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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To want a Country Living lifestyle?

498 replies

meditatingwithdolly · 18/03/2025 20:57

This is lighthearted. I've had a series of unfortunate events in the last year and have moved to a very deprived area with a lot of social problems, which is probably causing me to fantasise a bit more than usual. Subscribed to Country Living magazine on a whim as it was very heavily discounted. One of the highlights of the month is hearing it fall on the doorstep and I have to grab it quickly before it gets stolen. It provides wonderful escapism, the sky is blue all year around, everyone is sooo happy washing rocks in rivers and the animals are never PITAs, unlike my pets. No one ever has money problems, and the cost of living is an afterthought as sustainability and self-equilibrium are the utmost priority.

Women have lovely, fulfilling jobs that "they stumbled upon entirely by accident" eg Jilly, who was always very frustrated by the lack of solar heated plant pots for her oriental orchids that she fell in love with on her travels in SE Asia, and one day whilst walking her collie-cross dog Shep in her 50 acre paddock, she stepped in wild horse dung and had the wonderful idea to give up her full time job and start a sustainable business making her own handmade pots from dung. She did the completely obvious thing of untying her neck scarf, filling it up with as much dung as she could find, and carried it back to her 6th century renaissance 12 bedroom house, where her husband Robert greeted her with a warm smile at the site of her Dick Whittington style knapsack, and immediately started building her a cosy workshop-cum-snug where she hosts the local edible flower supper club 3 nights a week, when she's not up to her elbows in excrement. She had no idea if her £199 pots would take off, and was most shocked when she had 10,000 orders in her first week.

No one needs a business plan or a budget, peace of mind and a sense of zen is much more important than bringing in a wage. Forty two year old Carol was so stressed by her teaching job that she just handed in her notice and planted 40,000 carrots in her small holding. Originally intended to be a business, Carol admits sheepishly that she's so fond of each one (who she has given names to) that she cannot bear to part with them. "My husband Marcus jokes that they are my babies", she laughs, "but in reality it's true. These carrots have regulated my sensory nervous system, which the daily grind of work had just worn away. I simply had to give in to what my body was telling me. Watching each and every one of them grow and develop their own little personalities is nature's way of giving back to me".

First world problems keep these people awake at night, such as 31 year old Jackie, who couldn't find curtains for the nursery that reflected the personality of her unborn son. "I really sensed that he he felt a deep connection with the Ottoman empire, and I was just flabbergasted at the lack of relevant material on the market", she laments. At 39 weeks, she jumped upon a flight to Istanbul, after having a dream that the perfect print was in Topkapi Palace. "Everyone thought I was utterly mad", she laughs, but when she was hypnotized by the Turkish style tulip motif tiles in the palace state room, baby Freddie shot out of her uterus, confirming to her that this was the perfect print for the nursery. Three hours after giving birth she opened her business designing bespoke curtains for equally distressed parents-to-be. "They understood the stress as they were undergoing the same thing. Being able to relate to them really helped me zone into what it was that they really wanted. Sometimes words aren't enough, you have to be able to finely tune stress signals others are giving out in order to see their vision". Jackie (and baby Freddie) now work out of her garden studio, and she has been commissioned by the Royal Family to produce the perfect print for sash window in King Charles' water closet. "Every morning I wake up with a warmth that radiates throughout my body, and I love that Freddie has input in my work, this is all because of him, really".

AIBU to want to a job like this? Where everything is a lovely colour and all the materials are made of earthen clay and rare plant dyes? No money problems, no annoying customers, no bins that haven't been lifted by the council (there's no need for a bin anyway, all rubbish is fully compostable). Do people really have a business where people pay to meditate with sheep, or is Country Living an entertaining work of fiction?

OP posts:
Thread gallery
20
pearbottomjeans · 18/03/2025 20:59

Haha I was actually enraptured by Jilly’s story there so I don’t blame you at all. I’m taken in!

