interior decor ideas instead. Grin

FictionalCharacter · 29/03/2024 12:05

The problem isn't you and your house, it's your well-off materialistic "friends" who think they need a vast house to accommodate their kids because they're "getting bigger". Just how enormous do they think their kids will get that they need to build an extension? 😁
A big enough house is big enough, and anything more is a luxury and/or a status symbol. I can't stand tedious shallow people who boast about their plans for a kitchen the size of other people's whole ground floor. I have more time for people who do their best on a modest income.

Waitingfordoggo · 29/03/2024 12:06

I don’t know if it’s possible to say what I want to say without sounding like I’m humble bragging but I’ll try. I live in a large house. It’s not a mansion but it is roomy, detached, has four good sized bedrooms and a large garden, front garden and side garden.

I feel embarrassed about it because most of my friends live in smaller homes and the only reason I have a bigger one is that I had a large inheritance when my parents died and I did the obvious thing that most people would do with an inheritance- buy a house. Now I now this will sound ‘diamond shoes are too tight’ but the housework, cleaning and general upkeep take SO much time. Either I need to spend time on it every day or I have to just let it slide and accept a grubby home (we’ve got teenagers, 2 cats and a dog). We could ‘afford’ a cleaner but couldn’t justify the cost because of the cost of everything else rising (yes we had an inheritance but we’re still average earners so are feeling the pinch from price rises as most others are). The maintenance and council tax are ££££££

I’m looking forward to downsizing which we will do when the kids have flown the nest. I want a simpler home!

I do remember though what it feels like to live in a much smaller space, especially with kids. It is hard when you don’t have enough space to relax in or to have time by yourself when you want it. But what other people think shouldn’t even be on your radar. Like PPs, I can’t think of anyone who has commented on the size of my home and nor do I comment on the dimensions of other people’s living spaces. Usually I’m too busy admiring people’s decor as I am utterly hopeless at coordination/colour choices/style and wish I had the ability!

Janehasamane · 29/03/2024 12:07

bahhamburgers · 29/03/2024 11:45

I’ve been on all sides of this in my life.

Until I was 25, I lived in a tiny house with my first dh and our son who was a toddler then. I lived in a slightly less desirable area than the one a mile down the road where I used to go to all the playgroups. I was treated like scum by some of the other mothers. Even more so when ds sfarted nursery at a private school. We weren’t invited to anything as “oh, it’s sooooo far for you to come! We don’t want you to have to travel!” 1 mile. 1 fucking mile. The few who did lower themselves enough to come to our house would be so fucking condescending, “maybe when you are older you will be able to live in a nicer home, bless you!” People assumed I was a young, single mum (nothing wrong with that btw), or that I was lying about my husbands job.

Then we got very rich, and from 26 to 31 I lived in a massive house in the country. People used to bloody fawn over me like I was the second coming. I was invited everywhere. People spoke to me like I was special. They were licking my arse left, right and centre.

Then the bastard left me for his secretary, and I ended up with ds, on benefits, in a tiny flat in a posh London Suburb. Again, treated like scum by the other mothers. Talked down to, not invited anywhere, when I was spoken to it was like I was stupid. one of the mothers in ds class worked in the school office and “let it slip” that ds got free school meals, so that was fun for me. A couple of the other mothers wouldn’t let that go and mentioned it at every opportunity.

Now in my 40s, I’ve moved to what is a quite deprived area in parts in the midlands but to a large house which I own. I found out the other day that my nickname at the school gates (I have a younger child with now dh) is Kate Middleton and that I am a stuck up cow. News to me.

We are about to make a move to a much nicer town, but the houses we can afford there are very small. Already bracing myself 😂

Do you know what? I have never changed. I’ve always been the same, friendly, sociable person. People have just treated me differently because of what I have or haven’t had and the house I lived in.

So people do judge and treat you differently.

