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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

To be sick and tired of being asked where I am from

756 replies

Playdoughy · 21/12/2025 00:36

Just that really.
I am not from the UK, I've lived here a good portion of my life, my child was born here, my husband is also not from the UK (different country than me), and every single time everywhere - restaurants, get-togethers, parties we are invited to, standing in a queue, riding a bus, paying for a book in a bookshop - I really do mean everywhere and every single time - we both get asked where are we from - nicely and in a friendly manner ofcourse.

Now, to be clear - I am proud of where I am from, I don't mind talking about my country, a lot of beautiful things to say. I also don't expect people to assume I am from around here - I am aware of my accent 😁 so it's not like I am 'offended' that I am recognised as a foreigner...
I am just simply tired of the one and the same conversation every single time, day after day, all these years. If after my response I get - 'ah interesting I was wondering about accent' - fine, topic finished. But 90 percent of the time this goes into full conversation - Oh interesting, so what about xyz, how is xyz, do you xyz, how do you xyz.

When people engage into these conversations - does it really never cross their mind that this poor person you are about to interrogate about their roots probably gets that same question all the time and maybe just maybe is tired of it.
How about a good old weather themed conversation? Or asking about where I bought my bag, or recommend a movie, or simply rant about the ridiculous prices... anything but - 'so where are you from?'
And yes I know that the default answer to my post may be - 'If you don't mind me asking but - where are you from?' It is not even funny anymore.

Also is there anything I could potentially do to communicate that these questions are not exactly welcomed, without being rude or sounding like I am trying to hide something or being a weirdo.

OP posts:
landlordhell · 21/12/2025 12:29

I always think it’s nice to ask questions about people. I get it may be repetitive but surely you’re not always meeting new people?

Crushed23 · 21/12/2025 12:31

I had a friend in London who was born in England to parents who were born in England, and when she answered “England” to this question (rightly so), 90% of the time she would be pressed further with questions like “but what about your parents, where are they from?” Or “but in terms of of ethnicity, where are you from?”

Very bizarre. I don’t know how someone who was born in England, as were both their parents, and who’s lived in England all their life, can be anything other than English.

2dogsandabudgie · 21/12/2025 12:31

IhadaStripeyDeckchair · 21/12/2025 11:19

I'd answer the question literally

  • well I was brought up in Small village, then moved to city, then town and now current town. So all over the place but I think of current town as home now.

It's a racist question, a way of saying you're not from here so why are you here? which is offensive. I'd never give the name of my birth country for that reason.

Of course it's not a racist question don't be daft. I think the problem is that younger people are so glued to their phones and don't make small talk anymore that when someone does strike up a conversation with them they don't know how to engage and just pass the time of day with other people. It's part of British culture to talk about the weather, traffic, whether someone is local, how busy the shops are/aren't etc. There's no hidden agenda involved.

katseyes7 · 21/12/2025 12:33

*FiveShelties *
I'm from the North East (of England), but living in Yorkshire.
Literally every day at work (supermarket checkout) l'd get asked where l'm from, because my accent is so different from a Yorkshire one!
Some people just asked where l'm from originally, others remarked that they loved my accent. Which was lovely!
I also got some odd ones. I was once asked which part of Scotland l'm from, the strangest was a young lad telling me l sounded like Carol Vorderman.
And she's Welsh....

EatYourDamnPie · 21/12/2025 12:33

Dagda · 21/12/2025 12:24

Yes but “banter” about somebodies country or attitude because they think it is “bad” is very different to just asking someone where they are from because they have an accent,

I don’t sound like I’m from where I live. I’m from a different region but my accent doesn’t fit with that either. So I often quizzed about where my accent comes from.

Yes but I don’t know what people’s intentions are , or how they’ll react do I? I actually used to care and even get hurt and lots of other feelings.I am particularly worried if it happens when I’m with DD , because she doesn’t need to deal with that shit.

Imagine you’re at a work social , and a coworker you don’t know well asks this, you answer , friendly and open (before I get accused of having an attitude again) and their next question is “are you even legal?”. Like wtf ? Where do you go from there?

