7 Unexpected Reasons Why After 6 Years of Living in a Seaside Dream House, I Decided to Escape

Places
3 years ago

Every person has a dream. It keeps us going during difficult moments and makes us keep on fighting and working toward manifesting it. Sometimes, sooner or later, our dream comes true. But other times, reality turns out to be very different from what we had imagined. According to the latest research, about 40% of the entire population on Earth live on the seaside and usually, these people are happier than others.

I want to explain to Bright Side readers why I dreamed about living in a house on the beach and how reality changed my plans.

I had a really nice dream: a shiny white house, hidden in the shade of old trees, on the edge of a wide deserted beach. A wooden path goes along the sand and leads right to the sea. The waves are making a quiet noise, and in the sky, you can see beautiful sea birds.

Next to the house, there are 2 squeaky chairs and an old wooden table. My husband and I are drinking coffee and enjoying the scenery and the breeze. The sea is warm and you can go swimming any time you’d like.

For the first 30 years of my life, I lived near the Baltic Sea. Our Northern nature looked impressive and beautiful, but only from a distance. When you get too close, you don’t want to swim — the water is dirty and it’s really cold 10 months out of the year. I wanted to live near the sea where you could swim any time you wanted.

When we had a chance, we moved to a warmer climate with a tropical sea. We chose a small town and were hoping for a life in paradise, in the house of our dreams.

The cost of our dream

We weren’t planning to buy a house, which is why we started looking for places to rent. The prices were surprising. Only later did we realize that it would take some time and that we had to be smart about it. Since we chose a popular destination, it was better to choose a less popular season.

The landlords here set the rent price depending on the time of year. It was lower in the less popular season and 2 times higher in the high season. After a long and tiring negotiation, we managed to get a small discount because we were going to rent the place for a long time.

Our first house was big, but it was pretty far from the beach. Then we decided that if we moved here, we had to find something close to the sea. So, we found a house 100 meters away from the water. And I finally had a veranda. In the morning, we drank coffee and enjoyed the view. We had to cut down on our expenses and pay a high rent.

Working or resting

To pay for the house, we had to work but it was really hard to do anything in this place. Our laptops were collecting dust and we would spend every day in the sea. We realized that our surroundings were really relaxing and it was hard to make our brains work.

All my fantasies about creating masterpieces while watching the sea were fading. And the house was becoming harder and harder to pay for, so we needed to start working.

I was still hopeful that I would be able to go for a swim in the sea early, have my coffee, and start working. But my laziness was stronger than my hopes. Why run to the sea if I could go for a swim after lunch? Or in the evening. Maybe, tomorrow — we’re here for a long time and the sea is not going anywhere.

As a result, after several months we were only on the beach maybe once a week. When my friends asked me how often I swam in the sea, I just replied, “What do you think?” Because when I told the truth, everybody got confused.

Terrible hair

I came here with really good hair. And I had several packs of my favorite hair dye. I never used half of them. Several failed experiments proved that hair color doesn’t last for more than 2 weeks here. The color fades due to the sunlight and salty air. Besides, my wavy hair turned into little irritating curls that looked like a washcloth. Because of the humidity, my hair wouldn’t get dry and was really hard to comb.

All our clothes lost their color too. After every wash, it took our clothes forever to dry in the humid air. And to boot, there was always some white residue on them. My favorite swimsuit lost color and shape after one month of swimming every day. The sea was merciless with our clothes.

The sea made me give up on wearing glasses. I started wearing contact lenses because I would have to wipe my glasses every 5 minutes. They got covered with small drops and everything looked foggy and blurry. And by the end of the day, the salt really irritated the eyes. My friends got used to me looking as if I was crying.

Humidity and mold

When we moved in, our cute house was freshly painted. It had been renovated a bit earlier. But a few months later, I started seeing some spots on the walls. These pale dots started to grow in size and then became fluffy. It was then that I realized it was mold.

