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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:
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LoudSnoringDog · 29/08/2025 10:32

Great OP 😂

RainbowZebraWarrior · 29/08/2025 10:57

Baital · 29/08/2025 09:52

When the children aren't in a photo shoot they are probably chained to that bed 😂

Love this! Yes, I'd imagine they are probably sent to bed at 4pm each day after having bread and jam for dinner.

Pleased the thread has come back to life again. Hope it keeps going as it's a great read.

thecountrywife · 29/08/2025 15:34

Heronwatcher · 28/08/2025 17:39

I don’t much like goats. Always thought of them as less useful Machiavellian sheep. One once ate my map on a DofE expedition.

I’ve also now discovered the woman with horses in the kitchen- do neither of the adults work (I know she’s a writer now but what about the bloke)? There was also a fabulous reel about them doing their house up and turns out they renovated three beautiful outbuildings to live in before they even started on the main house (come stable). All looking like the pages of CL (tastefully frayed kilim, baskets to go astride the horse, clothes drying on the Aga etc).

And as for inigo, why is there a trend for making most of the (beautiful) houses look like they’ve been staged to resemble Wuthering Heights/ little Dorrit (especially those bloody awful kids bedrooms with iron beds straight out of a Victorian workhouse and an eiderdown which looks like it would give you tics). I suspect it’s so that they get acclimatised to boarding school early or so that the kids would rather stay at Gordonstoun or go to their mates houses (with a divan bed and an x box) the next time there is an exeat.

The account you're talking about, the husband has never truly worked in the way most will know, failed racehorse trainer, was Huntsman at a few hunts but left under quite the cloud mid season to go on a safari, as you do!
Then moved to the big house that was gifted to them by his mother and his "job" was doing that up then came the wicker basket saddles 😂

Actually feel a bit sorry for the eldest son, he's not into riding and the mother is so over the top happy the odd time he does ride.

meditatingwithdolly · 29/08/2025 17:28

LoudSnoringDog · 29/08/2025 10:32

Great OP 😂

Please send an email over to the editorial team at Country Living and tell them they are missing out on me!

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meditatingwithdolly · 29/08/2025 17:55

Baital · 28/08/2025 23:18

Goodness me no! Jolyon has inherited a substantial trust fund and has some sort of job in The City with bonuses in the region of a couple of mill each year!

I am the one who runs a business making fishing nets out of spider webs.

Do keep up!

The husbands never look The City type though. They come across the sort that an hour on the beach searching for driftwood (that obviously will be turned into something very expensive) would have them exhausted.
I need to investigate this further, perhaps I can write a book "Country Living: The Common Denominator" detailing how all of us plebs can live the CL life.

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WiddlinDiddlin · 30/08/2025 04:19

Oh no, they are the type that have a place on the board because of Daddy, but only show up in the City once a month for a four hour meeting that involves a lot of sandwiches and posho booze and then they wobble home (possibly via their club, merely to maintain membership, the only person they know there is the boy they fagged for at Eton, who gave them a swirly every day for four years) and back to the basket weaving, I mean wicker saddle basket making.

I am very curious as to how you get the heave ho from being a Huntsman... did he let hounds eat the Lady of the Manors prize poodle?

meditatingwithdolly · 22/09/2025 10:29

Halle BLOODY lulljah! Country Living have finally spotted this thread and are clearly taking our thoughts on board!

Oh joy! Oh rapture! Just opened October's edition to see not one, but two people of colour featured. This has to be a first? The bird watcher guy acknowledged that this hobby is perceived as a 'white persons thing' and how he wants to change this, and one black woman who makes spoons out of foraged food got a major feature where it specifically mentioned it was only possible due to a grant from the Prince's Trust, and she couldn't afford a studio until she started working.

Thank you Country Living for BOWING DOWN to us plebs and you are now showing content from ordinary people, who didn't grow up opening their lump of coal and tangerine on Christmas morning in their linhay in their cosy, modest 11 bedroom cottage set in 50 acres! I am ready to pay the full price per issue if this is the way forward!
Next step is TO TAKE ME ON BOARD!

