Anonymous wrote:We're doing that now, but my DDs are in Middle School. We live in VA and they go to school in MD. We make it work - I do a lot of driving back and forth. With most of their friends in MD, no one ever wants to come VA for anything. There's not much that's spontaneous. When they were at our neighborhood school for Elementary there were lots of impromptu playdates after school. I'm glad we had that proximity when they were younger. You can definitely make it work, but get ready to do a lot of driving!

Anonymous wrote:We did one 30 minutes and socially was tuff as everyone was spread out and most didn't want to drive distances for things like parties.
Anonymous wrote:You clearly don't live in a city.
I live in SF where there is a lottery system. The school DD got placed at was 50-60 minutes away by train. We live on the East side of the city, the school is in the middle. DD made friends from all areas of the city. Often after school she would go to a nearby park to play with friends and get a snack at a nearby cafe. You learn who's on your train line and where they live. DD got invited to birthday parties where we had to plan an hour and a half on the train+ walking to get there. It's fine. Not ideal, but fine. You deal with it.
Anonymous wrote:You clearly don't live in a city.
I live in SF where there is a lottery system. The school DD got placed at was 50-60 minutes away by train. We live on the East side of the city, the school is in the middle. DD made friends from all areas of the city. Often after school she would go to a nearby park to play with friends and get a snack at a nearby cafe. You learn who's on your train line and where they live. DD got invited to birthday parties where we had to plan an hour and a half on the train+ walking to get there. It's fine. Not ideal, but fine. You deal with it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You clearly don't live in a city.
I live in SF where there is a lottery system. The school DD got placed at was 50-60 minutes away by train. We live on the East side of the city, the school is in the middle. DD made friends from all areas of the city. Often after school she would go to a nearby park to play with friends and get a snack at a nearby cafe. You learn who's on your train line and where they live. DD got invited to birthday parties where we had to plan an hour and a half on the train+ walking to get there. It's fine. Not ideal, but fine. You deal with it.
I grew up in NYC. However, it was typical there and part of the culture. I'm concerned about what it would be like in the suburbs, where that isn't the culture.
Anonymous wrote:You clearly don't live in a city.
I live in SF where there is a lottery system. The school DD got placed at was 50-60 minutes away by train. We live on the East side of the city, the school is in the middle. DD made friends from all areas of the city. Often after school she would go to a nearby park to play with friends and get a snack at a nearby cafe. You learn who's on your train line and where they live. DD got invited to birthday parties where we had to plan an hour and a half on the train+ walking to get there. It's fine. Not ideal, but fine. You deal with it.