Wednesday, June 30, 2010

Everybody needs good neighbours...

There has been a fair bit of discussion on the network lately about neighbours and it has inspired me to share some of our experiences.

When we first moved to France, we lived in a small hamlet in Brittany. There were six houses including ours. Four were inhabited by pensioners of 80 plus. Three of these were siblings who hadn’t spoken to each other for the last 42 years, following a dispute over the sale of the fourth house. Needless to say, there wasn’t a whole lot of neighbourly activity going on. The remaining house was inhabited by a lovely couple, Monique and Michel. They were related to the warring three and were delighted when we arrived to dilute the atmosphere. They became surrogate grandparents to our three and Monique would save the milk from the prize cow (it had the highest fat content) for Max’s bottle. I howled when we left and despite being at the other end of the country, seven years later, we are still in touch.

We then moved to a series of isolated properties and as a result of their isolation, didn’t really have any real contact with our neighbours. There simply weren’t any. At this point, I made one of my worst decisions ever and decided we should try village life. I thought it would be good for us to interact more and that it would improve our French. So we dived in and bought a huge Maison de Maitre. The house was fantastic, the only problem was that we had bought in the village that time forgot. When I told my (French) friends, the reaction was unanimous, “Where? Oh my God! You do know what that place is like don’t you?”

It turned out that the entire village population was either over 80, mad or alcoholic. Or all three. Living there was like being an extra on the set of ‘Night of the Living Dead;” processions of people staggered past the door, weaving from side to side with glazed expressions in a zombie like manner at any hour of day and night. As our house fronted the street, they would inevitably bang on the door to shout “Bonjour Voisin” before continuing on their way. We took to closing all the shutters, day and night and hiding out in the back half of the house.

Even this didn’t deter our nearest neighbours who would happily ignore the firmly closed shutters if they needed us to ‘help’ them out. On one famous occasion, we caved in at ten ‘o’ clock at night after persistent banging on the side gate. They wanted James to ‘come quickly’....Fearing the worst and feeling guilty for having ignored them for the last hour, he dashed round to find Monsieur sitting cackling in the corner wearing nothing but his underpants and Madame waiting for James to remove the lid from her pressure cooker. She had forgotten how it worked and Monsieurs dinner was inside.

We moved on.

Now we are back in a hamlet and have lovely neighbours. All sane, around our age, helpful and there when you need them but not ’curieux’ as they say in French. I’ve come to the conclusion that neighbours need to be just close enough to be neighbours but not close enough to annoy you. What have everyone else’s experiences been? Is my theory right do you think? Or does it depend on the personalities involved?

7 comments:

  1. We're in a hamlet too. Our neighbours are OK; they are a bit older than us so we don't perhaps have too much in common. We pass the time of day, share a glass evry now and again and keep an eye on each other's houses when empty.

    One couple have six grand children in the same school as our offspring, so we see a bit more of them than the others.

    Only one of our number is a little, well, odd. Stark staring mad, if we're being less charitable. She's a lady living on her own who keeps imagining people (usually her ex husband) are spying on her. She can be difficult, but we try and look out for her - do any heavy lifting she needs, fix her lawnmower, that sort of thing - and she's starting to mellow.

    She made me a cake once. It was terrible.

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  2. I long to live in a more villagey/hamlet area, but am currently in the big city and don't really know anyone in the surrounding buildings.

    We do get on very well with our upstairs neighbour though (we share a co-propriete with them) but they are moving soon so we'll get new ones...

    One set of neighbours we had in the UK were very racist and used to shout racist insults at my Husband (French) whenever he went in teh garden. It was dreadful. Bad neighbours can really ruin your life.

    You sound as if you have lovely neighbours now, lucky you :)

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  3. I have hillbillies...if your grandmother hadn't had intimate knowledge of their grandfather then you're not family...and if you're not family then you are an alien from another world.

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  4. It is certainly nice to be free of nutters. One woman we lived next door too once told me that "she wasn't from round here" - turned out she was from the next village - six km away....she's only been living there for the last fifty years so clearly still new to the commune....

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  5. Blimey Crumpet, I think I know that village!! Like Fly, our French village consisted largely of people who were either mad, bad or dangerous and nearly all of them had been married to one another at some stage. Almost the entire school was related in one way or another. In our little hamlet though I had lovely French neighbours, most of whom we are still in touch with, some of whom will be friends for life but the English Ones were another matter. Selfish, thoughtless and very unneighbourly... unless they needed someone who spoke French of course. Here in the UK we are in a small village where we have been welcomed unreservedly despite being 'incomers' and our neighbours are some of the nicest, most generous and kind people I've every had the good fortune to meet. It's is everything we hoped we'd find in France but never did. I once met a French woman who told me she was from 'abroad'. Turned out she came from the Charente a few hundred miles away.

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  6. We have been living in this Mas for 4 months now and our neighbour (the only one - we are just on the border of the village)seemed a bit off and not very friendly the first time I spoke to him, I ignored it and still tried to strike up conversation with him. Last Sunday it became clear, however, when the Madame finally says hello and straight to the point - do I work? She knows I am foreign I have 3 children under the age of 6, my husband is French and works very hard, harder than the average French person (not difficult). I said no and she walked off and hasn't spoken to me since. Don't think I'm welcome. We're on the move.

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  7. @ Anonymous

    How rude! I'd have loved to have been there and said "Yes, like all mothers I WORK. Do you mean am I currently in full time paid employment? If so, the answer is no as I don't believe that you can devote enough time to small children and a full time job without an extensive support system."

    People who ask mothers if they work, really, really annoy me.....

    All mothers work - just some of us get paid!

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