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AIBU?

Share your dilemmas and get honest opinions from other Mumsnetters.

AIBU to think my parents are ignorant & somewhat racist ???

521 replies

ForCyanShaker · 27/06/2026 20:02

DH and I are both mid 40s. We moved to Dubai nearly 18 years ago for jobs, what was meant to be temporary became permanent, and we’ve built our lives here. We are still British, still expats, but very settled.

Our children were both born in Singapore as we were there for work for a while too. They’re British citizens but have never lived in the UK. We visit 6 or so times a fear. Frequent enough for them to somewhat know England or at least know where DH and I are from/grew up. They’ve done all the sightseeing, London eye, Scotland, Wales, Cotswolds, Cornwall etc they’ve been UK

They attend an international school here which is academically strong and well regarded. It’s also affiliated in various ways with UK private schools and a lot of the teaching staff are British. It follows a fairly rigorous curriculum, and many students go on to UK universities.

But the reality of the school is that it’s very international, as you’d expect. Their friendship group includes children from England, Scotland, America, Barbados, Bermuda, South Africa, Australia, India and many other countries. That’s just their normal.

We recently sent my parents a school class photos because they asked for it. My parents’ reaction really shocked us. They focused entirely on the fact it “doesn’t look English” and that there are “so many non-English children” in the class. My mum said she found it upsetting and that it made her feel sad for my sons.

We’ve also had similar reactions to other things. We sent a photo from my eldest son’s birthday recently around 20 children at a party here. Again, instead of being happy, the comments were about how it must be “just rich international kids” and that this isn’t a normal upbringing, and that we should be coming back to England.

The same narrative keeps coming up: that the children are “barely English anymore”, don’t sound English, don’t understand England properly, and that we’re somehow denying them a “proper British childhood”.
Even the accents get mentioned, they don’t have traditional English accents, more of an ‘international school’ accent despite DH and I having very southern England accents , which apparently is another concern.

What I struggle with is that from our perspective, none of this is negative.
My children are happy, confident, well educated, and very comfortable around people from all backgrounds. They don’t really think in terms of nationality in the way I grew up doing. They just see friends.

They are very well travelled, have lived this international lifestyle all their lives, and are completely at ease in multicultural environments. I actually see that as a strength rather than something missing.

But my parents seem to view it as a loss, like they’ve ended up with grandchildren who are somehow less “British” than they expected, and that this needs correcting by moving back.

They’re also very keen for us to return to the UK permanently, offering to buy us a house in cobham, but we simply don’t want to. I grew up in cobham, I don’t want to live there now. We have a good life here, we feel safe, the children are thriving, and we’re not ready to leave.

I grew up in Surrey and part of me does remember how small and insular things could feel, and I don’t think I want to go back to that for my children.

I feel guilty because I understand they miss us and want us closer, especially as they get older. But I also feel frustrated that everything about our children’s lives here is being framed as “wrong” or “less British”.

First it was ‘when are you two going to have children’ now I don’t think they love our children. They’re not willing to accept them. They’re still young, we can move back to the England and they’ll get an English accent but we don’t want to and also why does it matter. There’s more things my parents have said. Another example that really pissed me off was along the lives of what if one of the boys bring home a girl that isn’t English. Why does it matter??? It’s a disgusting way to view the world.

OP posts:
ForCyanShaker · 29/06/2026 20:26

Enidrocks · 29/06/2026 20:21

I quote you

my parents are ignorant and racist

I agree ?

OP posts:
Enidrocks · 29/06/2026 20:30

ForCyanShaker · 29/06/2026 20:18

I haven’t said that ? I think maybe you’ve misunderstood

Ah sorry I have misunderstood
so your children will now have nothing more to do with the racists. Relief!

ForCyanShaker · 29/06/2026 20:30

Enidrocks · 29/06/2026 20:21

Oh so you moved there 18 years ago but you have been posted in other countries and moved to them? So how long have you been in Dubai since the last posting? Is it normal to return multiple times to the same country?

UAE has been the most consistent. It just depends on policy, where your skills are needed and other factors. I’m not going to into all the details.

I would like for my children to also have a little bit of experience in the uk. DHs job isn’t permanent and I can’t just get permanent residency just like that especially not in UAE it operates differently.

We moved 18 years ago, it’s essentially been Dhs ‘home base’ outside the UK but between that time we’ve both had temporary duty travel. Frequent movement was much more common for us back then than now because of children.

OP posts:
Enidrocks · 29/06/2026 20:42

ForCyanShaker · 29/06/2026 20:30

UAE has been the most consistent. It just depends on policy, where your skills are needed and other factors. I’m not going to into all the details.

