Anonymous wrote:aside from Ethiopian food, wtf could you possibly miss about this place??
Anonymous wrote:This is OP again. Do people feel guilty uprooting family when the breadwinner is unfulfilled/disgruntled at work but the rest of the family is settled/happy?
Anonymous wrote:aside from Ethiopian food, wtf could you possibly miss about this place??
Anonymous wrote:I don't live in DC but have thought about moving. It would be the first time in my life I would move and live long term outside of my hometown (which is a major city).
I don't have anything to add to this thread but just want to say 1)Kudos to all of you for taking a chance and trying something new, you learn something incredible about yourself and what you're made of even when things don't work out as planned, and 2) You're honesty about the move not working out is still very inspiring and gives me the courage to go ahead and try it, despite the unknown.
Anonymous wrote:aside from Ethiopian food, wtf could you possibly miss about this place??
Anonymous wrote:Not identifying which poster I am in case somehow someone I know ends up on this board, but South Jersey. Geographically near Philadelphia but NOT Philadelphia in any way or sense. It’s like a region that is all Haegerstown. Some people love it and it is totally their place. More power to you, it’s just not MY place. Philadelphia and the Main Line ... if I had started over there, things would probably be very different.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We moved away "for the quality of life" and moved back after 2 years. We just...never found our people there. No one seemed to care about the things that I care about (politics, travel), and folks were passionate about stuff that I find boring at best (sports, college football).
I tried so hard to find folks who shared my interests and values, but kept running into the same "types." Overinvested hockey moms, Pilates moms who think "mommy juice" in the sippy cup was the height of edgy, and uber-crunchy homeschoolers who didn't vaccinate and spent their time mocking the "sheeple."
Yes, DC is stressful and expensive and we gave up a big house in a leafy suburb (full of racist jackasses) to live in the city, use a lower ranked school than we had in Whitesville, probably work harder, but we're much much happier.
OP again - I could have typed this. I really appreciate the replies.
as someone considering jobs all over and worried about what it really means to move somewhere totally unfamiliar (DH and I have lived only in urban coastal cities), would love a general idea of where you guys are....
I'm the PP above who references overinvested hockey moms. I was in the suburbs of a major Midwestern city that is not Chicago, in a neighborhood that is constantly being written up as one of the loveliest suburbs in America, but I found it stifling and impossible.
Unless you were there in the witness protection program, why not just name the city? Frankly, you don't exactly come off sounding all that great.
Ugh, troll with the fake personal attacks. Your posts are tiresome.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We moved away "for the quality of life" and moved back after 2 years. We just...never found our people there. No one seemed to care about the things that I care about (politics, travel), and folks were passionate about stuff that I find boring at best (sports, college football).
I tried so hard to find folks who shared my interests and values, but kept running into the same "types." Overinvested hockey moms, Pilates moms who think "mommy juice" in the sippy cup was the height of edgy, and uber-crunchy homeschoolers who didn't vaccinate and spent their time mocking the "sheeple."
Yes, DC is stressful and expensive and we gave up a big house in a leafy suburb (full of racist jackasses) to live in the city, use a lower ranked school than we had in Whitesville, probably work harder, but we're much much happier.
OP again - I could have typed this. I really appreciate the replies.
as someone considering jobs all over and worried about what it really means to move somewhere totally unfamiliar (DH and I have lived only in urban coastal cities), would love a general idea of where you guys are....
Why so coy?
I'm the PP above who references overinvested hockey moms. I was in the suburbs of a major Midwestern city that is not Chicago, in a neighborhood that is constantly being written up as one of the loveliest suburbs in America, but I found it stifling and impossible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We moved away "for the quality of life" and moved back after 2 years. We just...never found our people there. No one seemed to care about the things that I care about (politics, travel), and folks were passionate about stuff that I find boring at best (sports, college football).
I tried so hard to find folks who shared my interests and values, but kept running into the same "types." Overinvested hockey moms, Pilates moms who think "mommy juice" in the sippy cup was the height of edgy, and uber-crunchy homeschoolers who didn't vaccinate and spent their time mocking the "sheeple."
Yes, DC is stressful and expensive and we gave up a big house in a leafy suburb (full of racist jackasses) to live in the city, use a lower ranked school than we had in Whitesville, probably work harder, but we're much much happier.
OP again - I could have typed this. I really appreciate the replies.
as someone considering jobs all over and worried about what it really means to move somewhere totally unfamiliar (DH and I have lived only in urban coastal cities), would love a general idea of where you guys are....
I'm the PP above who references overinvested hockey moms. I was in the suburbs of a major Midwestern city that is not Chicago, in a neighborhood that is constantly being written up as one of the loveliest suburbs in America, but I found it stifling and impossible.
Unless you were there in the witness protection program, why not just name the city? Frankly, you don't exactly come off sounding all that great.