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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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IamtheDevilsAvocado · 20/12/2024 04:37

PorridgeEater · 11/12/2024 23:41

Did you / partner really need to video the roof? Could have said "looks alright to me but you'd probably best come and check for yourself " (or if it didn't look alright they need to deal with it). And you don't know any roofers (they're probably all busy anyway).
They can arrange their own window cleaner and pay online.
At least you could eat / distribute the contents of their freezer?

I think you've made a rod for yourself here... By being very pleasant to their faces...

It's gone on way too long.

Their requests are outrageous..

I'd be more and more vague... I wouldn't have even said to give me details of your waitrose delivery /whatever... I'd have shot them down... We're really busy and not really around, suggest you sort this when you're down,rather implying you'd try to help (but you've already decided you won't...)... It just is inviting the wrong assumption on their part!

Well done on responding by telling them re getting property agents... But DO NOT GET INVOLVED IN SUGGESTING PEOPLE... Just keep batting back... No idea... Perhaps Google?..
Be more and more vague as time goes on.

If you don't want to be blunt... Hint at a fictitious illness that taking a lot of your energy... No details /no nothing...

Fraaahnces · 20/12/2024 04:52

I think you need a more strongly-worded message to these "neighbours". Dear X, before you pick up your phone to call me or my DH you should first think about whether you would ask this of your neighbour in London, or if it would maybe push the boundaries of normal, healthy neighbourly relationships. I work full time as a *Teacher/Baker/Nurse/Plumber/Superhero - I'm definitely not a property leasing manager. Please engage a property manager to handle calls about your home. The contents of your freezer, your heating, your gutters, your windows, etc are not our responsibility or our priority.

buttonousmaximous · 20/12/2024 05:13

I think I would make my self less available. Don't respond to messages instantly and stop helping. !

Can you check on...,,,, Sorry I'm at work

Can you take in ......... Sorry I don't have space

What's on in ......,,,, Not sure I haven't had time to check

ruffler45 · 20/12/2024 06:38

They sound like they are the type of people who will end up blaming you when something goes drastically wrong (Burglary or electrical fire etc), if they have a remote property they cant look after then they need to employ professional people (including security) to look after it. Tell them you do not want the responsibility for it. No is a good word..

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