Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We live in a very large home (15,000sf). I have two much older kids and a new baby. I’m meeting some new moms and want to have them over but am afraid my house is too large.
When my older kids were younger, we lived in a smaller large house (8,000sf) and even then some people would comment on how large our house was.
I feel like one of the new mom friends I made dropped me after coming over. We used to chat about baby topics and trade advice. She stopped inviting me out and her texts have become really short. I know it could be a million other things but it happened right after she came over. Other moms joke about our different wings and servants. We don’t have servants, just a housekeeper. They will comment on how I don’t know what it is like since someone else cleans and does the laundry.
I have become so overly self conscious about this that I am afraid to host a play date in my home.
Am I totally overthinking this?
Would you not reciprocate if you went to a play date in a home that was too large?
Is this house to signal to the rest of your family that you have made it? Are you Indian or Hispanic?
+1 or Middle Eastern?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't do my own cleaning or laundry. My best friend does both. It has never once been a point of contention between the two of us. Instead, I sympathize with her if she gripes about spending time on those tasks and she never makes nasty comments about how I don't do it.
I do wonder if there's something about the way OP said something that was what bothered the friend. I can't empathize with several of my friends (i.e. my ones whose husbands are in the military and get deployed - I've never dealt with that, or the ones whose husbands never changed a dirty diaper - I never had that problem), but it doesn't mean I can't sympathize with them. Because, you know, that's what friends do. So if OP was weird in response to someone making a comment about having too much laundry or cleaning being such a bear, then yeah, I could see that person not wanting to be friends with OP anymore. You ought to be able to sympathize with your friends even if you don't understand exactly what they're going through. And maybe that was the problem. (OP, I'm not trying to be mean here, for the record, I'm not accusing you of having done or said something bad, just suggesting that perhaps that's the source of the problem).
I think I’m too old to try to fit in. I am not faux humble as someone suggested previously. I absolutely can sympathize with other people though.
Being a SAHM is new territory for me. Having a new baby after having self sufficient older children is also different.
When my older kids were younger, there were plenty of people we only met once for a play date. Some we met a handful of times. I was often the unavailable one. I think I am overthinking this. I shouldn’t have to hide my home.
I didn’t realize my thread would be so popular.
I highly doubt this is it. DC is full of "older" moms.
I meant I am not a kid trying to fit in with other kids. My age isn’t that old. I was on the younger side when I had my older kids. We are late 30s.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't do my own cleaning or laundry. My best friend does both. It has never once been a point of contention between the two of us. Instead, I sympathize with her if she gripes about spending time on those tasks and she never makes nasty comments about how I don't do it.
I do wonder if there's something about the way OP said something that was what bothered the friend. I can't empathize with several of my friends (i.e. my ones whose husbands are in the military and get deployed - I've never dealt with that, or the ones whose husbands never changed a dirty diaper - I never had that problem), but it doesn't mean I can't sympathize with them. Because, you know, that's what friends do. So if OP was weird in response to someone making a comment about having too much laundry or cleaning being such a bear, then yeah, I could see that person not wanting to be friends with OP anymore. You ought to be able to sympathize with your friends even if you don't understand exactly what they're going through. And maybe that was the problem. (OP, I'm not trying to be mean here, for the record, I'm not accusing you of having done or said something bad, just suggesting that perhaps that's the source of the problem).
I think I’m too old to try to fit in. I am not faux humble as someone suggested previously. I absolutely can sympathize with other people though.
Being a SAHM is new territory for me. Having a new baby after having self sufficient older children is also different.
When my older kids were younger, there were plenty of people we only met once for a play date. Some we met a handful of times. I was often the unavailable one. I think I am overthinking this. I shouldn’t have to hide my home.
I didn’t realize my thread would be so popular.
I highly doubt this is it. DC is full of "older" moms.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't do my own cleaning or laundry. My best friend does both. It has never once been a point of contention between the two of us. Instead, I sympathize with her if she gripes about spending time on those tasks and she never makes nasty comments about how I don't do it.
I do wonder if there's something about the way OP said something that was what bothered the friend. I can't empathize with several of my friends (i.e. my ones whose husbands are in the military and get deployed - I've never dealt with that, or the ones whose husbands never changed a dirty diaper - I never had that problem), but it doesn't mean I can't sympathize with them. Because, you know, that's what friends do. So if OP was weird in response to someone making a comment about having too much laundry or cleaning being such a bear, then yeah, I could see that person not wanting to be friends with OP anymore. You ought to be able to sympathize with your friends even if you don't understand exactly what they're going through. And maybe that was the problem. (OP, I'm not trying to be mean here, for the record, I'm not accusing you of having done or said something bad, just suggesting that perhaps that's the source of the problem).
I think I’m too old to try to fit in. I am not faux humble as someone suggested previously. I absolutely can sympathize with other people though.
Being a SAHM is new territory for me. Having a new baby after having self sufficient older children is also different.
When my older kids were younger, there were plenty of people we only met once for a play date. Some we met a handful of times. I was often the unavailable one. I think I am overthinking this. I shouldn’t have to hide my home.
I didn’t realize my thread would be so popular.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where are 15000 square foot houses around here even located? Way out in some random exurb? That would be way more off putting to me than the actual size.
Here's one in McLean. Inside the Beltway. That took me less than one minute to find.
https://www.redfin.com/VA/McLean/1181-Ballantrae-Ln-22101/home/102799983
Anonymous wrote:I probably wouldn’t want to be friends. We have a few friends who have serious wealth (hundreds of millions) and they live in very nice but not crazy houses. A 15,000 sq ft house means that we have very different values and likely won’t see eye to eye on much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:an architectural mullet!
I *love* this descriptor!
Anonymous wrote:I don't do my own cleaning or laundry. My best friend does both. It has never once been a point of contention between the two of us. Instead, I sympathize with her if she gripes about spending time on those tasks and she never makes nasty comments about how I don't do it.
I do wonder if there's something about the way OP said something that was what bothered the friend. I can't empathize with several of my friends (i.e. my ones whose husbands are in the military and get deployed - I've never dealt with that, or the ones whose husbands never changed a dirty diaper - I never had that problem), but it doesn't mean I can't sympathize with them. Because, you know, that's what friends do. So if OP was weird in response to someone making a comment about having too much laundry or cleaning being such a bear, then yeah, I could see that person not wanting to be friends with OP anymore. You ought to be able to sympathize with your friends even if you don't understand exactly what they're going through. And maybe that was the problem. (OP, I'm not trying to be mean here, for the record, I'm not accusing you of having done or said something bad, just suggesting that perhaps that's the source of the problem).
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Where are 15000 square foot houses around here even located? Way out in some random exurb? That would be way more off putting to me than the actual size.
Here's one. On Chain Bridge Road in Washington DC
https://www.zillow.com/homes/for_sale/Washington-DC/67393834_zpid/41568_rid/12000-15000_size/globalrelevanceex_sort/39.086903,-76.676331,38.699444,-77.352677_rect/10_zm/
I just spent at least 2 minutes toggling back and forth between the picture of the front of that house and the picture of the back. The realtor should have never put them side-by-side in the slideshow; it's like an architectural mullet!
I think the front is historic, and the back is addition.
Anonymous wrote:an architectural mullet!