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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To feel low in mood today cos of DC having rich friends!

237 replies

NotUsually · 29/05/2025 12:34

Eugh
I hate myself for feeling like this.
It goes against everything I stand for and yet here I am feeling shit about the very situation that I tell others not to feel bad about!
Both my DC have lovely friends. Every single friend lives in a much bigger, grander house than ours.
We live in a tiny semi, 3 bedrooms but the 3rd bedroom is only 9ft x 6ft with the stair box in it so feels even smaller as its got that big dead space in it.
DC are so lucky that they both have lovely kind friends, and that they both receive regular invites round to their houses.
And I make sure to always invite their friends to ours. I facilitate a lot of play dates and sleepovers and always make sure to give them a nice time.
But now my DC and their friends are getting older (9 and 12) I'm starting to feel awkward and uncomfortable about how tiny our house is, in relation to all of theirs.
Our whole house is very, very small.
Kitchen is 7ft x 10 ft. Can't get a table in there. We have no hallway, front door leads straight in to lounge. Tiny garden.
But we live in such a lovely area, it's a village on the edge of an AONB, the schools are lovely and there is a really lovely community here. Basically, we decided this was the area we wanted to bring our DC up in, but we could only buy a tiny house because the house prices here are sky high due to the area. Ours are the smallest houses in the village. At the time, before DC were even born, when we were planning to start a family, we went for location over size, and I stand by it because the location and village itself is providing my DC with a wonderful childhood.
We bought one of the smallest houses in the village. Everyone else that lives in the row of houses the same as ours are retired people. No famies other than us. Our houses are amongst the smallest in the village. We are living in a village of serious wealth. Grand houses. Listed houses. Massively extended houses. Detached houses. Houses with expanses of woods as their back gardens. Even the semis have all been converted to have loft extensions and enormous rear extensions and double story side extensions and have gigantic gardens.
And every single one of their friends lives in these houses.
DC must notice the difference. Of course they must. They don't usually say anything, but last night DD said very coyly that all her friends have gigantic bedrooms compared to hers (she has the weeny box room, only enough room for her bed and 1 single cupboard). She wants a vanity dressing table which all her friends have, but there simply isn't room in her bedroom. It's not a lot to ask for, and I could afford the vanity table, but there's no room.
DS comes home from friends houses and talks about the quad bike he went on in their garden woods, or the pool he swam in in their garden, or the grounds he ran around in at the back of their house, or huge converted loft with ensuite that's been built especially for his friend, fields for gardens, double fronted houses. DD is telling me all about how her best friend is "having her house made twice as big by the builders".
I know anyway, as I'm friends with all the parents.
When DC friends come round, I stand there dying of embarrassment when the mums or dads come round to collect their kids. It's so embarrassing, knowing how huge their homes are. You could pick up the footprint of my whole house and put it in to just their kitchens.
There's no hope of is moving to a bigger house. We do not have the funds. Our mortgage interest rate has doubled this year after our fixed term ended, and we are kicking frantically beneath the surface just to stay afloat financially. Borrowing more money to move or extend is out of the question.
We get invited as a family to other people's garden parties, Sunday lunches, BBQs, fireworks in the garden on bonfire night, etc., where people invite multiple famies round together, and it's lovely for us to be invited, but we can't ever return the invites because we do not have the space, and I do mean literally. I'm feeling very self conscious that they must all be noting that we never invite anyone to ours, and I feel bad about that,cas they're all so friendly and lovely to us.
DH and I both have shitty public service jobs that have had a pay freeze for over a decade.
All these friends parents work in IT, or banking, or they are medical Consultants.
Nobody else has the shit low paying nose to the grindstone professional jobs that we've got stuck with.
We can't retrain, too old (50s), and can't afford the drop in salary to retrain anyway.
What comes in every month goe's straight back out. We budget hard. But COL crisis has hit us hard meaning we've no hope of stepping up the ladder.
No inheritance, parents in social housing with no savings.
I just feel so shit about not being able to provide better and bigger for my DC.
I've tried so hard to better our circumstances for my DC as I came from a single mum with severe MH problems who was on benefits all through my childhood and we lived on the breadline and I had to deal with a lot of neglect.
But my hard work isn't enough. And when DD said last night "I love my bedroom mummy and im not saying I want a bedroom as big as all my friends have but I wish it was bigger so I could have a little vanity dressing table, I'd love that so much...." it stung. Because she can't have one. And I can't provide a bigger room for her.
BTW my DC both have SEN, and both of them are the most lovely, kind, non assuming, calm, happy, gentle, positive, fun, affectionate and truly loving children. I'm absolutely blessed to have them and I support them emotionallyand mentally and practically as hard as I can, I really work hard at being a good mum.
Our home is calm, safe, happy, decorated nicely, I've put my all into making a tiny space nice.
But I'm feeling utterly shit about myself for not providing better for them, compared to all tbeir friends.
And I don't know what to do with these feelings bubbling around inside of my mind and in my chest.

