Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did you grow up there?
Can you just resign yourself to getting around to wherever the way you did as a teen?
OP here. I grew up there and was thrilled to go away to school. Other than them, I have no ties there. My parents talked about moving for years, and I looked forward to hearing them finally say they found a place. At this point, visiting them feels like going to Miss Havisham's but the tragedy wasn't being left at the altar, it was the kids growing up. Part of it is the feeling in the house, I have to admit. They're not a happy couple. There's no joy there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did you grow up there?
Can you just resign yourself to getting around to wherever the way you did as a teen?
OP here. I grew up there and was thrilled to go away to school. Other than them, I have no ties there. My parents talked about moving for years, and I looked forward to hearing them finally say they found a place. At this point, visiting them feels like going to Miss Havisham's but the tragedy wasn't being left at the altar, it was the kids growing up. Part of it is the feeling in the house, I have to admit. They're not a happy couple. There's no joy there.
Anonymous wrote:I just deal with it to see my parents who I love and could lose at any moment? It's not really a challenge to be somewhere kind of boring for a little while.
Anonymous wrote:Did you grow up there?
Can you just resign yourself to getting around to wherever the way you did as a teen?
Anonymous wrote:There’s a metro??? Lucky!!! My DH’s hometown stinks. It’s 90 mins by car to the closest big city and the city MIL lives in has almost no people due to decades of industry moving overseas. There are no good restaurants and it’s freezing cold all winter. Literally, the ONLY thing to do is go to the movie theater or sit at home. So, we see a lot of movies, play a lot of board
games and cook.
Anonymous wrote:I just deal with it to see my parents who I love and could lose at any moment? It's not really a challenge to be somewhere kind of boring for a little while.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My parents have been in the same house for 40+ years in my cookie-cutter hometown. We're visiting for Christmas and DH and I have agreed this is not how we want to spend future holidays when we have time off. The kids are older and get antsy after two days. The only thing of interest to do is drive or take the metro into the big nearby city, but even that has gotten old. For those who are also obliged to spend their time off more or less sitting in their parents living room eating coffee cake being asked questions about people you haven't seen in decades, how do you cope?
This isn't even a walkable place with a pretty downtown with Christmas lights and coffee shops and bookstores. Walking around there isn't even safe. It's a sprawling suburb off a busy road that no one in their right mind would want to walk. No paved walkway for pedestrians. You're literally tiptoeing on a narrow dirt path through weeds to get to a Starbucks a mile away. My parents, of course, think it's a wonderful place and don't understand why we are bored or ask about meeting elsewhere for the holidays. I've suggested cruises, meeting up in a pretty tourist destination, anything. But they refuse.
It’s big enough to have a metro connect it to a big city, how bad can it really be? Why can’t you just enjoy being with your parents for a few days and find things to do in the city with a metro?
There are only about 15 cities in the US that have a subway system, and most of those cities are fairly large.