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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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Vroomfondleswaistcoat · 06/10/2025 10:02

meditatingwithdolly · 06/10/2025 09:50

Well she explains that her husband Rollo would never have agreed to a pink kitchen either, so she just simply didn't tell him. She had some obscure reason (of course) as to why it had to be pink, I'll look it up tonight. Of course he loved it in the end. It is Farrow and Ball, after all.

I see this a lot in interiors magazines (I know, I know! I just can't stop myself, all right?) Women who 'just know' that a certain colour will look right and their husband isn't sure so they paint it anyway while he's out and - Oh! True Wonder! - he loves it!

More like he can't be bothered with the 'well, if you hate it so much, YOU can paint it!' and thinks he can live with 'babysick yellow' or 'silage green' until she gets tired of it.

zingally · 06/10/2025 11:13

Haha! Love it!

Reminds me of "Escape to the Country", when they're all about 35 years old and how are you possibly affording this 6 bedroom converted barn? When according to the presenter, Jasmine makes beeswax lipbalms for a living?!

FairlyFarleigh · 06/10/2025 12:55

Vroomfondleswaistcoat · 06/10/2025 10:02

I see this a lot in interiors magazines (I know, I know! I just can't stop myself, all right?) Women who 'just know' that a certain colour will look right and their husband isn't sure so they paint it anyway while he's out and - Oh! True Wonder! - he loves it!

More like he can't be bothered with the 'well, if you hate it so much, YOU can paint it!' and thinks he can live with 'babysick yellow' or 'silage green' until she gets tired of it.

I suspect Rollo now spends much more time in his linhay, whittling driftwood into hay forks (for stacked rather than baled hay, because haystacks allow hay to breathe whereas bales crush the hay and make it dusty and irritating to the throats of their pygmy goats).
All this to avoid spending time in that tutti frutti kitchen.

Here4the · 06/10/2025 13:31

The husbands I know like that spend most of their time in their office working and probably wouldn't even notice the kitchen colour change. I doubt this would be mentioned in a magazine article.

meditatingwithdolly · 06/10/2025 14:51

FairlyFarleigh · 06/10/2025 12:55

I suspect Rollo now spends much more time in his linhay, whittling driftwood into hay forks (for stacked rather than baled hay, because haystacks allow hay to breathe whereas bales crush the hay and make it dusty and irritating to the throats of their pygmy goats).
All this to avoid spending time in that tutti frutti kitchen.

Rollo has his own studio where he is a hobby joiner. He doesn't even have a job!

OP posts:
meditatingwithdolly · 06/10/2025 15:16

Patina Lady painted her kitchen pink (Nancy's blushes, to be correct) because her inspiration is 1980s circus. It's also very important for her that nothing matches. She would love my house!

OP posts:
RainbowZebraWarrior · 06/10/2025 15:46

meditatingwithdolly · 05/10/2025 14:26

Patina Lady's kitchen. Her and her hobby joiner husband live in a six bedroom, 3 bathroom (+ downstairs loo) home with their two terriers. She manages the CL lifestyle by making banners for parties. I NEED THIS JOB

Christ, that makes me feel a whole lot better about my current messy eccentric and cluttered - but at least all white - kitchen. Mind, mines only cluttered because I've been making many jams, chutneys, and sloe gin with home grown and forraged produce dahlings, as well as lovingly draping bunches of hops everywhere. I actually shit you not. God, I sound like a country living wanker.

The walls remind me of Germolene. I think she probably knows it looks like shite and regrets it, but is having to brazenly style it out

Endlessdogbowlsandbones · 06/10/2025 16:39

plominoagain · 18/03/2025 22:25

Hail fellow spirits ! My mother buys me a subscription every year for Country homes and Interiors , and it’s chock full of houses that mine is going to look like when I grow up . (I’m errrr .. older than 50) And every month I peruse it whilst sitting at my kitchen table , wondering how their artfully curated objets that they sourced whilst travelling with the unborn baby Anemone in the lower Transvaal, somehow doesn’t look like a load of old shite , and furthermore , how long all that Farrow and Ball shade of Old Semen stayed that particular shade of vaguely yellowing white before someone said “Nope , it looks crap” and painted over it with Dulux wipe clean magnolia .

The Farrow and Ball shade… Old Semen 😆😆

meditatingwithdolly · 06/10/2025 16:52

Endlessdogbowlsandbones · 06/10/2025 16:39

The Farrow and Ball shade… Old Semen 😆😆

Patina of Semen sounds much more CL.

OP posts:
newrubylane · 06/10/2025 17:02

SheherazadesSpringNonsense · 19/03/2025 19:54

It turns out I do! Now I have looked up 'linhay' (lean-to roof; open to the elements) it turns out that we have been mistakenly calling ours a 'rotten shed' all these years

We plan to sell our house (in the Cotswolds) next year. I'm now wondering whether we could market the falling-down garage as 'classic linhay with fantastic development potential'.