OP posts:
Thread gallery
10
TheSandgroper · 29/05/2025 15:54

Should you ever think that dc’s friends will notice a lack in your house, make a good cake and plenty of it whenever you host a sleepover. Kids will notice and remember the warmth of your welcome before they notice anything else.

as to the rest of it, just shrug your shoulders. “well, this is home for us and we are happy here”. That’s it.

TonTonMacoute · 29/05/2025 15:54

krustykittens · 29/05/2025 15:23

what really jumped out from your post, OP, is that you and your dc have lots of friends who love to spend time with you all and you live in a great place that makes you happy. The rest is just packaging. I understand your longing for a bigger place but if it’s not possible, it’s not possible. There is no point beating yourself up about it. If you moved to a cheaper area for a bigger house, you wouldn’t have the same life.

Totally agree with this.

When DS was that age he was at a lovely school, he had lots of friends but time and again he would go into school on a Monday and everyone would be enthusing about yet another weekend get together that he hadn't been invited to, just because we weren't in the parent clique.

Grass is always greener OP, your DCs are happy and secure and that really is the most important thing.

CocoPlum · 29/05/2025 15:55

@Ghosttofu99 guess I'm caught not RTFT 😆

toomanycatsonthedancefloor · 29/05/2025 15:56

OP, you come across as such a genuine, lovely, sweet person - and if your friends are anything like you, they see you for who you are, not where you lay your head at night.

For what it's worth, my husband and I live in what many would consider a fairly grand home (you could safely call it a traditional country house) and we mix with all kinds of people from all different kinds of backgrounds, often visiting socially in their home or in ours. They live in all different sorts of houses and flats all across the 'fancy' spectrum. We do not care one jot about the type of houses our friends have - we care about whether we have a good time with them and whether they are good people inside. Bonus points in my book if they have or appreciate cats ;)

Zippidydoodah · 29/05/2025 15:57

Your kids sound lovely and they sound like they have a lovely life.

how about you count your blessings?

JSMill · 29/05/2025 15:59

You have given your dcs a happy loving home environment. That’s all that matters. They might not realise now but they will appreciate it when they are older. I grew up in the kind of house people would envy but I had a shit home life, partly caused by the stress my parents had paying for it and I know other families in the big houses around me were going through it too. You have no idea what goes on behind closed doors.

MarioLink · 29/05/2025 16:00

I lived in a huge house as a child. A huge very unhappy house. I felt so jealous when I went round to my friends houses. They shared rooms with brothers in two bed council houses or four sisters shared two box rooms. But I wanted to live there as they were happy families and they looked like they had everything they needed to me.

BigSkies2022 · 29/05/2025 16:03

We both had (decent) careers in the civil service, one DC, and we got on the ladder in London in the 90s, so ended up with more house than we could get if we were starting out from the same salaries today. We were able to send our child to private school, but we deliberately chose the less posh one on offer because we knew we would look very much the poor relations compared to many of the kids he would make friends with in terms of house size, cars, how much of our own housework we did, did we ski at Christmas, did we have a holiday home in Umbria, that sort of thing.