Hankunamatata · 21/12/2025 12:36

It's just part of living in a different country. I get asked where I'm from daily and what brought me to where we live now. It's just people making conversation. Just keep your replies light and breezy.

landlordhell · 21/12/2025 12:36

EatYourDamnPie · 21/12/2025 12:33

Yes but I don’t know what people’s intentions are , or how they’ll react do I? I actually used to care and even get hurt and lots of other feelings.I am particularly worried if it happens when I’m with DD , because she doesn’t need to deal with that shit.

Imagine you’re at a work social , and a coworker you don’t know well asks this, you answer , friendly and open (before I get accused of having an attitude again) and their next question is “are you even legal?”. Like wtf ? Where do you go from there?

Walk away and report them

Baahbaahmutton · 21/12/2025 12:39

IhadaStripeyDeckchair · 21/12/2025 11:19

I'd answer the question literally

  • well I was brought up in Small village, then moved to city, then town and now current town. So all over the place but I think of current town as home now.

It's a racist question, a way of saying you're not from here so why are you here? which is offensive. I'd never give the name of my birth country for that reason.

Bit I am not from here so they don't even have to say it. My face, accent, upbringing, stupidity tolerance, openness are not from here.
How is asking about that obvious things racist and offensive?

EatYourDamnPie · 21/12/2025 12:41

landlordhell · 21/12/2025 12:36

Walk away and report them

So more work and hassle for me. Brilliant!

DoYouThinkYouCouldTell · 21/12/2025 12:41

I am interested in people. No matter their accent.

My accent does not fit my surroundings, and when I first moved here there was some PA bollocks from a few people (men) because of my accent. Definitely not my race, just accent.

Unfortunately, asking someone 'where you from ' isn't always received well as I'm sure that has been followed by negative comments etc.

Having said that, I have had some great conversations, learned a lot, and found some great restaurants by starting conversations or asking about people's country of birth.

If you don't want to have that discussion you are free to say that. The askers feelings aren't your problem 🤷🏻‍♀️

Didimum · 21/12/2025 12:43

EatYourDamnPie · 21/12/2025 12:25

Oh , you sweet summer child.

It was a joke.

GarlicRound · 21/12/2025 12:49

afatatha · 21/12/2025 04:43

I could not disagree more - this question is the bread and butter of social interaction for a reason and the fact that there are so many different backgrounds out there is exactly why it's normal and healthy to be interested. Sometimes I've asked it, sometimes the other person has asked first, but every lifelong friendship or meaningful connection I've ever made has either started with this question or else it's come up pretty early on in the conversation (I've lived in the UK and in two different foreign countries - one context very white, the other not at all). It works so well for most of us because it takes you from small talk into something that can become funny, meaningful and engaging more or less immediately if two people genuinely want to connect.

Of course, if someone doesn't want to answer for whatever reason then they can say so and the conversation can move on to another topic, but if we all decide that it's rude and offensive to show an interest in another person's background then I personally think we lose something important. Having said that, the OP seems more concerned with boredom than offence and would prefer to talk about the weather or where her bag came from. I can't say I've ever had an interesting or engaging conversation about the weather or a bag but then we're all different I suppose.

the fact that there are so many different backgrounds out there is exactly why it's normal and healthy to be interested

This is a good point. I can probably tell you where everyone I've ever known was born or grew up. With English people it's a town or county - or, if it's a big city, which part of that city. With others, probably just the country unless they talk about it often.

GarlicRound · 21/12/2025 12:59

GreyCarpet · 21/12/2025 09:02

I think some posters are missing the point.

Not wishing to speak for the OP but I would imagine that the occasional question at a new job or at a party would be expected and not a problem.

But the OP has no obligation to engage in 'polite conversation' with strangers or 'show off about her culture' just to satisfy someone else's nosiness curiosity. She shouldn't have to 'get in there first' or 'steer the conversation' when she has no interest or need to speak to someone in the first place.

Well, okay, then she doesn't like random small talk?