Endlessdogbowlsandbones · 06/10/2025 17:24

meditatingwithdolly · 06/10/2025 16:52

Patina of Semen sounds much more CL.

True! 😁

meditatingwithdolly · 06/10/2025 19:03

newrubylane · 06/10/2025 17:02

We plan to sell our house (in the Cotswolds) next year. I'm now wondering whether we could market the falling-down garage as 'classic linhay with fantastic development potential'.

Noooooo! It isn't "potential development", it's "an exhilarating opportunity to lovingly restore decades of patina, handcrafted with sensible emotion by the earth's forefathers in 1647". This way, someone who makes 3 lipbalms a year will pay X10 the asking price.
Perhaps seeing as the ungrateful yokes in CL have yet to take me onboard, I could market myself as a CL estate agent? I will call it Patina Homes.

OP posts:
SheherazadesSpringNonsense · 06/10/2025 19:09

Londonmummy66 · 05/10/2025 22:58

Has anyone seen the India Knight article in the Times today - basically a total eyeball of "layered storied items" - to me someone who has failed to "curate" their offering...

IK is everywhere at the moment - she's got a new book about how to pile up the storied layers in the most artful way possible. The fawning over her 🙄(sorry I know that's not very CL but it is vomit-inducing)

newrubylane · 07/10/2025 11:50

meditatingwithdolly · 06/10/2025 19:03

Noooooo! It isn't "potential development", it's "an exhilarating opportunity to lovingly restore decades of patina, handcrafted with sensible emotion by the earth's forefathers in 1647". This way, someone who makes 3 lipbalms a year will pay X10 the asking price.
Perhaps seeing as the ungrateful yokes in CL have yet to take me onboard, I could market myself as a CL estate agent? I will call it Patina Homes.

😆😆😆

meditatingwithdolly · 07/10/2025 18:55

For those plebs who are not yet in the knoweth regarding our fellow CL friends, I'm going to introduce you to several people in each issue.

Can't be arsed to go downstairs to find out his name (I'm in bed, mag is downstairs), but this lovely chap is the epitome of Country Living. He got fed up of medical school so "packed it in" and instead went back packing around Australia (as one does). He decided his real passion was clay (of course!) so got a GRANT to spend one year going around the UK to dig up bits of local clay to make into pots. (WHERE THE HELL CAN I APPLY FOR SUCH A GRANT?!) He obviously has a studio, but the sob story bit is that there was no mention of a "cosy, ramshackle 5 bed farmhouse", so surely this cannot mean that he lives in a 2 bed semi in Grimsby? Country Life we need more details, you have failed here big time!
Trigger warning some of his local clay is nearly running out, Edinburgh for example. However will the earth continue to spin on its CL axis when we have a dearth of pottery that has been infused with a patina of Edinburgh's rocks? The fantastic news is that he does three pottery firings a year, so he must be minted.

To be continued....

To want a Country Living lifestyle?
OP posts:
meditatingwithdolly · 14/10/2025 17:15

Just me again! Can we all take a few minutes to absorb the absolute beauty that is this fine notebook that arrived with me today. £10 for 3 issues plus this FREE notebook. This is a company that clearly values and respects it's customers! I feel like I have been propelled up into the upper set with this finery, I shall have to seek out posh villages now to sit outdoors and make notes! When everyone sees me with this they will do a secret Masonic style head nod at me, understanding that I am one of them.
Country Living seems so incredibly low brow now.

To want a Country Living lifestyle?
OP posts:
Gatekeeper · 14/10/2025 21:07

Goodness...your postie must be slow- that's taken him 56 years to deliver it!!!

NeverDropYourMooncup · 14/10/2025 21:18

Vroomfondleswaistcoat · 03/10/2025 13:37

On the plus side, as a result of reading this month's copy I have learned that my furniture isn't 'old and scruffy' - no! Rather it has 'the patina of age'.

Like me then.

I've got some utterly Country Living dining chairs.

'The chair the cat sits on to watch us cooking? Oh, both of them were made from Oak trees that were saplings at the time of the Salem Witch Trials.'

It's true. However, they cost me fifteen quid and bus fare for two people to get back from the junk shop because I was too cheap and lazy to catch two buses to IKEA for a couple of folding chairs instead.

Hard to see the difference underneath a fluff encrusted red gingham cushion and a fat arsed cat, tbh.