It's just a fact of life, salaries differ, wealth differs. You sound like you've made excellent choices for your family, OP, and they will appreciate it. But I would say: talk to your children about money, talk about the choices people can make around careers, sectors, how those choices affect what you earn and what you can spend, how much value you might place on fulfilment through work rather than sourcing your personal satisfaction and fulfilment from a variety of things, eg. travel, holidays, being able to retire early, live in a big house - and work supporting those other aims. To be frank, I was staggeringly naive about money and its importance, and didn't get to grips with even the basics until shamingly late. Your children don't have to experience that!

cestlavielife · 29/05/2025 16:06

Such a waste of time to stress over this.
Your kids friends are happy to share.
You can return the favours by meeting them in a pub buying them drinks etc
You can invite one or two kids over at a time.
You cannot achieve wealth just by being jealous and you have what you have . It is what it is. Sounds like you have a lovely family.
Direct your energy elsewhere.

scotstars · 29/05/2025 16:07

I get it. I'm 1 of only a few single parents in dc class so 1 wage household we live in a small flat with no storage..all the flats have a garden most are not taken care of so the area looks scruffy, lots of people who rent and landlords don't care. We have a tiny kitchen, paper thin walls while most of dc friends live 2/3 miles away in a mixed area of lovely victorian houses or new build 3 storey townhouses. I save as hard as I can to move up but on 1 wage its extremely hard I just try to be grateful I'm on property ladder at all it would be much harder starting now

Oceancreature · 29/05/2025 16:12

Your home sounds lovely and you you sound such a thoughtful and caring mum. What a wonderful start in life you’ve given them! There is no shame in your situation it’s just different, hold your head high. Perhaps some sort of fold down vanity table might be possible.

DrPrunesqualer · 29/05/2025 16:12

My friends at school were all super rich. Daddy picking up in the Bentley or Merc whilst I crammed on the bus. Off skiing for February half term plus several other holidays whilst we went to stay at Grandads in Ireland with no heating or running water.
Of course I noticed.
It just made me really ambitious for more whilst all ( yes absolutely all ) of the wealthy kids didn’t.

So your kids may benefit in the long run

neverbeenskiing · 29/05/2025 16:17

You're going to be told that comparison is the thief of joy about 1,000 times, OP 🤣

I think most of us are aware that comparing ourselves and our lot negatively to others doesn't make us feel good, that there is always someone worse off and that we should appreciate what we have. But we're human, so that means from time to time we all have thoughts that aren't particularly helpful. There's no point in beating yourself up for having those thoughts, that just adds to the upset you're feeling. It's not wrong or unnatural for your DD to see something her friend has and think "I wish I had one of those", and it's not wrong or unnatural for you to want to make that wish come true. It doesn't mean that either of you doesn't appreciate what you have.

For what it's worth, when I was 12 I got a scholarship to a private school and started mixing with some very wealthy kids. I remember going to a parties at the homes of a kids who lived on these sprawling estates with tennis courts, indoor and outdoor pools, one of my friends had a croquet lawn etc but I was too busy obsessing about whether the boy I had a crush on liked me back, or excitedly chatting to my friends about whatever band it was we loved at the time to be in awe of my surroundings. I was aware of the difference between me and my classmates, of course. But it wasn't something that I thought much about. The fact that your DD fancies a dressing table in her room doesn't mean she's not having a wonderful childhood.

Iamthemoom · 29/05/2025 16:18

Could something like this work for your DD? https://www.debenhams.com/product/flair-harry-high-sleeper-bed-with-desk-wardrobe-and-storage_p-d1f24a23-907d-4f09-abf3-b4b8f840de7d

just add a mirror so it’s a vanity not a desk.

I get how you’re feeling but it sounds to me like your kids have the best riches. As a child I would have killed for a warm, loving home, no matter how small.

As someone who went from having nothing to having the big house, I tried to always count my blessings and be grateful for what I had. I appreciate not everyone will believe it’s possible and maybe you don’t see a way but I do believe the more you feel gratitude for what you have, the more you attract into your life. It worked for me.

One point regarding you not being able to reciprocate invitations. Could you not invite couples individually? We do a lot of entertaining and I don’t mind because we’re blessed with space but it really irritates DH that we’re rarely invited back. I know it’s because friends feel they can’t compete (we’re both good cooks thanks to our heritage, keep a lovely home on account of my ocd and being a perfectionist and have a nice house on account of making a shrewd purchase then buying a huge wreck but doing all the work ourselves) but I really value every invite we get, no matter how simple the food and I really don’t care what friends houses are like.

One of my best friends lives in a house that sounds teenier than yours but I love going round to be with her. It’s about being with friends and being valued by them. It doesn’t sound like your friends would judge or look down on you. I bet they would be thrilled to be invited even if it’s just for coffee and cake. So don’t be afraid to reciprocate.

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AlpineMuesli · 29/05/2025 16:20

Rich people like having poor friends. (I’m sure rich people can chime in here.) Makes them feel better about having so much, to be able to share it, imo.

