When journalist and writer Laura Kennedy left London, it was with the weary certainty shared by many of the city’s young professionals: the capital had become too expensive, too exhausting, and too cramped to feel like a place to build a life. Years later, she finds herself back in the same city she once abandoned, reappraising both London and the version of herself who fled it. In this Irish Times piece,Kennedy traces how spiralling rents,frayed public services and a relentless pace pushed her out – and why,despite those pressures,she has chosen to return. Her story offers a revealing snapshot of a generation caught between the promise of big-city opportunity and the reality of a metropolis straining under its own success.
How rising rents and daily stress pushed Laura Kennedy to leave London for good
For years,Laura’s life in the capital followed a familiar pattern: wages edging up in cautious increments while rent surged ahead in great,merciless leaps. Each time a lease came up for renewal, the numbers told the same story in starker terms – more for less, and always with the unspoken threat that if she didn’t accept it, someone else would. What had once felt like the price of opportunity began to resemble a penalty for standing still. As commuting costs swelled and the city’s tempo accelerated, her daily routine narrowed into a grind of calculation: Can I afford this? became the quiet refrain under every cup of coffee, every bus fare, every night out declined.
- Rent hikes outpacing her pay rises
- Shared housing offering little privacy or security
- Noise and crowds turning rest into a luxury
- Commuting fatigue eroding time for friends and hobbies
- Emotional strain from constant financial vigilance
| Year | Monthly Rent | Commute Time |
|---|---|---|
| 2016 | £650 (room) | 45 mins |
| 2019 | £850 (room) | 1 hour |
| 2022 | £1,050 (room) | 1 hr 20 mins |
By the time her last lease review loomed, the pressure had seeped into every corner of her life. Sleep became restless, weekends turned into recovery missions from the week’s cumulative strain, and minor setbacks at work felt disproportionately heavy. Friends swapped stories of eviction notices and bidding wars for box rooms, normalising a level of instability that left her feeling perpetually one step from crisis. The final push was not a dramatic event but a dawning clarity: the city that once promised possibility had rebranded itself as a test of endurance. Faced with another rent rise and a commute that carved further into her day, she understood that staying would mean accepting a version of adulthood defined largely by anxiety and exhaustion – a bargain she was no longer willing to strike.
What life in Ireland revealed about work life balance and the cost of contentment
In the rhythm of Irish life, work seemed to know its place. Days were still long and demanding, but they were rarely allowed to devour evenings and weekends in the way London had normalised. Colleagues left on time without theatrics, and employers were more likely to apologise for late emails than expect instant replies. There, the unspoken rules around labor were different: you were a person with a life, not a brand with a never-ending growth curve. Yet this quieter cadence carried its own price. The limited job market, lower salaries and patchy career progression demanded trade-offs that were less visible than London’s astronomical rents but just as real. The question was no longer simply how much work took from you, but how much potential you were prepared to set aside in exchange for a calmer commute and a familiar accent at the bus stop.
The contrast distilled competing definitions of value into everyday choices:
- Time vs. money – shorter commutes and earlier evenings in Ireland, offset by fewer high-paying roles.
- Community vs. anonymity – dense social ties and accountability at home, against London’s liberating, if isolating, scale.
- Predictability vs. ambition – a steadier,slower career trajectory versus the capital’s volatile,high-reward ladder.
| Aspect | Ireland | London |
|---|---|---|
| Work hours | More bounded | Frequently enough elastic |
| Cost of living | Quietly high | Visibly extreme |
| Career scope | Narrow but stable | Wide but pressured |
| Everyday contentment | Accessible, modest | Hard-won, fragile |
Why returning to London demanded new financial boundaries and lifestyle compromises
Coming back meant admitting that the version of London I once inhabited no longer existed on my old budget. The casual dinners that used to be a midweek reflex now demand a line item on a spreadsheet, and the idea of grabbing a cab “just this once” has been quietly retired. Rather, life is restructured around non‑negotiable boundaries: rent cannot exceed a set percentage of income, socialising is planned weeks in advance, and every subscription must justify its place. What used to be a city of spontaneous possibility has become one of careful triage, where saying no is no longer a social faux pas but a survival tactic.
- Housing: Smaller space, longer commute, but secure tenancy.
- Social life: Fewer outings, more at‑home dinners and park walks.
- Work: Side projects and freelance shifts to plug financial gaps.
- Spending rules: Cash envelopes for food,transport and leisure.
| Category | Old London | New London |
|---|---|---|
| Rent share | ~40% income | Firm cap at 30% |
| Eating out | 3-4 times a week | 1 planned meal out |
| Transport | Oyster + taxis | Travelcard, walking |
| Free time | Tickets and venues | Libraries, galleries |
These compromises are not simply about thrift; they reshape what it means to “belong” in the city. The London returned to is one where time, money and space are all rationed, and where identity is negotiated through those limits. Choosing a cheaper postcode can mean losing a sense of neighbourhood history; prioritising quiet nights in can mean drifting from old friends whose calendars are still dictated by the city’s nightlife. Yet within these restrictions lies a different kind of freedom: a clearer sense of what is worth protecting, and what can be surrendered, in order to stay.
Practical lessons for readers weighing a move between London Ireland and back again
Anyone tracing the same arc between London and Ireland will discover that romantic notions of “starting over” with a single suitcase are no match for spreadsheets and stark realities. Before you go, itemise everything: rent, transport, health care, flights home, childcare, and how much of your time you’re willing to surrender to commuting. It helps to sketch a side‑by‑side comparison, not just of costs, but of the kind of days you’ll be buying with those costs. Ask hard questions: Do you work in an industry that truly needs London’s scale? Will you be trading a smaller flat for a bigger life, or the other way round? And be honest about your appetite for anonymity versus community; the very bustle that once thrilled can, with time, feel like a permanent low‑grade alarm.
- Test the fantasy: spend a few weeks in the area you think you want to live, at the hours you’ll actually inhabit it – late nights, early commutes, rainy Sundays.
- Budget for emotional costs: distance from family, loss of professional networks, or the subtle loneliness of returning “home” changed.
- Plan for reversibility: keep rental contracts flexible, store rather than sell certain belongings, and maintain professional ties in both places.
- Redefine success: decide whether it’s measured in square footage, cultural access, or simply having the bandwidth to think straight.
| Factor | London | Ireland |
|---|---|---|
| Career scale | High opportunity, intense competition | Smaller market, closer networks |
| Cost of living | Overcrowded & premium priced | Rising, but uneven by region |
| Daily pace | Fast, often draining | Slower, sometimes isolating |
| Support systems | Friends as chosen family | Family nearby, old ties renewed |
In Conclusion
Kennedy’s return is less a neat resolution than an honest acknowledgement of contradiction: London is still too expensive, too intense, and yet, for her, still irresistible. Her story captures a wider generational tension between the pull of possibility and the need for security, between the fantasy of escape and the reality of what – and who – draws us back. As cities like London continue to price out the very people who give them life, the question isn’t just why individuals leave, but what it takes for them to come home again, and at what cost.