Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I faced this same dilemma 16 years ago and moved. Happy wife happy life.
Is your firstborn a girl? It’s likely your wife is looking at the kids around here and thinking she doesn’t want her kids to be like them. I can relate and there’s really nothing rational you can saw or do to counter it.
And why would the Midwest be “failing?” I can’t speak for Ann Arbor, but southern Ohio is booming. Good jobs should are plentiful and the area west and south of Columbus down to the northern suburbs of cincy is really nice. I go there for work often and the people are really nice, mortgages don’t leave them house poor, schools are good, and the pace of life seems manageable.
From experience, raising kids and teenagers in the dc metro is a complete circus clown show every day. Maybe I’m romanticizing it as greener grass, but trust your wife’s intuition.
Raising kids in the DMV is similar to any large metro area. I have family in NJ (NY suburb) and Dallas and it’s more or less the same.
Anonymous wrote:I faced this same dilemma 16 years ago and moved. Happy wife happy life.
Is your firstborn a girl? It’s likely your wife is looking at the kids around here and thinking she doesn’t want her kids to be like them. I can relate and there’s really nothing rational you can saw or do to counter it.
And why would the Midwest be “failing?” I can’t speak for Ann Arbor, but southern Ohio is booming. Good jobs should are plentiful and the area west and south of Columbus down to the northern suburbs of cincy is really nice. I go there for work often and the people are really nice, mortgages don’t leave them house poor, schools are good, and the pace of life seems manageable.
From experience, raising kids and teenagers in the dc metro is a complete circus clown show every day. Maybe I’m romanticizing it as greener grass, but trust your wife’s intuition.
Anonymous wrote:Be careful, moving to a general area “near” family is nothing like moving to their city. My family lives an hour away and I see them every other month or so.
Anonymous wrote:Op here and I will try to address a few things. Yes the cost of living will be lower there, but we would still be paying $500-$600 for a home and we would lose our low interest rate. We also just put a lot of money into home renovations. My wife would most likely be making more money, but I would probably make less and have less opportunities. She moved here for me though and says now it's time for me to move for her. I don't think life works like that and it isn't really a good argument. Yes we moved here for my job, but she was able to easily find a job as well and was 100% onboard with moving here.
I moved around a lot as a kid, but my parents are also in the Midwest but not close to her family, and we would probably still see them the same amount as we do now. Her mom has helped us a lot since the baby was born, but she has a part-time job and isn't able to take more time off at the moment. My wife just freaked out about 2 months going by without seeing any of her family and that rekindled her obsession with moving. Before the baby was born we saw her family maybe 3 times a year.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Be careful, moving to a general area “near” family is nothing like moving to their city. My family lives an hour away and I see them every other month or so.
Agree that near family is a vague term and it’s confusing that she’s thinking about 2 different states in the same region, neither of which are too too far from DC. Does your wife have one sibling in each place and she wants to be in the same town as one of them? Is she trying to get within range of an easy weekend drive? What specifically does she want?
I visited my hometown this summer and I think I understand what you mean about feeling like failing by going back. My sibling is wildly successful financially, even by DC standards, but it seems kind of weird to me that their kids graduated from the same high school we went to, and I ran into several classmates at one of those HS graduations because their kids were also graduating from that school. This isn’t a small town, it’s a real city. 800 kids in the graduating class. But people like it there and they stay. I don’t and I left and I don’t want to go back.
That said, the thing I had to admit about myself this summer, in response to some very candid conversations with my partner about moving to be near family, is that I don’t want the responsibility of being near family. I don’t want to be tied to getting together for all of the birthday dinners and holidays. I don’t want to live near my parents or sibling and fit all the strings that comes with that into our already busy lives. It works very well for me for our visits to be special, occasional, snd relatively short. I love my parents and my sibling, but we all get along much better with me living here, in large part because I don't want to, and have never wanted to, do what’s expected of me with my family of origin. In that way I’ve come to realize I’m selfish. My sibling truly enjoys a lot of that stuff, and they’re also just a better sibling and child than I am.
Anyway I wrote all of that to say that feeling like a failure doesn’t seem like a very good reason, but you may want to do some self exploration to see if you can better understand your own concerns and use that to have a more open and honest conversation with your wife.