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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

Second-homer wanting to be part of the community

854 replies

IMustConfess · 22/11/2024 20:30

I live in a village on the coast in a semi-rural area. It's a place where people come to live for a relatively quiet life with great walks, fresh air and unspoiled beaches. Lots of artists and writers and gardeners.

Two years ago a couple from London bought the small detached property next door to me. It's a holiday home for them and their friends and family. They're in their 50s, clearly used to a busy lifestyle in London. Lots of talk of theatre and gigs and nice restaurants. They moved in and invited a few locals to dinner and said they wanted to get involved with whatever's going on. They clearly expected to be invited back to eat with everyone and were surprised when some didn't reciprocate. 'But we were told there was a great community here!' They went round knocking on lots of doors and introducing themselves and saying how much they wanted to be involved, but they're probably only here for 10 weeks of the year max. One of my neighbours was really pissed off by it. She said it was like they had an idea of country life they'd got from a TV drama.

When their families come down independently they knock on my door and introduce themselves and say how wonderful that we're all such good friends/ such a lovely community and seem to expect to be invited in and given tea and told what's on. If there's something happening they want me to take them along. They've clearly been told I'll be happy to include them.

This year the husband's been working away a lot and so the wife has been coming down on her own. She always messages me a day or two before she's due to arrive and announces she's coming and wants to know what's on in 'the community'. She messages me when she's arrived so I know she's arrived safely. 😱She expects to be included in anything I've got going on. I took her to my book group when she was down in the summer, and now she expects to be included and tries to get us to schedule our meet-ups for when she's here.

When I moved here I got to know people slowly and worked out who I got on with. My neighbours seem to think friendship comes on a plate and everyone loves them. We have friends who live next door to an AirBnB and say something similar: many of the people who rent the place want to talk to them as if they're friends and happy to spend half an hour telling them which coastal walk is most scenic or which local pub does the best beer. We live here: we're not tourist information or rent-a-mate.

Are we the unreasonable ones? What's going on with people that they think they can just waltz into a new area and everyone'll love them?

OP posts:
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6
Rinoachicken · 22/11/2024 20:31

YANBU

ExtraOnions · 22/11/2024 20:32

It’s a Local Book Group for Local People .. there’s nothing for you here

Buddhistcauliflower · 22/11/2024 20:33

Or you could be nice to them

Roguebludger · 22/11/2024 20:33

You could reply that you're all getting your pitchforks out to lynch the tourists 'all for the greater good' or just ignore them.

PlantDoctor · 22/11/2024 20:34

I'm in Cornwall and we have a lot of seconds homes here. I actually think it's quite nice that your neighbours want to join the community. 10 weeks is quite a big chunk of the year!

Edit to add: I think she's being a bit much but yabu too

Suzuki76 · 22/11/2024 20:35

YANBU. I live relatively near Bruton in Somerset which attracts people like this because of The Newt, The Pig near Bath, Babington House etc. Same with Frome. Most of us just want to get on with working, shopping, seeing family and taking the kids to the park. I'm not prone to hosting village-wide cheese and wine parties!

Hazeby · 22/11/2024 20:35

You could tell them the latest community project is building a large man made of wicker on the village green.

IMustConfess · 22/11/2024 20:35

Buddhistcauliflower · 22/11/2024 20:33

Or you could be nice to them

I'm lovely to them!

OP posts:
EmberAsh · 22/11/2024 20:36

Stop inviting her to book club for a start

Lammveg · 22/11/2024 20:37

They sound a bit OTT but I'm sure it's coming from a good place.

They could be the other way and never interact at all.

Maybe there's a way to ask them to calm it down a bit, something that subtly highlights that actually this is your actual home and daily life etc!

Wendolino · 22/11/2024 20:37

Your part time neighbour sounds like a nightmare
YANBU

hazelbiscuit82 · 22/11/2024 20:38

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

IMustConfess · 22/11/2024 20:38

Suzuki76 · 22/11/2024 20:35

YANBU. I live relatively near Bruton in Somerset which attracts people like this because of The Newt, The Pig near Bath, Babington House etc. Same with Frome. Most of us just want to get on with working, shopping, seeing family and taking the kids to the park. I'm not prone to hosting village-wide cheese and wine parties!

Thank you. Yes. At times I feel like the nice little woman who does for them. It's all what can we offer them to make their weekends jolly, not what they can offer 'the community'. What is 'the community', anyway. A bunch of people getting on with their lives.

OP posts:
sweeneytoddsrazor · 22/11/2024 20:38

Well I wouldn't knock on a door but if I saw you I would smile and say hello and I might ask if there was any pubs or restaurants you would recommend. That's just general pleasant conversation.

IMustConfess · 22/11/2024 20:39

This reply has been deleted

Message deleted by MNHQ. Here's a link to our Talk Guidelines.

Don't leave it there. Do I smell or something?

OP posts:
titchy · 22/11/2024 20:39

Ask them when their own book club is meeting then turn up earlier that afternoon up to their London home and invite yourself for dinner and book club. Or send a friend along as they're so welcoming...

hazelbiscuit82 · 22/11/2024 20:39

This reply has been deleted

This has been deleted by MNHQ for breaking our Talk Guidelines.

AlisonDonut · 22/11/2024 20:40

I feel your pain!

We live in a rural village in France now, and are the only people on our row of houses who live here full time. Most neighbours just come, and go, and do their own thing but one is always suggesting meet ups and barbeques [We don't eat meat], and going to the bar [I don't drink] and then they are gone. There's nothing I want to do less than go to the bar with a load of other Brits to be honest. So I nod and say 'maybe' and then just don't make any plans.

CocoapuffPuff · 22/11/2024 20:40

Yanbu. We loathe the village part timers. They're all such experts on how to live here, despite only being here 5 weeks a year, on average. If I hear "this is what you're all doing wrong" from some effing townie one more time, I'll not be kind....

StillTryingToKeepGoing · 22/11/2024 20:41

There was a holiday let next to our old house. Once I got stopped by some holiday makers who got really offended that I didn’t remember them despite them “coming every year”. I’m sorry - I have no clue who you are, And yes I know it’s lovely here, but no , we’re not lucky - we’ve made a choice. It has its up and down sides living here. We accept lower salaries and fewer opportunities.

Quitelikeit · 22/11/2024 20:43

Look you can be difficult about this or you can choose not to be

Seems like you want to be difficult

Says A lot about you and these so called friends!

Pickandmixmood · 22/11/2024 20:45

She sounds lovely and friendly to me. What a bitch.

SoNiceToComeHomeTo · 22/11/2024 20:49

It is a bit strange. Getting involved in the community would normally include things like attending the school fete, joining an evening class, going to church, singing with the choir etc and hoping to make friends along the way, not expecting individuals to welcome you into their lives and come for dinner when they hardly know you.
If you don't like it, best smile and say you're busy these days and can't spend time with them. Inviting them to your book group may have raised expectations.

VexedofVirginiaWater · 22/11/2024 20:50

ExtraOnions · 22/11/2024 20:32

It’s a Local Book Group for Local People .. there’s nothing for you here

😂😂😂

DirtyDuchess · 22/11/2024 20:51

When I lived in a village there was this particular couple who came down to their cottage every weekend and sort of attached themselves to a group in the very lively pub. They'd probably been there for a year or so when covid hit. This village had not one case of covid and one weekend the London couple turn up in the village (during a lockdown). Lots of villagers reported them to the police and they were made to leave their cottage. Shocked they were!

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