TorroFerney · 21/12/2025 13:02

dreamiesformolly · 21/12/2025 01:48

But OP doesn't owe people small talk, however interesting other people may find it. Especially as it's (potentially) of a somewhat personal nature.

But op must be talking to them for them to hear her accent and ask her? Or does op mean people serving in shops and bars? It's not living up to the London stereotype of no one speaking is it!

silverwrath · 21/12/2025 13:28

It happens wherever you are in the world. It's certainly not a trait specific to the British. We were asked it constantly when we visited the US. We're from Scotland. It did become irritating after a while. But we just had to suck it up because it wasn't done out of malice. Just curiosity.

FellowSuffereroftheAbsurd · 21/12/2025 13:29

YANBU, and sadly I've not yet worked out a solid polite way to manage it yet.

I get it a lot, I've tried altering how I speak, but so far been unsuccessful - where I've lived for a couple decades now has a fairly light accent, for lack of better descriptor, and the help I've sought out and speaking exercises I've done hasn't yet been able to produce a local accent, just a mixed one. If I could change it, I would, in a heartbeat.

when I hear that question, it's not just the drain of it happening often, it's bracing for the unknown of what comes next. As much as people want to pretend it's just that people are interested and curious - that's not my experience and really, even if it was true, I wish there was something more interesting about me to talk about than why I still sound weird.

I've had the person who sounds like they're just being curious turn around and rant about how they knew I wasn't local and why they have an issue with that or how ridiculous it is that I still have an accent after over 20 years or demand to know if my loyalty is to the Crown. I've had people start to list the countries they think it's acceptable to move here from. I've had people go from sounding nice to being really angry that they've guessed where I grew up wrong to the point that I will now lie if people do that, I've been followed at work, through closed doors, by a professional in another department after I'd honestly answered their question because she wanted to tell me what she thought I'd sounded like and when I told her that I was uncomfortable and really needed to focus on my work (she knew I was preparing to work with a child victim of rape who was waiting in the next room with her family), she continued on with how interesting she thinks different parts of how I sound is - I felt like I was no longer a professional to her, just a curiosity that she needed to work out of her system before she walked away, no interest at all in me as a person, just in getting her thoughts on my voice out of her system at me.

And that's the people who ask. I've been followed around shops with people mocking how I say certain words having made the mistake of asking a staff member a question. My kids and I have all been shouted at in the street for how we talk and I've been called all sorts for asking grown adults to leave my kids alone when they've refused to believe my kids were born and raised here. I've had medical professionals say my older two children's communication difficulties are because of my accent (they were later diagnosed as autistic), I've had to get involved at one of my kid's schools because she was being bullied after a teacher had started to make near daily jokes and asking her questions like wanting her to explain how the medical system in the country the teacher assumed my kid was from. I had to threaten to make a formal complaint to get the school to intervene, up to that point, they kept telling DD that the kids mocking and insulting her for her accent were just 'interested'.

So yeah, maybe I'm a bit chippy, maybe I need to lighten up or work harder on getting rid of what's left of my childhood accent, maybe I need to do better to engage with people and be interested. I still don't think it's unreasonable to be sick and tired of hearing the same question all the time and wanting to not feel pressured to be polite answering personal questions just because of a difference.

Peopke just need to lighten up a bit. It’s polite to show an interest in others. Would you prefer it If nobodyacknowledged your accent? I personally think it’s ignorant to do that.

Yes. I'd absolutely prefer for people talked about or had an interest in what I said or anything else rather than how I say things. Why I sound different and why I look different are my two least favourite topics to have with strangers, and I'm fine with the latter when it's about my hair or clothes or something I chose. I didn't choose how I sound.

I think it's a bit ignorant to in this time where there is so much anti-immigrant rhetoric going on and so much news of issues in other countries to not at least consider when hearing a foreign accent that the person with it might not want the reminder of that we can't blend in that most of us really don't need or that talking about where we're from may not be light small talk comfortable topic. I mean, I fled my country of origin as my alternatives were homelessness or forced marriage - I don't tell the people who are just being curious that because that's not the small talk they're looking for, as many have said - people who ask where I'm from, then why I'm in the UK aren't really interested, they're being social -- but it does mean that to be polite, I need to lie on a regular basis. It's not the worst thing, but it can be draining.

