Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would say yes except whe I was in college and early twenties and law school….I literally never liked any of my peers who grew up in NYC. None of them. They just weren’t nice. They were kinda haughty and full of themselves in a too cool for school way and weren’t friendly. I would not want my kids to be like that.
Oh my goodness, same. There was a girl from NYC who lived in my hall freshman year. I remember she went to Chapin. She literally would not even speak to her non rich friends. Would pretend she didn't see you when you said hi to her in the all. Didn't participate in any dorm events. It was bizarre.
Anonymous wrote:No, never, ever. I lived in NYC and for awhile and always felt claustrophobic there. Love all that the city has to offer, but I guess I’m a country mouse at heart.
Anonymous wrote:The answer would have been yes for so long but I think it might be shifting. After I turned 40 I just started to crave nature more and more, I'm not sure if weekends and vacations and walks in the park would cut it for me. Even DC, where nature is pretty accessible, sometimes feels too urban for me these days.
The museums and restaurants and theater and dance might still be enough to sway me though. With a place upstate.
Anonymous wrote:I’m someone who was born there who said no way. To explain why, first of all in general I prefer the west coast, although I do love DC and parts of New England. But second of all, I just don’t like the relentless focus on money in NYC. It is an area that is hyper focused on wealth in a way I’ve found nowhere else in the world except China. I find it suffocating. Finally, I hate how dirty I feel after spending a day there. Idk of there is a fine layer of dust that covers everything or what, but in no other major cities do I so strongly feel that I have to strip down and shower immediately after coming in from the outdoors. I just feel physically gross there.
Anonymous wrote:If I won the Powerball lottery today and had $500M in the bank, I would NEVER even consider living in NYC. It smells like pee, is covered in rats, overrun with trash, has terrible city management, has failing infrastructure, and the crime is uncontrolled. Just no.
Let me think again...
Not even if you paid me to do it.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We are and we love it. One kid, private school, big brownstone, and the city at our feet. Crazy expensive but worth it if you can swing it.
This is my life in DC. Big row home with plenty of outdoor space, one kid, private school, quiet neighborhood. You couldn’t pay me to live in New York.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would say yes except whe I was in college and early twenties and law school….I literally never liked any of my peers who grew up in NYC. None of them. They just weren’t nice. They were kinda haughty and full of themselves in a too cool for school way and weren’t friendly. I would not want my kids to be like that.
Oh my goodness, same. There was a girl from NYC who lived in my hall freshman year. I remember she went to Chapin. She literally would not even speak to her non rich friends. Would pretend she didn't see you when you said hi to her in the all. Didn't participate in any dorm events. It was bizarre.
She sounds horrible, but that's Chapin. Most new yorkers dont go to private school, let alone such an elite one.
First poster here. Maybe, but the NYCers I know have run the gamut. Chapin types, public schools like Sty and Bronx School of Science and Hunter College, kids from Washington Heights who went to public schools there, Prep for Prep. They just….aren’t nice.
Ok actually I can think of one Prep for Prep kid who went to a rural boarding school who was nice. But I think she spent a lot of her childhood in Puerto Rico.
We are just different kind of nice. Low tolerance for BS and all.