LowDownBoyStandUpGuy · 29/05/2025 16:20

Honestly OP your home and life sounds lovely and there is nothing wrong with your house.

Coming at this from the opposite side we have a lovely big house and my DC (same ages as yours) have friends with various types and size of housing and they never, ever comment on it and I don’t think about it either. I grew up in a tiny little council house but it was my home and I loved it and I never felt that people with bigger houses were somehow better off than me, our first two homes before we bought this one were also tiny but we loved them and just got lucky in the post covid boom to make a good profit and be able to buy something much bigger but I don’t look at my DC’s friends homes and judge them.

As long as you love and support your children then you are doing right by them, house size doesn’t matter one bit.

minnienono · 29/05/2025 16:23

Kids do notice but they don’t necessarily mind. We had a larger house when the kids were children but the trade off was a cheaper area on a main road. You live in a nice place, and it sounds like nobody is judging you for your smaller dwelling.

im now remarried and I have a townhouse, it’s smaller but nobody cares - to entertain my family i have to book rooms at the ibis!

BobbyBiscuits · 29/05/2025 16:25

Surely it's positive that your kids are able to spend time with these families, experience their bigger home and maybe get to do some treats that they might get much at home.

As long as the friends and their parents aren't horrible snobs who are condescending towards people less wealthy, then just see them as nice people.

Most people will know folks with more money and possessions than them, and some with less. It's about whether they are decent people with similar interests and values. Not how much is in their wallet.

Delphigirl · 29/05/2025 16:25

Turn it around. Isn't it nice that your kids get the benefit of woods and quad bikes and swimming pools and fabulous playdates? They get those because you have prioritised living in a nice area over more space in a less-nice area. They might like a bigger bedroom but they aren't going to get it. That's fine. We'd all like things we aren't going to get. Its a good lesson in life. It is also a good lesson for kids to know if they really want the swimming pools etc etc etc they should aim for the professions and jobs that will allow them to get them and not those that don't.

LeafyGreenSalad · 29/05/2025 16:36

Can you add shelving and drawers above the stair box to make it into a dressing table?

Smleps · 29/05/2025 16:40

You sound like a lovely mummy and your children seem delightful. All the children need is your love. As long as you have enough money to cover all your bills and some for treats you’re winning. Other people’s lives can look glamorous but looks can be deceiving. Their children don’t have you!

Hwi · 29/05/2025 16:41

To be worried what little shits who achieved nothing in this life apart from being birthed from rich parents, would think about you and your humble abode? Seriously? What example are you setting for your children? Even richer-than-I don't know what people pretend to their children that inherited wealth means nothing, that you have to achieve yourself. This is envy, pure and simple, however you dress it. Nothing good comes out of it and I hope you haven't diseased your children with this horrid envy bug.

Everlore · 29/05/2025 16:41

crumpet · 29/05/2025 12:45

When da was in a box room he had a high bed with a desk under it (which used to be DD’s) Would that be a possibility? A mirror/ lights around it etc could make it into a dressing table.

I was about to suggest this. My friend had a gamer bed put into her son's bedroom for his sixteenth birthday, he hadn't been allowed to have his console in his room before then, it was a high bed with room underneath for a special gaming desk and chair and he loved it. I'm sure something similar would work with a vanity underneath the bed, it's a great way to maximise space.

ThreeGreen · 29/05/2025 16:41

If it helps, I lived in a house that sounds very similar to yours growing up. I’m sure I probably made comments to my parents about our house being small or my friends having better houses. But looking back now all I remember is a happy childhood with parents who spent a lot of time with us. And as an adult I see all the sacrifices they made for us and am eternally grateful for them, and that they made good decisions for us (school choices etc) even if I didn’t agree with them at the time.

Straightjacketsandroses · 29/05/2025 16:43

What I will say is that there will always be someone above you - no matter how rich a person is. Your children will always know people who are richer.

We’re probably one of those families you see: decent-sized house, lovely holidays, good jobs, but our children think their friends have so much more than they do (more in an observational way than moaning about it). Thing is, people just choose to spend their money differently; you could probably sell your house in it’s stunning area and buy one 3 x the size in an absolute shithole, but you’ve chosen location for your family - and I would too!! So you haven’t failed your children at all. You could treble your incomes and living space and still find that comparison is the thief of joy!

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