Gatekeeper · 18/03/2025 21:06

I am giving you a standing ovation for the glory of your post OP what a fibber...I am sitting down necking cheap crisps from Lidl

Leeto888 · 18/03/2025 21:11

I love this.

Bigearringsbigsmile · 18/03/2025 21:12

I remember years ago a Christmas edition where this woman was describing the way she went to s church furnishers and bought boxes of beeswax candles for her house, wrapped all her presents in sheet music and had holly snd ivy draped everywhere. The pictures were so beautiful and dreamy. I still think sbout it every Christmas and I wonder if she ever succumbed to tinsel.

Ribenaberry12 · 18/03/2025 21:12

I definitely know a Jilly and a Jackie and I love this post.

Screamingabdabz · 18/03/2025 21:13

Brilliant op. YANBU.

I live in a deprived area where people live on soulless new build estates if they’re lucky. The “…I sourced hand painted antique tiles at a delightful tea house in Marrakesh which match beautifully with the hand carved rainforest wood panelling in the en-suite guest room when I was decorating my tumble down 10 bedroom Cotswold bolt hole …” is so far removed from my every day existence that it reads like a copy of Viz ‘spoilt bastard channels pretentiousness’.

madamweb · 18/03/2025 21:13
Grin

I used to pour over country living magazine as a child. It's no wonder the real world has been a perpetual disappointment!

evilharpy · 18/03/2025 21:14

I love this post and I love the OP 💜

StrawberrySquash · 18/03/2025 21:14

All of these stories should be required by law to come with a section that lays out the finances and accounts. I need to know how these people afforded not to earn for so long!

Screamingabdabz · 18/03/2025 21:15

StrawberrySquash · 18/03/2025 21:14

All of these stories should be required by law to come with a section that lays out the finances and accounts. I need to know how these people afforded not to earn for so long!

I can tell you. It’s hedge funds and trust funds.

crackofdoom · 18/03/2025 21:20

StrawberrySquash · 18/03/2025 21:14

All of these stories should be required by law to come with a section that lays out the finances and accounts. I need to know how these people afforded not to earn for so long!

Husband Hugo is invariably a hedge fund manager.

ssd · 18/03/2025 21:20

Love this

Pianoaholic · 18/03/2025 21:20

Love this. I am.obsessed with the programme Escape to the Country, and it's got similar vibes to this magazine. Often the people seem very young to be retiring and they often seem to have ideas to set up a glamping business or cookery school etc.
But is always annoys me when they walk into a massive kitchen diner and 9 times out of 10 say that it's too small. They should see my kitchen!

abracadabra1980 · 18/03/2025 21:22

I love CL-a little escapism from the shite of modern life. Often subscribe when it's on offer.

Theeyeballsinthesky · 18/03/2025 21:24

Yes!! You sometimes see these ppl in the wild on countryfile with women who make art from wood they’ve foraged from the beach or men who weave chairs from reeds. They nearly all live in huge houses and are either retired fund managers or married to retired fund managers 😁

AnnaQuayInTheUk · 18/03/2025 21:25

Brilliant OP.

Sminty2 · 18/03/2025 21:25

You write as if you live in the same village as me! It used to be a normal place but over the last 30 years has morphed into an exclusive enclave of the people you describe so beautifully.
The village shop used to sell normal food and has now been taken over by the ‘doing it properly brigade’, run by a committee and sells Scotch eggs made of marinated tofu with black pudding sprinkles for £7 each.
The fridge contains free range meat, carefully labelled to distinguish Roe deer from Muntjac loin. Seasonal Hare, Rabbit loin and Pheasant are available on request. The rest of us get them from the gamekeeper, same as always say the toffs finish their £1000 Saturday shoot (lunch extra).
The village Fete is organised to within a micrometer of its life and every email has ‘no tat or chain store clothing’ at the top.
It’s both hilarious and horrific to see. Us ‘common folk’ - so quaint darling, they don’t even have an au pair - just bite our tongues, chew our straw and wait for them to migrate further down the M3, so our children can afford to buy homes here again.
Keep writing, you have a real talent.

