Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was the child who was uprooted every few years to go to another country.
My kids are the ones who see their friends leave.
Let me tell you something, OP: the second scenario is easier!
I'm the poster who begged her parents to move from LI to Manhattan. I would have LOVED to move around to different countries. I was such an adventurous kid who was great at making friends wherever I went.
Anonymous wrote:I know there are great, cool things about growing up here but it makes me sad that my kid’d childhood is going to be so different than mine. All the kids in my neighborhood lived there the whole if school years, we all rode bikes everywhere, we all had swingsets and slip n slides in our backyards. The ice cream man came down our street everyday.
We live in a condo in Arlungtin- no backyard, learning to ride a bike on the W& OD, really transient area. She is three and her best friend’s famiky just told us they are relocating to Europe. Seems like any friend she makes will have a 1-3 yr lifespan. Just bums me out. Yea there are great museums and playgrounds etc but makes me sad she won’t get what I had.
Anonymous wrote:I know there are great, cool things about growing up here but it makes me sad that my kid’d childhood is going to be so different than mine. All the kids in my neighborhood lived there the whole if school years, we all rode bikes everywhere, we all had swingsets and slip n slides in our backyards. The ice cream man came down our street everyday.
We live in a condo in Arlungtin- no backyard, learning to ride a bike on the W& OD, really transient area. She is three and her best friend’s famiky just told us they are relocating to Europe. Seems like any friend she makes will have a 1-3 yr lifespan. Just bums me out. Yea there are great museums and playgrounds etc but makes me sad she won’t get what I had.
Anonymous wrote:Please don't do this to you or your kid. Yes, their childhood will be different than yours. THAT IS FINE! I have teens and my husband laments that they don't "hang out" at the bowling alley during the summer or "cruise" in cars every weekend evening. He literally said this and my teen nearly burst a gut laughing at him. They have their own lives and they will enjoy them.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was the child who was uprooted every few years to go to another country.
My kids are the ones who see their friends leave.
Let me tell you something, OP: the second scenario is easier!
I'm the poster who begged her parents to move from LI to Manhattan. I would have LOVED to move around to different countries. I was such an adventurous kid who was great at making friends wherever I went.
PP you replied to. For the child it can certainly be fun, albeit challenging, because you have to learn new languages and adapt to different cultures. For the parents, it's very hard. My mother fell into a depression and my father was married to his job. It's harder to make friends the older you are, and when you're moving around every few years, learning the language and trying to fit in, it can get impossible to make real friendships. My parents' social difficulties impacted my childhood significantly.
My point, PP, is that travel comes at a price.