Anonymous wrote:This is for people who, when asked where they're from, will say the current city they live in, rather than where they grew up.
Aka someone who grew up in Utah, but is living in NYC, and when they meet someone new and asked, the say "New York".
Why do you do it? Is it shame about your hometown? Wishing you could have grown up in someplace more sophisticated?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is why I've started asking people "where did you grow up?" Everyone wants to seem like a lifelong urban dweller, and they will do anything to maintain that illusion. It's kind of sad.
Seriously why do you care? Those who are fixated on this seem like the nosiest, most status-obsessed, people. And I'm someone who answers that I'm from Florida because I am. But I don't care how other people answer, I'm just making conversation.
Because I'm curious about other people and knowing where someone grew up gives you an important clue to their identity? I mean... duh?
There you go. The bolded is why some people are uncomfortable with answering your question straight on. You think where they were born and raised is an important clue to their identify, they think you'll make assumptions about them and they'd be right. Plenty of people don't have good associations with where they grew up and may feel more emotional attachment to somewhere else where they actively carved out their identity.
Do you not see the irony of your statement?
Of course it does. Everyone is influenced, both by where they live, and where they grew up. We're suppose to erase 20 years of a person's life?
So basically, you think people will judge you for where you're from and you're afraid of that judgement? Because you think you grew up in some loser town or something?
Anonymous wrote:This is for people who, when asked where they're from, will say the current city they live in, rather than where they grew up.
Aka someone who grew up in Utah, but is living in NYC, and when they meet someone new and asked, the say "New York".
Why do you do it? Is it shame about your hometown? Wishing you could have grown up in someplace more sophisticated?
OnAnonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:You seem like a Karen O.P. You have no apparent awareness that this question is often asked of non-white people where the questioner assumes the person is from outside the U.S. M.Y.O.F.B.
NP. You dont seem to know what a Karen is. Stop policing other people and check your own privilege
Anonymous wrote:You seem like a Karen O.P. You have no apparent awareness that this question is often asked of non-white people where the questioner assumes the person is from outside the U.S. M.Y.O.F.B.
Anonymous wrote:I sometimes say I am from the town next to mine, where I went to high school, because more people have heard of it.
If asked where I live now, while traveling, I say DC. If pressed further by someone who knows the area, I say Arlington.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is for people who, when asked where they're from, will say the current city they live in, rather than where they grew up.
Aka someone who grew up in Utah, but is living in NYC, and when they meet someone new and asked, the say "New York".
Why do you do it? Is it shame about your hometown? Wishing you could have grown up in someplace more sophisticated?
I can't imagine what this looks like when some native New Yorker says something like, "cool. I grew up on the Upper West Side, how about you?"
Mega embarrassing for Provo.
Yep or "what high school did you go to?"
Major, major L. And way less embarrassing than just calmly saying "I'm from Kentucky" from the jump.
????
Conversation in DC between people who are just meeting:
"So, James, where are you from?"
"New York."
"cool. I grew up on the Upper West Side, how about you?"
"Oh, I grew up in Kentucky. I moved to New York after college. Do you get back there often?"
How is that embarrassing?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is for people who, when asked where they're from, will say the current city they live in, rather than where they grew up.
Aka someone who grew up in Utah, but is living in NYC, and when they meet someone new and asked, the say "New York".
Why do you do it? Is it shame about your hometown? Wishing you could have grown up in someplace more sophisticated?
I can't imagine what this looks like when some native New Yorker says something like, "cool. I grew up on the Upper West Side, how about you?"
Mega embarrassing for Provo.
Yep or "what high school did you go to?"
Major, major L. And way less embarrassing than just calmly saying "I'm from Kentucky" from the jump.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is for people who, when asked where they're from, will say the current city they live in, rather than where they grew up.
Aka someone who grew up in Utah, but is living in NYC, and when they meet someone new and asked, the say "New York".
Why do you do it? Is it shame about your hometown? Wishing you could have grown up in someplace more sophisticated?
Why do you want to know where they grew up? Is it relevant to your life? Why do you do it?
Anonymous wrote:This is for people who, when asked where they're from, will say the current city they live in, rather than where they grew up.
Aka someone who grew up in Utah, but is living in NYC, and when they meet someone new and asked, the say "New York".
Why do you do it? Is it shame about your hometown? Wishing you could have grown up in someplace more sophisticated?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This is for people who, when asked where they're from, will say the current city they live in, rather than where they grew up.
Aka someone who grew up in Utah, but is living in NYC, and when they meet someone new and asked, the say "New York".
Why do you do it? Is it shame about your hometown? Wishing you could have grown up in someplace more sophisticated?
I can't imagine what this looks like when some native New Yorker says something like, "cool. I grew up on the Upper West Side, how about you?"
Mega embarrassing for Provo.