Gransnet forums

Chat

Lovely thing to say

(130 Posts)
Scribbles Wed 29-Jul-20 15:20:36

I was talking to some neighbours this morning. They're just back from a visit to relations on the south coast and were telling me about their trip. Jenny* asked about my trip to Richmond 3 weeks ago. I said I'd enjoyed it but, all the same, was glad to be home.
"Well, I should think so," she said, "this is such a lovely, friendly house, it must be really good to come home to."

That's one of the nicest things that anyone's ever said to me! I've always hoped my home might strike other people that way but have never had any certainty.

* not her real name.

pinkym Thu 30-Jul-20 10:18:57

When my eldest DS was still at school he used to help out in a small local grocery store at the weekends. One Saturday I dropped in to do a bit of shopping and he was in the storeroom at the back. He came out beaming and said "I knew you were here, it felt suddenly really warm and cosy and lovely in here". Coming from a 15 year old BMX/skateboard fanatic, I was so touched, it made me feel warm and lovely, I've never forgotten it and he's 39 now!

timetogo2016 Thu 30-Jul-20 10:17:43

Same here Saddee55.
And my gc tell me they love me too,it`s a wonderfull feeling and i do well up.
There are more nice/good people out there than there are nasty/bad it`s just the nasty/ bad get the attention.

Startingover61 Thu 30-Jul-20 10:16:46

After the decree absolute ending my 28-year marriage came through, a friend told me how special I was and not to forget it. On the day before my ex-husband remarried - which was just 7 weeks later - the same friend turned up at my house and gave me 15 yellow roses ‘in case tomorrow is a bad day for you’. I thought that was truly lovely of him.

Neilspurgeon0 Thu 30-Jul-20 10:16:39

My wife, who used to be a school dinner lady, was once described to me by the Headmaster as “just like my mum, she always has a crinoline of children around her”. She wasn’t amused, he was too old to be our son, about my age at the time, but I thought it a lovely complement to a very warm, loving woman.

Juliet27 Thu 30-Jul-20 10:15:42

My dad who had cancer said not long before he died ‘You’d make a good carer.’. He was very undemonstrative so it meant a lot to me.

grandMattie Thu 30-Jul-20 10:13:58

Meryl , I agree. I try to make people comfortable. After all, it’s only a house and “stuff” no longer matters to me. People are far more important.

Diggingdoris Thu 30-Jul-20 10:13:23

I was told recently, 'your daughter in law doesn't realise how lucky she is to have such a caring, loving and helpful mother in law like you'. This was said by someone who had experienced a very different type of M-i-law.
It made me feel good.

TrendyNannie6 Thu 30-Jul-20 10:13:09

One of my friends said to me a few years ago, do you know me n so n so can always tell you our problems, whatever they are, and you never judge us ever, that means such a lot to us you have our backs, you are an amazing friend, that made my day,

harrigran Thu 30-Jul-20 10:12:18

I get a lot of " oh wow " when people walk into my kitchen, not sure why they are surprised. Maybe they are expecting old fashioned units and old lady curtains.

grandMattie Thu 30-Jul-20 10:11:42

At a cousin’s daughter’s wedding, he specifically named me and said that I had always been kind to him, especially during his rather chaotic and eccentric childhood. I was in tears...

Coco51 Thu 30-Jul-20 10:10:35

DGD: ’Did you wear these when you were a princess?’

varian Thu 30-Jul-20 10:09:28

Some years ago an elderly friend of a friend visited us for a few days and told me that our home was the nicest house she'd ever seen. She was a minister's wife, had seen a lot of houses over the years and seemed very plain spoken so I was extremely flattered.

Saddee55 Thu 30-Jul-20 10:08:29

My sons saying I love you mum .

Welshwife Thu 30-Jul-20 10:06:10

DD had a friend who lived in quite a big house with lovely gardens - Ours was a much more modest place but the friend once said to DD - I love coming to your house - it always smells of food!
DD once came home from this friend’s house and announced she could not understand why they had a freezer (bigger than ours - chest type) - as all they had in it was a small packet of fish fingers!!

maryrose54 Thu 30-Jul-20 10:04:00

When I worked as a TA in an infant school, one of the staff told me that I was always so calm and caring with the children. I used to feel anything but calm a lot of the time, but these kind words made me realise that I was doing a good job.

lovebeigecardigans1955 Thu 30-Jul-20 09:57:34

That is nice, Scribbles - I got a similar comment from a neighbour who said he loved my home as it was cosy. I was surprised as he is half my age and I imagined that it would be thought old-fashioned. I'm not the tidiest.
There is a style of decor which I saw in a magazine which had things like embroidered cushions, a crotchet throw and pretty pottery, etc. It was right up my street and I was a little perturbed to see it titled, 'granny chic'! Make of that what you will.

spabbygirl Thu 30-Jul-20 09:54:14

Human warmth & kindness, that's what makes a good home

Nortsat Thu 30-Jul-20 09:45:34

How lovely Scribbles.

A very young, enthusiastic Community Police Officer recently complimented us on our home.
Bless him, he was young enough to be our grandchild.

Charleygirl5 Thu 30-Jul-20 09:40:48

I remember as a child visiting my mother's sister. She was so houseproud we rarely got beyond the kitchen possibly in case we ruined her Ercol furniture. I was always uncomfortable as a child.

MawB Thu 30-Jul-20 08:22:49

A very good friend was chuffed to bits when someone visiting her house admired it saying “It looks just like a show house”
I’m glad for her, but if they had said it to me (unlikely) I would have been very disappointed if not insulted!

MerylStreep Thu 30-Jul-20 08:18:24

JackyB
It's not the house, it's the people in it. We are both gregarious people, love entertaining.
This got me thinking of 3 of my neighbour/ friends. All people that I've entertained in my home. When I've had need to talk to them over something I could be standing on the doorstep for 15 mins?
When any neighbour knocks on my door the first thing I say is: come in, cup of tea?
Some people have it, some don't.

MellowYellow Thu 30-Jul-20 08:16:09

That's lovely Scribbles. JackyB I wonder that, too. Recently I've had two young men visit my flat - one a builder, the other a plumber - and they both went, 'Wow, this is a really nice place,' when they walked in. It's a very small, unsophisticated place, full of quirky items like bottles my son dug up working on a building site, and various unfinished projects, like a half-knitted pheasant ha ha. My sons say 'It's cosy, mum,' so I think what's happened is I've turned into my mother and become a warm, welcoming granny, with a home full of odds and ends! Flip, I never saw that coming, but I'm happy about it.

JackyB Thu 30-Jul-20 07:44:42

Well done. It's a knack some people have. My mother's house was always welcoming and comfortable, although it wasn't ever untidy. I hardly remember her doing housework either. Even when she was in her 90a and just sat watching TV all day, it was nice to go in there.

I don't have the knack at all.

Scribbles, can you pinpoint what it is that makes your house so welcoming?

It's nothing to do with the colour of the cushions or whether your kitchen surfaces are gleaming, so I wonder what it is.

Scribbles Wed 29-Jul-20 18:53:36

Of course, kitty. Just let me know when you're heading this way and I'll put the coffee on!

kittylester Wed 29-Jul-20 17:49:11

How lovely Scribbles. Can I visit?