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meditatingwithdolly · 22/09/2025 10:42

And of course if I get selected for the CL editorial team, I will spell hallelujah properly. I'm quite shooketh, I always thought there was an l before the j, as in hallyloolyah, did anyone else think this? Every day is a school day, I'm not afraid to admit my mistakes and shortcomings. CONTACT ME ASAP COUNTRY LIVING. YOU WILL NOT REGRET THIS!

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Vroomfondleswaistcoat · 22/09/2025 10:47

Have just bought and not yet even flicked through. Am looking forward to the above, amid, no doubt, fifty million adverts for freestanding baths and paint that costs more than my entire house.

CoffeeCantata · 22/09/2025 11:18

I’ve recently severely pruned my rosemary bush and, aided by a YouTube video, have made several lovely little wreaths for my kitchen.

Absolutely delightful! It’s all very well - I can try to live the CL lifestyle, but it’s getting my husband and friends to go along with it and buy into my fantasy…and mine won’t!😢

They’re so prosaic. When they see my creations they tend to ask “What’s it for though?” I don’t suppose William Morris, Laura Ashley or Martha Stewart had that problem.

meditatingwithdolly · 22/09/2025 11:41

CoffeeCantata · 22/09/2025 11:18

I’ve recently severely pruned my rosemary bush and, aided by a YouTube video, have made several lovely little wreaths for my kitchen.

Absolutely delightful! It’s all very well - I can try to live the CL lifestyle, but it’s getting my husband and friends to go along with it and buy into my fantasy…and mine won’t!😢

They’re so prosaic. When they see my creations they tend to ask “What’s it for though?” I don’t suppose William Morris, Laura Ashley or Martha Stewart had that problem.

Yes this is a massive part of the problem. Perhaps we should create a re-education camp for family members, who, have not yet seen the necessity of mushroom brushes, aesthetic compost heap covers and garlands fashioned out of brazil nuts? (picked from your own land, obviously).
I will never forget one episode of Home & Garden where the posho woman lived in a haunted castle Venetian apartment and said her dc's favourite part of Christmas was decorating with pears and pomegranates. And all her male friends tapestried the cushions for her as gifts. From where do we acquire such people?

OP posts:
meditatingwithdolly · 22/09/2025 11:51

CoffeeCantata · 22/09/2025 11:18

I’ve recently severely pruned my rosemary bush and, aided by a YouTube video, have made several lovely little wreaths for my kitchen.

Absolutely delightful! It’s all very well - I can try to live the CL lifestyle, but it’s getting my husband and friends to go along with it and buy into my fantasy…and mine won’t!😢

They’re so prosaic. When they see my creations they tend to ask “What’s it for though?” I don’t suppose William Morris, Laura Ashley or Martha Stewart had that problem.

On a serious note, when I am the chief editor of CL perhaps your rosemary wreath could be my first feature? We could go into the struggles about how your husband didn't even know what it was for, and perhaps set up a gofundme for your studio? We could have a special feature each month called Country Living: Widening Participation (or, for the People not quite yet Like Us). Instead of money, people could donate conkers, pinecones, llamas etc and anything else they foraged off their land. It would be so incredibly wholesome and empowering, you could use the donated stuff to make wreaths, garlands, llama wool thimbles etc to sell. Let me know if that would work for you.

OP posts:
CoffeeCantata · 22/09/2025 12:01

meditatingwithdolly · 22/09/2025 11:51

On a serious note, when I am the chief editor of CL perhaps your rosemary wreath could be my first feature? We could go into the struggles about how your husband didn't even know what it was for, and perhaps set up a gofundme for your studio? We could have a special feature each month called Country Living: Widening Participation (or, for the People not quite yet Like Us). Instead of money, people could donate conkers, pinecones, llamas etc and anything else they foraged off their land. It would be so incredibly wholesome and empowering, you could use the donated stuff to make wreaths, garlands, llama wool thimbles etc to sell. Let me know if that would work for you.