The mold was strong. Even chlorine couldn’t remove it. We decided to try and cover these spots but eventually gave up. Under them, something scary was evolving.

In the bathroom, we had to clean the mold 2-3 times a week. It seemed like it grew overnight. And in the kitchen, the painted walls started to get covered with bubbles that popped at the most unexpected moments. The mold was everywhere: on the curtains, our clothes, our shoes, our kid’s toys, our cameras. I realized that mold could even live on plastic.

Only the metal didn’t get covered in mold. But all the metal things got rusty. All the connectors to our computers and consoles became rusty. 6 months later, my husband’s computer looked like it had been on the sea bottom. Someone even told us that at their house, they had a special server room where all the computers were, with the AC always on to reduce the humidity.

Crowds of tourists

If you live in a resort town, you get used to crowds of tourists pretty fast. In the middle of the high season, there are several times more tourists than there are locals.

I was totally okay with the tourists, but it was because I didn’t spend that much time on the beach. You could only see me walking there in the low season. And of course, the scenery didn’t look as fantastic with all these crowds of people.

Another important thing about the town we lived in was that everything in it was made for tourists. So, the quality of things to buy was worse and the prices were higher. There were not a lot of grocery stores and the food was vacation food: chips, chocolate bars, nuts, and other snacks. Also, there were many shops with souvenirs, swimming equipment, and stuff like that. To buy something useful, we had to drive to a nearby town.

Restaurant food was pretty bad too. Again, it was for tourists, so the quality wasn’t very good. Tourists leave in 2 weeks and are replaced with new people.

There were lots of bars, clubs, and cafes. Once, a theater group came to give a performance and the tourists weren’t interested, so they never returned.

“Plastic” waves

When you go on vacation, you don’t notice a lot of the bad things around you. And even if you do, these bad impressions are often erased by good ones. But if you see something bad for several years, you can’t ignore it anymore.

The sea was dirty. No, not all the time, but after big storms when all the plastic that was floating somewhere else came to the shore. Bottles, containers, glasses — anything. There were bags. And there were more bags than there were animals! It was really unpleasant to swim in this water.

The sea was becoming dirtier every year and it was really hard to look at. We collected the trash every time we went swimming, but we weren’t having fun. Now, I honestly hate plastic cups, bags, and plastic in general.

Other facts about living in a resort town

In general, living by the sea is good for your health, but we all get ill from time to time. And finding a good doctor in this kind of town is not an easy task. There are usually, like, 2 doctors that are supposed to treat hotel visitors. It all depends on your insurance. The more procedures and meds a doctor prescribes, the more they earn. The 2 doctors we knew were nice people, but we didn’t want them to be our doctors. You can’t say this about every small town, but it was true for us.

Other things about civilized life were also hard to find. Good classes for kids, kindergartens, and schools were also hard to come by. Almost anyone could open this kind of facility. There were a lot of kids in our town, so these facilities would appear and disappear very fast.

And the strangest thing of all, we got tired of the endless summer. We were used to having 4 seasons, and when it was warm all the time, it seemed unnatural. As a result, we decided to change our climate. Not a lot, though, because we wouldn’t be able to survive a real winter after so many years of living in a hot place.

We moved to Tbilisi, 200 km away from snowy mountains and 400 km away from the sea. When we saw snow, we were ecstatic. Our course, our excitement (and the snow) didn’t last for more than 20 minutes.

I don’t regret having lived for several years in the house of our dreams. It was anything but boring. I can still hear the sound of the sea and remember the look of the stars.

Where would you love to live?

Preview photo credit Depositphotos

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I'm going to have to respectfully disagree with that last part. If cold weather is so great, why is everything bad named after it? :P Cold shoulder, winter depression, frostbite, nuclear winter...

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I can see why it would be hard to work there, I struggle a lot with motivation and consentration so I wouldn't want to live there either, unless I am retired maybe :D

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