Holy stereotypes. Northern california is a lot colder weather, more techy, and more expensive. Southern California is filled with "intellectual thought" in the sense that it has top medical institutions, one of the best mathematicians alive resides here, and we have one of the best research institution on the planet-Caltech. We also happen to acknowledge that there's more to life, because we have nice things like Mountains, Beaches, and amazing diversity nearby that allows us to do things other than be grumpy. |
What you say is sort of true about early 20s kids who are in LA trying to make it in creative or looks-based industries…but not really college students. |
| DDs friend is considering leaving a school in Boston because she already dislikes the cold and it isn’t even cold yet. She didn’t have any real world comparison and I think had a romantic notion of cold weather. She dislikes it |
| What is it about SoCal that people don't like - curious? I'm on the east coast and dream of living in SoCal (didn't grow up in the east coast, but rather in the midwest) |
There is a rich, variegated, global non-white culture in SoCal that doesn’t conform to this stereotype. But I prefer living in NorCal, too. SoCal is just too overwhelming for me. Both can be really challenging for someone coming from back East. It can be more difficult to unlock social life in CA than you might think. |
The immensity of it, the traffic congestion and the lack of mass transit. If I could get around there, I’d like it. |
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I’d have her do up a plan for transferring. Research which classes will transfer to preferred college, any cost differences, what being a transfer student might mean (are there scholarships? Housing issues coming in a second year?), etc
If this is a temporary/homesick thing, maybe the research will make her want to stay. If it’s not, she’ll have the info to make an informed decision (school A might require an extra semester bc fewer classes transfer than school B) |
I lived in LA for a year and was happy to leave and come back to DC. It felt overwhelmingly immense, and the traffic was suffocating and impacted every aspect of life. It felt like rush hour never ended. And I ended up hating the lack of seasons. There was no variety and every day was the same as the previous. And the cost of living was insane. The gas and food prices were bonkers. I was relieved to come back to DC. It's not like we don't have bad traffic and a lot of people and high cost of living here, but it was just so much MORE there and pushed past what I could tolerate and enjoy. |