I look forward to it!

And why does no one get as enthusiastic as me about pine cones? I think they’re one of the most beautiful things in nature. My several large bowls of them go unappreciated by the rest of the family too.

I particularly prize those huge ones (stone pine??) which you find lying around in some NT gardens…🤫

meditatingwithdolly · 22/09/2025 12:05

CoffeeCantata · 22/09/2025 12:01

I look forward to it!

And why does no one get as enthusiastic as me about pine cones? I think they’re one of the most beautiful things in nature. My several large bowls of them go unappreciated by the rest of the family too.

I particularly prize those huge ones (stone pine??) which you find lying around in some NT gardens…🤫

I will probably need to employ you to sit along side me at the editorial table handcrafted from an old IKEA desk I found abandoned in my council house alleyway. I hope you have availability, you clearly share my vision 🍍 (That's not a MN stunt pineapple, please just pretend it's a pinecone)

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Heronwatcher · 22/09/2025 12:29

her dc's favourite part of Christmas was decorating with pears and pomegranates. And all her male friends tapestried the cushions for her as gifts. From where do we acquire such people?

From the confines of the editor’s fervid imagination, that’s where. But seriously if my kids got excited about decorating with pears I’d test the water pipes for lead/ assume this was something to do with a Roblox game, and if my partner stated tapestry I’d assume he was having some sort of mid-life crisis and I was about to be introduced to his new friend Patrick.

The other alternative is that the kids have gone to a particularly severe boarding school where fruit is considered to be massive posh haribo so they are genuinely delighted 🤷‍♀️

Just off to google rosemary wreaths.

Baital · 22/09/2025 12:31

meditatingwithdolly · 22/09/2025 11:41

Yes this is a massive part of the problem. Perhaps we should create a re-education camp for family members, who, have not yet seen the necessity of mushroom brushes, aesthetic compost heap covers and garlands fashioned out of brazil nuts? (picked from your own land, obviously).
I will never forget one episode of Home & Garden where the posho woman lived in a haunted castle Venetian apartment and said her dc's favourite part of Christmas was decorating with pears and pomegranates. And all her male friends tapestried the cushions for her as gifts. From where do we acquire such people?

My life has been blighted by having the wrong friends and family... not one of them makes tapestry cushions for me 😭

Heronwatcher · 22/09/2025 12:34

We could go into the struggles about how your husband didn't even know what it was for,

You should count yourself lucky. I asked my partner to get me some rosemary this weekend and he came back with a clump of leylandi branches. He eventually found the herbs but then needed very clear directions shouting at to get it right (“if it smells
like SOAP or TOOTHPASTE it’s not right”).

meditatingwithdolly · 22/09/2025 12:35

Some possible ideas for the re-education camp:

  • participation in group sound baths, whilst someone dances in the middle waving rosemary wreaths. Hopefully as the sound increases, enlightenment will be achieved and participants will be begging to leave in order to fashion their own wreaths.
  • sheep therapy. Prolonged exposure to sheep sitting on your lap until you shed tears
  • being made to use home made brooms to brush up the piles of leaves created from 5 acres of oak trees
  • a workshop with the lady who had a breakdown over not finding a suitable wallpaper for her dd's nursery. After listening to her problems, and the resulting £££££ costs that occurred due to her very necessary house move, a meditative breath work session will resume and continue until you are inspired to create your own wallpaper
  • Christmas decoration competition. Any mention of pound shop tinsel will result in you being flogged with foraged birch wood. The aim here is to reset the mind into the CL default Christmas mode of decor, where old Clementine peels, kiln dried sheep faeces and 'rustic' mould ridden pears are the joys of the year.

I'm open to any other suggestions. There will be an early bird price of £14,599 on the retreat/camp for 4 nights (this does not include accommodation). If you are on a low income (salary of £89 or less per year) there will be a concessionary price of £14,598.