To be honest I had somewhat similar.

we lived in a small house, and privately educated our child. Honestly it was an expensive part of Surrey and there were very wealthy folks at the school , some of the houses were stunning. We chose to live there for a good few years, then we moved , and bought a house 4 times the price, and a couple of the mothers were stunned. They sort of side eyed me in surprise and stared, saying wow what a beautiful house. I guess confused on the leap, which was Salary escalation enabled.

most though were just normal. I didn’t give a shit and the couple of mums who were judgey were simply twats. I don’t think it is the same as the ops situation in the main though.

LolaSmiles · 29/03/2024 12:13

I tend to think that where people have choices, everyone has different preferences on space.

There seems to be a very copy and paste style of extension at the moment that's a huge rear room with white walls, a new kitchen, black framed bifold doors, and a roof light or two. It's not to my taste so I don't worry about it.

We have a nice family home and there's ample space. We feel very fortunate and I've got no desire to push for a bigger mortgage for more rooms that means more stuff and more cleaning. I'd like to think the people we're friends with like us as people, not because of our home.

IgetitOP · 29/03/2024 12:15

I get it OP. We live in a run down house in an area with lots of very wealthy people. We could only afford to move here because the house was rundown. We can't afford to do it up. Its smaller and more run down that anyone else's house. We were buying against a timescale but I regret it. Its pretty shit feeling the poorest amongst your peers. I don't invite people around either as I am ashamed. I never thought I would feel like this or that things like this would bother me. But the truth is, it does.

Your 'friends' are really rude to make those comments though. Good manners tells you to keep your mouth shut or make positive comments. Nothing else is acceptable!

CountryMouseInAFix · 29/03/2024 12:20

No! Don't feel bad! I have a biggish house with a big kitchen extension. My best friends whole flat is probably the same size as the downstairs of our house..... And I love going to her home, it's small and perfectly formed, and so quickly tidied that I feel so calm there. Plus I only ever think about the size of it when I'm there, and certainly don't judge her for it.

bridgetreilly · 29/03/2024 12:24

Bet mine is tinier! Well, it is, though admittedly it only has to fit me in it. I have a single bed because there is no room for a double. Can’t have a sofa bed for guests because there isn’t enough floor space. I would do almost anything for a dishwasher but there isn’t room.

On the other hand, it’s ll mine and I love it. More house = more clutter and more cleaning. No thanks.

Coldia · 29/03/2024 12:26

You're giving far too much thought to this. There will always be people who have more money than you, nicer houses etc, unless you're a Saudi prince or something. It's easy to overlook what we have but if someone took your house off you you would be devastated I am sure. Take a breath, look around yourself and think about what you've got, not what you haven't.

Rosesanddaisies1 · 29/03/2024 12:28

IsItFinallySeptemberYet · 29/03/2024 11:23

You’re totally overthinking this, nobody cares. Most people I know live in big houses in better areas, I live in a small terrace. They don’t like me less for it! Who cares? I can’t afford to move so here I am. You live within your means, there’s nothing embarrassing about that. Comparison is the thief of joy, don’t waste headspace on this.

This! Sorry but you really need to get over this. You can’t live like that, it’s unhealthy. I honestly bet no-ones cares. You live with what you can afford. And appreciate the benefits of a smaller house - quicker to clean, cheaper to heat, less to maintain. I love a cosy small house.

Deliadidit · 29/03/2024 12:29

Fgs who seriously buys into this nonsense and class snobbery! Why don’t you be grateful that you have a roof over your head and maybe think about the thousands of young families currently in temporary accommodation all squashed into one room who would be thrilled with a small house!

xSideshowAuntSallyx · 29/03/2024 12:31

I live in a 2 bed flat, it's mine, it's light and airy, in a decent location (surrounded by country parks). One of my friends lives in a big house but its on a main road, another in a big house but on a shit estate with shit parking.

I would love to live in a little two bed cottage in one of the local villages near me. So size doesn't bother me.