My Daughter goes UMASS Amherst like 9 hours away. She takes Vermonter Amtrak train to and from school a Eight Hour train ride. Often 9 hours plus with delays and getting to Inion Station and Uber to campus.
UMASS Amherst is middle of nowhere not like she is moving there. |
I just don’t buy that going away to college makes it more likely that a DC will be is gone forever.
What if DC marries someone from another part of the country — say Chicago or Hartford. Will you object because it increases the risk they will settle near their spouse’s family and not you? There is a great value in experiencing life in another part of the country or the world. College is a good time to start to do that. |
Of course I love my children and would always want them near me, but more I want them to experience everything the world has to offer. I hope they live somewhere exciting and have a fun life. |
Ok but very few people work in academia. |
I truly think it’s one of the worst things about modern culture. It’s not natural or healthy for families to live hundreds or thousands of miles from each other. |
And how often do you see these members of your family, and how often do they all get together? . |
+100 |
Um not really. In college many kids are in very serious relationships, and have made some of their best friends for life. And if they’ve gone to school far away it’s rather unlikely those people are from this area. There are many compelling reasons for a kid to not come home after college. |
Because otherwise you barely ever see your family. And if everyone did this extended families would essentially never see each other anymore. |
And the chances that your kid marries someone from Chicago is a lot higher if they go to school somewhere else versus staying in Virginia. |
Well, my kid is in school in a fun city with jobs. Most kids are relatively local, or from within five hours of the schoool. No certainty, but Ithink the odds are good. |
+2. I’m with the previous posters. Maybe part of the divide is from people that are only here for their careers and grew up elsewhere (and maybe most of their family is elsewhere) versus people that grew up here and want to stay in the area. Among my friends from Montgomery County it's amazing how many moved back to be near their family when they had a family of their own. Most stayed within a 4 hour drive for college but not all. There were quite a few that worked overseas, went to grad school elsewhere, or lived in Boston or NYC for a time. But to settle down they are near their own family or their spouses’s family. |
OP, is clueless |
Not if Bethesda is any indication. Seems like people here make a beeline back after college. |
+1000 |