I would like for my children to also have a little bit of experience in the uk. DHs job isn’t permanent and I can’t just get permanent residency just like that especially not in UAE it operates differently.

We moved 18 years ago, it’s essentially been Dhs ‘home base’ outside the UK but between that time we’ve both had temporary duty travel. Frequent movement was much more common for us back then than now because of children.

So in the past 18 years you’ve moved around - from Dubai back and forth.

Yes definitely wise to settle in England then for the secondary schooling. This would be unsettling to have to do in your teens when studying

just keep your parents away from them!

Fulloff · 30/06/2026 06:08

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JHound · 30/06/2026 09:42

Enidrocks · 29/06/2026 19:36

Your kids can do the IB in Dubai

There seems to be a weird bitterness about OP wanting to return to England one day. What’s wrong with that?

iwishtoo · 30/06/2026 13:45

JHound · 30/06/2026 09:42

There seems to be a weird bitterness about OP wanting to return to England one day. What’s wrong with that?

For me it's not the returning, it's the calculated timing so that her children don't have to pay the higher rate of university fees when she's not paid tax on her salary.

Gresley · 30/06/2026 14:51

I think you will have to accept that your parents are set in their ways and just smile and let it wash off you like water off a duck's back. I don't think what they say will alter the way your children think, because they spend so little time with the grandparents and so much with you and with people of other nationalities. You won't be able to shelter them from racism forever: best to explain what is wrong about what your parents say rather than cut them off completely. You will never 'educate' your parents. If your children come back to Britain to go to university, they will find people from all over the world there. I assume that if they come back for secondary school, you will send them to a private school, where the same will probably be true. Having encountered students with an international background myself, I envied their confidence. The only thing I wouldn't do is live in Dubai, but apart from that I think you are giving them the best start in life. Your parents probably wanted far more contact with grandchildren when they had them and this is probably a big factor in their disapproval. My sister strongly disapproves of the idyllic place my nephew's kid is being brought up purely because it is too cut off from her. Your parents sound blinkered and a bit selfish but don't deserve being cut off completely.

PatzyCline · 30/06/2026 14:56

They're not racist.

drspouse · 30/06/2026 15:14

iwishtoo · 30/06/2026 13:45

For me it's not the returning, it's the calculated timing so that her children don't have to pay the higher rate of university fees when she's not paid tax on her salary.

If they go back when the eldest is 10, that's 8 years of taxes for him, and more for the younger ones. He should repay the student part of the fees (we won't pretend student fees actually pay all that a university education costs) if he follows his parents into reasonably well-paid work, too.

thepariscrimefiles · 30/06/2026 15:43

PatzyCline · 30/06/2026 14:56

They're not racist.

I think OP knows them better than you do and she says that they are racist.

PatzyCline · 30/06/2026 15:44

thepariscrimefiles · 30/06/2026 15:43

I think OP knows them better than you do and she says that they are racist.

Then why ask for opinions? You made yourself seem silly with that remark.

DancingOctopus · 30/06/2026 15:53

I am completely missing the point here. However, I am amazed that your parents can afford to buy you a house in Cobham.

thepariscrimefiles · 30/06/2026 16:37

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Doihaveit · 30/06/2026 17:33

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PatzyCline · 30/06/2026 19:03

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Silly thing to say. I don't engage in name calling.

Friendsinahighplace · 30/06/2026 20:11

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Friendsinahighplace · 30/06/2026 20:53

Why on earth was my post deleted and the post that I was agreeing with…. Isn’t??!!

JHound · 01/07/2026 14:52

iwishtoo · 30/06/2026 13:45

For me it's not the returning, it's the calculated timing so that her children don't have to pay the higher rate of university fees when she's not paid tax on her salary.

Why does it matter that she has not paid tax on her salary? She lives in a country where services are paid for differently. How is that her fault.

We don’t throw a tantrum that people whose parents never worked, attend uni paying the local (fairly high) rate. So why so much bitterness at OP. It seeks a general bitterness at people who happen to work in countries with less income tax than ours.

JHound · 01/07/2026 14:52

PatzyCline · 30/06/2026 14:56

They're not racist.

To racists, likely not.

CatesandAle · 01/07/2026 15:01

If what’s bothering them is students of different skin colours, have you pointed out that this would also be the case if your kids went to school in London? Or probably any big city in the UK.

You know them, I don’t, and it’s entirely possible that they’re racist and/or infected by listening to Farage. But I wonder if there’s also just a bit of wistfulness about feeling less culturally connected to their grandchildren than they were expecting, and not sharing experiences they were expecting to share? Not to mention having them at a massive distance. I don’t think they’re automatically BU to feel sad about that. (But that also doesn’t mean you have to come home if you don’t want to).

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