OP posts:
meditatingwithdolly · 22/09/2025 12:41

Heronwatcher · 22/09/2025 12:34

We could go into the struggles about how your husband didn't even know what it was for,

You should count yourself lucky. I asked my partner to get me some rosemary this weekend and he came back with a clump of leylandi branches. He eventually found the herbs but then needed very clear directions shouting at to get it right (“if it smells
like SOAP or TOOTHPASTE it’s not right”).

I've already signed him up. For advertising purposes, we will market it as a retreat, please do not mention anything about the re-education part.

OP posts:
meditatingwithdolly · 22/09/2025 12:46

Baital · 22/09/2025 12:31

My life has been blighted by having the wrong friends and family... not one of them makes tapestry cushions for me 😭

Yes I almost booked an appointment with my GP when I watched this. I had to pull myself together, with a homemade tincture and not dwell on the fact that my 'village' do not deserve to even live. I will find my 🍄 🖌️ tribe in Country Living Heaven.

OP posts:
meditatingwithdolly · 22/09/2025 12:52

Heronwatcher · 22/09/2025 12:29

her dc's favourite part of Christmas was decorating with pears and pomegranates. And all her male friends tapestried the cushions for her as gifts. From where do we acquire such people?

From the confines of the editor’s fervid imagination, that’s where. But seriously if my kids got excited about decorating with pears I’d test the water pipes for lead/ assume this was something to do with a Roblox game, and if my partner stated tapestry I’d assume he was having some sort of mid-life crisis and I was about to be introduced to his new friend Patrick.

The other alternative is that the kids have gone to a particularly severe boarding school where fruit is considered to be massive posh haribo so they are genuinely delighted 🤷‍♀️

Just off to google rosemary wreaths.

Go and wash out your filthy mouth with cold pressed, hand cured tallow soap! Of course the children love this, you could see the glee in their eyes as they pranced around in their starched pyjamas! Our street urchin children are the blight on society, desiring Xboxes and iPhones when they could instead be gifted a family rendition of O Come all ye Faithful around the fireplace. How oh how could we have failed them like this?

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meditatingwithdolly · 22/09/2025 12:59

@Heronwatcher I can only assume your teenage offspring would not be overjoyed to receive a pair of hand weaved Iranian kilim slippers as a gift for an 18th birthday? Climate change, child poverty and lack of housing are all smokescreens for the bigger problems with the youth!

OP posts:
Heronwatcher · 22/09/2025 14:30

meditatingwithdolly · 22/09/2025 12:59

@Heronwatcher I can only assume your teenage offspring would not be overjoyed to receive a pair of hand weaved Iranian kilim slippers as a gift for an 18th birthday? Climate change, child poverty and lack of housing are all smokescreens for the bigger problems with the youth!

Is there someone on Etsy/ tedoo who can do an Iranian kilim rendition of someone from KPop demon hunters or Korean psychopaths murdering each other for money over children’s games? Or perhaps a tuille de jouy wallpaper in a similar vein spots gap in market?

I’ve mentioned the retreat re-education programme to my partner, he says if there’s some mead/ craft ale and it gets him away from my nagging about herbs/ the Korean pop/ murdering, he’s very keen.

Arraminta · 22/09/2025 17:39

Baital · 22/09/2025 12:31

My life has been blighted by having the wrong friends and family... not one of them makes tapestry cushions for me 😭

I feel your pain. I too have been bitterly let down by a distinct lack of tapestry weaving men friends. I can only imagine the look of bafflement on my largely ex military and/or ex rugby playing male acquaintances if I suggested they take up needlepoint?

Baital · 22/09/2025 17:49

In a period of acute boredom i did take up bobbin lace. It takes hours just to make something like a bookmark. I feel handmade lace items are my entry point in CL.

Maybe laundry bags - spending about 20 hours on one basic item seems the way forward.

There must be people who would pay serious money for hand made lace laundry bags?

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