Anonymous wrote:I think one can easily live this way in the US, especially in a more urban environment. I think the US is more focused on the individual than it is on community and we are also okay with moving far from family and cutting ties if we need to. You can pick up and start over without needing to keep ancestral ties to a place or to others. But yes, people talk about neighbors and so forth and you won't get privacy in a small town except maybe in the Pacific Northeest where they have the so-called chill. I think you just live your life how you want.
Anonymous wrote:I live in the Pacific Northwest and the broader culture here does not value community in the way I have experienced in the American Midwest, the east coast, NYC, Texas, London, and much of Asia.
It’s a very interesting phenomenon that has been well-studied locally. Some believe it has to do with the area’s early Nordic immigrants, and others think that tech wealth and libertarian politics have sustained it. It affects socializing here and definitely affects civic engagement and government effectiveness.
Anonymous wrote:DCUM is MY community!
Anonymous wrote:I think one can easily live this way in the US, especially in a more urban environment. I think the US is more focused on the individual than it is on community and we are also okay with moving far from family and cutting ties if we need to. You can pick up and start over without needing to keep ancestral ties to a place or to others. But yes, people talk about neighbors and so forth and you won't get privacy in a small town except maybe in the Pacific Northeest where they have the so-called chill. I think you just live your life how you want.
Anonymous wrote:Real communities have traditions they maintain and are helpful:
Sport team players
Church or temple or mosque active members
Active alumni groups
Sororities and fraternities
Neighborhoods that are friendly and caring/ look out for another
In person hobby groups
Extended families with traditions and gatherings
Anonymous wrote:In the US we are pushed with the idea we need community, a friend group, to know our neighbors, etc.
And I don't have any of that and feel lonely. But after giving it deep thought I realized I don't WANT that and maybe I only feel lonely because I'm being told what the ideal is.
So what if the ideal what more independent? Is there some society or place I could move where I could just have a dog, and see people like once a week when I go buy food and a couple times a year to take the dog to the vet?
Anonymous wrote:In the US we are pushed with the idea we need community, a friend group, to know our neighbors, etc.
And I don't have any of that and feel lonely. But after giving it deep thought I realized I don't WANT that and maybe I only feel lonely because I'm being told what the ideal is.
So what if the ideal what more independent?
Is there some society or place I could move where I could just have a dog, and see people like once a week when I go buy food and a couple times a year to take the dog to the vet?
Anonymous wrote:In the US we are pushed with the idea we need community, a friend group, to know our neighbors, etc. And I don't have any of that and feel lonely. But after giving it deep thought I realized I don't WANT that and maybe I only feel lonely because I'm being told what the ideal is. So what if the ideal what more independent? Is there some society or place I could move where I could just have a dog, and see people like once a week when I go buy food and a couple times a year to take the dog to the vet?