@Gina1746 " isnt the base concept of airbnb renting out your home?"
No. The original concept was home-sharing, i.e. renting out a room or two in your home, or a renovated garage or granny unit on your property while you are living there, not renting out your home while you vacate it.
But Airbnb has come a long way from there, as I'm sure you are well aware, and now we have faceless vacation properties run by huge property management companies, where guests use self-check-in, there is no personal touch to it at all, no interaction with guests aside from sending them necessary info like door codes and an address.
So that has unfortunately become what many guests have falsely come to expect from listings of entire homes- that it is a rental purely for guests. Even hosts who rent a self-contained suite in their home where they are living, or a cottage out in the yard have had guests show up and be shocked and dismayed that the host actually lives there, even though guests have a completely private space complete with kitchen, private entrance, etc. and the host's don't interact with the guest unless the guest encourages that.
There is a difference in the average attitude of guests in an actual home-share, like I have. Guests have a private bedroom and bathroom and share my kitchen and outdoor areas with me. They understand that if they are sharing the home with the host, of course it will contain the host's belongings, there may be a few of the host's dirty dishes on the counter, there might be some cat hair on a cushion the cat favors, there might be some dust on the living room bookshelf. What they expect to be super clean and set up only for guests is their bedroom and bathroom, if the bathroom is listed as private.
There is a different perception when they rent an entire home, even though it is normally where you live, and what you consider to be sharing, so that is why you have to be clear in your listing info.
It's like a difference between what one would call "sharing" food. You could say, "Help yourself to whatever food you find in the fridge".
But that's a different kind of sharing than inviting someone to sit down with you and eat the meal you just cooked.
What you are doing is fine, just make sure guests understand the nature of the rental. And don't concern yourself too much with clueless, fusspot guests.