Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, some people are pretentious, and want to pretend they are better than they really are - hence the lying.
If you think where you're from makes you better than other people, then you're not someone I want to be around. I care about who people are, not who their parents were.
So then by this logic I presume you have no issues accurately stating your hometown?
+1
What else are you hiding?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, some people are pretentious, and want to pretend they are better than they really are - hence the lying.
If you think where you're from makes you better than other people, then you're not someone I want to be around. I care about who people are, not who their parents were.
So then by this logic I presume you have no issues accurately stating your hometown?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, some people are pretentious, and want to pretend they are better than they really are - hence the lying.
If you think where you're from makes you better than other people, then you're not someone I want to be around. I care about who people are, not who their parents were.
So then by this logic I presume you have no issues accurately stating your hometown?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why are you so determined to get into other people’s business?
If someone is not comfortable telling a stranger where she/he grew up, why don’t you accept it and move on. It’s not relevant to your life.
Anonymous wrote:Why are you so determined to get into other people’s business?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If someone asks “where are you from?” I would assume they mean “where do you live?” rather than “where did you grow up?”
+1
No way. It takes two seconds to say, "I'm from Ohio but have been in DC 20 years."
It's not that straightforward for many of us.
I was born in Indiana, raised in Maryland from age 8 up, moved to Michigan for college, lived on the West Coast for 22 years before moving overseas for work, and now I live in Virginia. But I lived in California the longest and most of my family is there now and I consider it home. That's a lot of info when we just met, and if I just tell you I'm from California because I don't feel like repeating my life story, that's my perogative.
Well, you're not FROM the west coast, however much you love it, and however much "the west coast" may have a cache to it. You're from Indiana and Maryland, and that's easy enough to say. You live in California now and have lived there for a while, but that's not where you're FROM, unless you're traveling around the country and someone wants to ask where you live now.
No, I lived in California the longest. For several decades. I don't live there now. I don't even remember Indiana.
Correct, but you didn't grow up there, so you're not FROM there. You live there now, so I'm glad you love it so much.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If someone asks “where are you from?” I would assume they mean “where do you live?” rather than “where did you grow up?”
+1
No way. It takes two seconds to say, "I'm from Ohio but have been in DC 20 years."
It's not that straightforward for many of us.
I was born in Indiana, raised in Maryland from age 8 up, moved to Michigan for college, lived on the West Coast for 22 years before moving overseas for work, and now I live in Virginia. But I lived in California the longest and most of my family is there now and I consider it home. That's a lot of info when we just met, and if I just tell you I'm from California because I don't feel like repeating my life story, that's my perogative.
Well, you're not FROM the west coast, however much you love it, and however much "the west coast" may have a cache to it. You're from Indiana and Maryland, and that's easy enough to say. You live in California now and have lived there for a while, but that's not where you're FROM, unless you're traveling around the country and someone wants to ask where you live now.
No, I lived in California the longest. For several decades. I don't live there now. I don't even remember Indiana.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP, some people are pretentious, and want to pretend they are better than they really are - hence the lying.
If you think where you're from makes you better than other people, then you're not someone I want to be around. I care about who people are, not who their parents were.
Anonymous wrote:OP, some people are pretentious, and want to pretend they are better than they really are - hence the lying.