Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:DH and I met in college in DC. We continued to live in DC for a few years after college and began our careers there.
We're both from the Central Florida area and neither of us particularly wanted to return to Florida other than for the reason that we missed our families. We ended up moving to Orlando, which is about 30-45 minutes away from both of our sets of parents, when I got pregnant. We're happy to be able to see our families often and we're grateful for all of the support our parents have provided. We're both pretty close with our parents and see them about once a week.
The thing is: we hate Florida. The only silver lining is the proximity to family. The weather is terrible, the people are mostly pretty dumb and uneducated, there is little to do, and career opportunities are pretty scarce. We'd both rather live in the DC area and feel it would be a better environment for our children, too. However, we'd feel terrible abandoning our parents (particularly as they're getting older) and we'd like our children to see their grandparents on a regular basis and have that sort of close relationship with them.
At the end of the day, we probably won't move. We'll just stay miserable in Orlando. Anyone else been in a similar situation?
Semi-similar...I'd like to move to the west coast for professional reasons, but family proximity is an issue, especially with a young kid (proximity is an issue for relationships with grandparents/relatives, not really for help). If we could afford to travel to see them as much as we wanted, it would be easier to consider a big move, but we can't. So I'd say your travel budget and flexibility are big factors.
I agree with PP that grandparents won't be around forever, but neither will you. As others have noted, life is too short to be miserable. Can you spend longer blocks of quality time together on a less regular basis? Do either of you have the job flexibility where you could take the kids for a week or a long weekend every couple of months? Can the grandparents move?
Anonymous wrote:DH and I met in college in DC. We continued to live in DC for a few years after college and began our careers there.
We're both from the Central Florida area and neither of us particularly wanted to return to Florida other than for the reason that we missed our families. We ended up moving to Orlando, which is about 30-45 minutes away from both of our sets of parents, when I got pregnant. We're happy to be able to see our families often and we're grateful for all of the support our parents have provided. We're both pretty close with our parents and see them about once a week.
The thing is: we hate Florida. The only silver lining is the proximity to family. The weather is terrible, the people are mostly pretty dumb and uneducated, there is little to do, and career opportunities are pretty scarce. We'd both rather live in the DC area and feel it would be a better environment for our children, too. However, we'd feel terrible abandoning our parents (particularly as they're getting older) and we'd like our children to see their grandparents on a regular basis and have that sort of close relationship with them.
At the end of the day, we probably won't move. We'll just stay miserable in Orlando. Anyone else been in a similar situation?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can't you find somewhere you like better in Florida? Your parents won't be around forever, and if they are starting to need help, that will only increase. Also, thinking ahead for your kids, I would bet college prospects a lot better for well-educated students coming from Florida versus the DC area (such a glut of high-pressure public and privates make it hard for good students to stand out). I would try to find everything you can like in Florida and embrace the fact that you can be at beautiful beaches quickly, your kids can play outdoor sports year-round (so if they end up liking soft/baseball, tennis, soccer, etc., they will be better at it than northern counterparts), etc.
This seems like a happy compromise OP.
Satellite Beach. Live as close to the water as possible. That' the only way Florida is tolerable.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can't you find somewhere you like better in Florida? Your parents won't be around forever, and if they are starting to need help, that will only increase. Also, thinking ahead for your kids, I would bet college prospects a lot better for well-educated students coming from Florida versus the DC area (such a glut of high-pressure public and privates make it hard for good students to stand out). I would try to find everything you can like in Florida and embrace the fact that you can be at beautiful beaches quickly, your kids can play outdoor sports year-round (so if they end up liking soft/baseball, tennis, soccer, etc., they will be better at it than northern counterparts), etc.
This seems like a happy compromise OP.
Anonymous wrote:Can't you find somewhere you like better in Florida? Your parents won't be around forever, and if they are starting to need help, that will only increase. Also, thinking ahead for your kids, I would bet college prospects a lot better for well-educated students coming from Florida versus the DC area (such a glut of high-pressure public and privates make it hard for good students to stand out). I would try to find everything you can like in Florida and embrace the fact that you can be at beautiful beaches quickly, your kids can play outdoor sports year-round (so if they end up liking soft/baseball, tennis, soccer, etc., they will be better at it than northern counterparts), etc.
Anonymous wrote:Life is too short to stay in a place that makes you miserable.