Suninthe · 15/10/2025 18:13

this thread has made my week cant stop laughing.. reminded me of when DC were little and I rented a little cottage in Norfolk and tried to channel my CL desires...picture The Holiday, drifts of coastal loving perennials, village green, pub full of quirky locals with ££££ cars in the car park etc. My youngest (4) was going through a non hair brushing phase, I decided to let her be and become the tousle haired moppet of a CL magazine - you know the ones with jumpers which looked like your nan knitted them in 1965 but prob cost about £500 , barefoot, long skirt. By the end of the week she looked like she should have a dog on a rope and living in a tree house in wild Wales, wasnt the look I was going for, not that there is anything wrong with that of course. Plus my DSS hadnt got the vibe and kept on scrapping on aforementioned village green, coastal planting etc and DSis turned up with fags. bottles of cheap rose and didnt get it either and it took me hours to comb DD hair out - I think she ended up getting a number 3 when we got home... memories

WiddlinDiddlin · 19/10/2025 05:30

Oh I have just found the most perfect CL source of income ever...

A shop that makes paint, oh but not any paint.

Blue watercolour paint. 5 shades, all using the same pigment - Lapis lazuli.

They sell just 1 of those shades in a tube of paint (which is £31 for 15ml, plus shipping because they are obviously on the arse end of the moon). You can buy the other pigments as powder (a billionty quid for a tiny sniff of blue dust).

I mean it's a nice shade of blue... buuuuuuuuut... not sure it's keeping me in sourdough bread and artisanal cushion covers.

meditatingwithdolly · 25/10/2025 08:30

WiddlinDiddlin · 19/10/2025 05:30

Oh I have just found the most perfect CL source of income ever...

A shop that makes paint, oh but not any paint.

Blue watercolour paint. 5 shades, all using the same pigment - Lapis lazuli.

They sell just 1 of those shades in a tube of paint (which is £31 for 15ml, plus shipping because they are obviously on the arse end of the moon). You can buy the other pigments as powder (a billionty quid for a tiny sniff of blue dust).

I mean it's a nice shade of blue... buuuuuuuuut... not sure it's keeping me in sourdough bread and artisanal cushion covers.

This is exactly the sort of business that sustains a cosy, 12 bedroom cottage on a 216 acre small holding!

OP posts:
meditatingwithdolly · 25/10/2025 09:04

Oh. My. God What in the Universal Credit is going on here?!

You might remember I've been eagerly awaiting the thump of my first edition of my new elevated status of Country Life magazine. After the rapturous joys of the FREE notebook that is a silken, warm bath for painful, day 3 conjunctivitis eyes; my expectations have been at stratospheric levels. I even went as far as divorcing myself from all of the Jackie's and Juniper's of Country Living, as I have my dignity and know where I'm not wanted.

You can only imagine when I heard that glorious thump my heart raced and I sprinted the 49cm from my sofa to my front door, where my postie was shouting expletives on the other side due to getting his sausage fingers trapped in my broken letterbox.

Only to discover, DAVID BECKHAM as the GUEST EDITOR! Prancing around, masquerading as a fake shepherd and even pretending that Victoria is "obsessed" with gardening. Are all the other 2 million possible editors off on the sick?! As if the mere pictures are not enough to make me purge my bowels of last night's yellow sticker quinoa salad, the captions.....well, what can I say, without sounding mean? It reminded me of the annual Year 3 School magazine!

Sir David, on walking in the Scottish Highlands:

I wasn't expecting to have to do so much walking - we all felt it the next day - but we loved it

Upon his extensive landscaping:

I have planted a circular rose garden so that I can grow my rose at our house.

His great passion for trees:

Buying mature trees is one of my favourite things to do, although there's always a risk with planting bigger, older ones and there are a couple that I wish I had put in different places

Good Lord, my pearls are not only mumsnet-ily clutched, but I've torn them off my neck and thrown them at my peeling woodchip wall in a fit of rage! I'm sure the actual landed gentry are doing exactly the same! How many admissions to The Priory have come about due to this tragedy upon mankind? David did not even have the decency to add in one single sob story, or have any sleepless nights over designs, and no sign of a linhay!!!! I'm too embarrassed to even put this in the kerbside recycling box, straight to the compost pile it shall go! I'm definitely going to need some sheep meditating or alpaca stroking therapy to get over this! My nerves are absolutely wrecked!!!

Country Living I'm back on board, willing to give you a final chance!

To want a Country Living lifestyle?
To want a Country Living lifestyle?
OP posts:
Gatekeeper · 25/10/2025 10:22

I wouldn't sully my splendid compost bin with that...only decent thing to do is pour petrol over it and set alight <nods sagely>

meditatingwithdolly · 25/10/2025 10:25

Gatekeeper · 25/10/2025 10:22

I wouldn't sully my splendid compost bin with that...only decent thing to do is pour petrol over it and set alight <nods sagely>

Yes I completely agree, I didn't want to come across melodramatic though! My compost pile would oxidise at the mere thought of being fertilised by oiks such as the Beckhams!

OP posts:
Baital · 25/10/2025 10:38

PLANTING MATURE TREES??????

One plants young trees knowing one's great grandchildren will benefit.

Planting mature trees flies in the face of everything CL stands for.

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