I mean... not really? Where you're "from" doesnt change, no matter how much people may want it to. Why do you have the desire to "claim to be" from somewhere else? |
| I am not aware of anyone I know in DMV lying to me about where they are from … and even if they did m, I would not know or care. I have a few friends who grew up here but most of us come from other states or countries … |
The locals rarely mix with the unwashed masses. |
Two of my closest friends are locals and another one is the husband of a good friend. They have no issue with it at all. Why would they? So many brainy, talented and civic minded people in DMV come from other places … |
Exactly my point. |
| OP, myob. |
??? I am not talking about acquaintances but close friends. Why are you creating drama out of nothing? No one lies to me about where they are from because it is not a big deal to me or to anyone else I know. |
| I only know a couple of people in my friend group who lived in one place for their whole childhood. My spouse lived in 3 states by 10 and moved from where she was born at 1. The where are you from question is hard to give a straight answer to and isn't the best way to make small talk with people you don't know. People give broad and generic answers to most small talk topics. |
They are from Detroit. And no one outside of Michigan knows Bloomfield Hills, for god’s sake. |
That’s right! We don’t want PP passing herself off as a West End girl, when she’s really from Stepney. The nerve of her! |
Do you even know anything about either of those places? |
Yes, most people do. Why does it bother you?
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| I think it depends on context. If I’m travelling and someone I meet at a hostel asks where I’m from, I’d say DC, as I interpret them to be asking where I’m travelling from. Same for people I work with who could be anywhere in the world and are just asking to get a vague sense of what time zone I’m in. But if I’m chatting with another parent from my kids’ school they presumably know I live in DC and are asking what I was born/raised so I give the rough geographic area for that (no one has ever heard of the tiny village in question). But where you’re “from” isn’t clearly where you were born/raised; it can also mean where you came from [to get here]. If you’re super hung up on wanting to know where people were born ask about their hometown. |
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I am amazed at the totally stupid topics that get so many pages of responses as if it was real and important.
This one is clearly in competition with the one about hating her husband's brown eyes. I think the results are neck and neck so far at about 9 pages each, perhaps tomorrow will tell who is the winner of the most pages for the most moronic topic of the day. |
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If someone I don’t know asks me where I am from and I think they mean where did I spend my childhood, I will say Buffalo. Most people know generally where that is. I did not grow up in Buffalo but in a farming town near Buffalo. Neither place is cool and I have no shame about where I grew up, but saying East Hayseed, NY (for example) is pointless since the follow up question to “where is that” is simply “near Buffalo.”
I assume most people don’t really care about the answer and are just being polite. In the case that it turns out the other person is also from “near Buffalo” we have a good time narrowing down our answers and seeing if we know any people/places in common. Claiming to be from Buffalo or Detroit or Chicago or LA on the East Coast is not a weird flex. It’s just easier to give a basic geographic marker and let the person ask follow up questions if they are actually interested. |