Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:I met with some builders and they kept talking about entertaining. I don't want people in my house. This is for me, not to show off.
For many, it's not about "showing off"; it's about connecting, sharing, actually spending time together and talking to one another in an increasingly isolated, removed world. This comes up a lot, mostly in the Food forum. I hate the misconception that inviting people to your home, wanting them to have a good time, and sharing a special experience with them is "showing off."
OP here and I agree with you but that's WHY I don't feel like I need to plan my house around it. I have friends over all the time, am the primary host of playdates, and have even pulled off my share of family holidays but I think part of my attitude about it stems from not thinking guests need a lot of special accommodations built into my house. Years ago we set up a bunch of borrowed card tables and threw tablecloths over them and had a 20 person dinner party in a 1 bedroom apartment. It's one of my fondest hosting memories. So my post wasn't about not wanting to entertain it was about thinking the emphasis on it in homebuying is overblown. Even as a person who really enjoys hosting, it is a very small fraction of the time I'm actually in my home. And usually it's a small group and/ or 1 person who doesn't need any kind of accommodation beyond what I personally already find comfortable.
Sure as someone who once lived in NYC and hosted 50 people at a party in a 800 sq foot apartment, anything is possible but when people get older and move out to the burbs where space is more affordable, some people prioritize having more space to entertain. Others don’t.
It gets more awkward when you're the only one left trying to host in an 800 sq foot apartment, your guests sit on the couch to eat, and there isn't really room for adults and kids to hang out in separate areas. I loved hosting in my apartment in my 20s. It doesn't work anymore, I feel like it's nice going to other people's places and they probably are uncomfortable in mine. I also wish I could have people over to eat and hang out in a yard.
That said, I know my day to day commute will get worse when we buy and we probably won't host more than once or twice a month, so it is a small factor. I'd certainly pay more for a house with a dining room than an eat in kitchen, or a basement with room for kids to play by themselves, though.