Anonymous wrote:I’ve found northern Va to be very open minded compared even to other places I’ve lived (including San Francisco, LA, Boston) as we have many people here that have jobs in places like the CIA, World Bank, foreign service, Pentagon, etc. that have lived in and regularly travel to many places oversees. We also have many people in northern VA who have family overseas that travel abroad to see relatives regularly.

Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am fascinated by this post. I’ve lived in 9 different places in this country and Northern VA is, by far, the most transient and least likely to have neighborhoods populated entirely by folks who grew up here. In fact, our friend group is probably 80/20 transplants vs natives. Impressive work befriending every local in McLean!
Look, some kids have the desire to spread their wings and some kids don’t. Even if you are stuck with a kid who can only muster Georgetown or UVA, there’s a possibility that they’ll wander post-college.
Your options are to expose them to a lot of different people, places, and experiences OR make home life so miserable that they are forced to flee.
+1 I'm in Bethesda but the majority of our friends and neighbors and social circle from work, kids school etc are all transplants. Us too.
I also don't think people here are insular compared to much of the country.
Anonymous wrote:I am fascinated by this post. I’ve lived in 9 different places in this country and Northern VA is, by far, the most transient and least likely to have neighborhoods populated entirely by folks who grew up here. In fact, our friend group is probably 80/20 transplants vs natives. Impressive work befriending every local in McLean!
Look, some kids have the desire to spread their wings and some kids don’t. Even if you are stuck with a kid who can only muster Georgetown or UVA, there’s a possibility that they’ll wander post-college.
Your options are to expose them to a lot of different people, places, and experiences OR make home life so miserable that they are forced to flee.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If you live in NOVA, your child is already exposed to far more diversity than they would be anywhere else.
Only if one takes a very narrow view of what diversity means.
IMO, class diversity, diversity of political and religious beliefs, etc. are equally important.
Very little of those types of diversity in the affluent DC burbs.
Anonymous wrote:If you live in NOVA, your child is already exposed to far more diversity than they would be anywhere else.
Anonymous wrote:I am fascinated by this post. I’ve lived in 9 different places in this country and Northern VA is, by far, the most transient and least likely to have neighborhoods populated entirely by folks who grew up here. In fact, our friend group is probably 80/20 transplants vs natives. Impressive work befriending every local in McLean!
Look, some kids have the desire to spread their wings and some kids don’t. Even if you are stuck with a kid who can only muster Georgetown or UVA, there’s a possibility that they’ll wander post-college.
Your options are to expose them to a lot of different people, places, and experiences OR make home life so miserable that they are forced to flee.