Plmnki · 18/03/2025 21:25

I haven’t looked at this mag for maybe 30 yrs, I loved it when in my 20s though and living in Australia and missing the U.K. what a trip down memory lane!

now I live in London and get twitchy if I’m more than an hour from, say, Piccadilly. So as much as I loved CL, is there a London life equivalent?

SkaneTos · 18/03/2025 21:27

You are a great writer, OP!

JustBec · 18/03/2025 21:31

Bear with me here: flesh this out a bit. Maybe Jilly, Carol and Jackie are thrown together by some unexpected circumstance - a handsome but reserved new veterinarian moves into the village and they take him under their wing while surreptitiously competing for his affections.
Write the book - maybe a trilogy with one book focusing on each woman - sell the screen play, buy and renovate a vicarage in the country, start business offering writers’ retreats out of a handful of charming shepherd huts at the bottom of your (rambling) garden. Add dopey but adorable Labrador called Hugo. Maybe flirt with his vet. Dream accomplished.

MoetUndChandon · 18/03/2025 21:31

I was getting prepared to be all snide as I generally can’t stand posts by would be creative writers - but yours is amusing OP 😀

Heronwatcher · 18/03/2025 21:32

I mean I like your style but Jilly, Scherezade and Clover mostly have husbands in finance or accounting who fund this type of lifestyle. I love a good house magazine but you can literally play bingo most of them are such a cliche:

  • husband in high powered job;
  • wife does creative career which probably involves bothering friends for commissions or just makes no money;
  • either moved out from London or still have house there;
  • Kids with ridiculous names;
  • dog with also ridiculous name;
  • tall about living in squalid conditions “the first Christmas we all slept in cardboard boxes… next to the 15k Aga”;
  • then it turns out they had an architect, landscaper, interior designer and a troupe of local artisans on site for 18 months;
  • talk about unique style which derives from her Swedish heritage/ his travels in khazskstan/ living in Singapore for 6 years but, surprise surprise they have a house which looks exactly like the same couple from last week…

Honestly the “real” country people live lives nothing like this. It’s fun to observe but not real in the slightest.

Marylou2 · 18/03/2025 21:33

Incredible post! I want to hear more OP. Are you a writer?
I'm obsessed with House and Garden YouTube for similar reasons. Women who start their own lampshade companies showing their exquisite London homes and country boltholes. All funded by Fintech husband or generational wealth of course.

Scrowy · 18/03/2025 21:34

I voted YABU.

I live in the country in a massive house and it's full of spiders and woodworm.

The people you describe are the ones everyone else avoids down the pub. Don't be Jilly, Jilly is a knob.

NeverDropYourMooncup · 18/03/2025 21:38

You forgot to mention in passing that Marcus wears a rather fetching Tattersall shirt, slurry coloured moleskins that have never seen the stomach fur of a working line labrador despite there being three of them and a border terrier lined up in their adorable moonshine moth iridescent silk coats (£594 each from her Dear Friend Fiona Muche-Monein that she's known since their days fluffing the Duchy of Cornwall's breeding rams' little company) and a £750 gilet in the photo when he's taking time out from his little part time job of running a tiny little business in the British Virgin Islands providing laundry services for a biotech firm. Oh, and a tweed cap.

Has she mentioned young Bracheocephalosaurus coming back to visit from his work experience at his best friend's Dad's company yet? It's quite convenient, as he can get from the office to Flumserberg for a couple of runs after work in under an hour. And of course, Dear Tilly should be back from finding herself any time soon - she's only been on her Gap Year since 2015 and will probably be back for that job caressing Aloe Vera plants in the C Suite filing room that only pays £20k a week sometime around 2030.

You can of course buy from the accident baby youngest's hobby business where he curates ecologically friendly material into charming reproduction art prints. Just £159.98 for a joyful string of CRAP Bunting to drape over your 17th Century Oak dining table you've dragged out of the hen house where the Silkies use it to shit roost on when you have impromptu 34 course picnic lunches.