It feels a little misanthropic - and as though these days people can’t win. If no one shows any interest people feel invisible, unseen, lonely and disconnected from society, but if a stranger shows interest, tries reach out and try to connect on a human level by asking where you are from that’s invasive and loaded.

Often, when people ask me this, they've entirely ignore what I've said for how I've said it. I find that very disconnecting.

And yes, if you look at the news around us, anything potentially do to with immigration is loaded right now.

Just embrace it, see it as an opportunity to show off your culture or language. It's wonderful that you're different and add interest to people's lives. Please don't get frustrated by the questions.

I left my country of origin because I wasn't safe. There is nothing about it I want to show off.

If the only interest I can add to people's lives is that I sound weird, then I don't think I've really added anything of value.

Jaxhog · 21/12/2025 13:36

Unfortunately, most people are a bit clueless when it comes to making conversation, so they jump on the most obvious (to them) opening question. It isn't personal, and it means they want to be friendly. As a southerner (UK) with a somewhat RP accent, I invariably get asked that question whenever I'm in the North, South West or Wales.

The only answer is to wear a striking piece of clothing so they can ask about that instead.

Jaxhog · 21/12/2025 13:39

People are just weird! When I tell people I'm half Canadian, many say they can hear the accent. Which is pretty funny since I've never lived there.

Elmspringwater · 21/12/2025 13:46

Elopeme · 21/12/2025 00:49

YABU because I love meeting and chatting to people from other countries - much more interesting conversation than discussing the weather or where your handbag is from.

Me too.

Etatauri · 21/12/2025 14:12

2dogsandabudgie · 21/12/2025 12:31

Of course it's not a racist question don't be daft. I think the problem is that younger people are so glued to their phones and don't make small talk anymore that when someone does strike up a conversation with them they don't know how to engage and just pass the time of day with other people. It's part of British culture to talk about the weather, traffic, whether someone is local, how busy the shops are/aren't etc. There's no hidden agenda involved.

But then equally people aren't being very creative with their small talk, which the op is calling out as repetitive and dull. Both can be true. I have a southern english accent but live in the north. Can't remember the last time someone asked about the weather tbh, everyone goes straight for 'you're not from these parts are you'.

AutumnAllTheWay · 21/12/2025 14:19

Oh my days.

If people have a strong accent and were in the midst of polite convo, I almost always ask where theyre from. I dont care really, I always thought it sounded welcoming anf interested.

Maybe I wont in the future!

Moanranger · 21/12/2025 14:20

@FellowSuffereroftheAbsurd says it well. What many many previous posters fail to understand I this is NOT about making polite conversation in a social setting. It is about being regularly interrupted by complete strangers in public the moment they hear my accent. I posted about this already a few hours ago.
It is othering.
It reflects badly on the questioner.
It suggests xenophobia.
For those who question the othering aspect, that is how it makes me feel. And that is a legitimate feeling in the circumstances.

Daisymay8 · 21/12/2025 14:20

Can you come up with an answer that doesn’t encourage conversation eg Russia, French Guyana ( hoping no one knows where this is) , Brittany (many people know this place), Luxembourg (boring) , New York ( not sure there is much to add to that) etc

EatYourDamnPie · 21/12/2025 14:36

AutumnAllTheWay · 21/12/2025 14:19

Oh my days.

If people have a strong accent and were in the midst of polite convo, I almost always ask where theyre from. I dont care really, I always thought it sounded welcoming anf interested.

Maybe I wont in the future!

Great!

rebeccachoc · 21/12/2025 14:42

Thanks for saying this OP, I'll be more careful asking it myself, if it is annoying. I don't ask everyone I meet with an accent, just people I'm going to be in contact with regularly, like the carers for my family member so I can understand / relate to them a bit better.

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