Anonymous wrote:do you want your car being broken into, child being mugged?
Anonymous wrote:
But I know there is another side to this. There are some people who bring the feeling of "home" with them. Like the previous PP who was so happy with her community. Maybe it's really just that she was lucky, but I also get the sense that she's the kind of person who reaches out and enriches the whole neighborhood with her energy and community spirit. I tell myself I should stay here and be like that. But I still would love to have the kind of place that fits us like a glove. I don't know how to describe it, but feel some PPs understand.
Anonymous wrote:Do any of the posters saying "Location, location, location" actually live in a neighborhood where they don't fit in socially or socio-economically? (aside from the Cleveland Park poster who found that she didn't and chose to move)?
It's easy to say "location, location, location" until you're stuck in a neighborhood where you have very little in common with 90% your neighbors.
We live in one (beautiful house in upper NW DC which we afforded due to a combination of factors) and we often wish we had moved to Silver Spring, Takoma Park, etc instead. We have a decent enough income but we don't have the same lifestyles as any of our neighbors. I SAH but I don't have a full time nanny. I don't have a vacation home. I don't drive a luxury SUV. I don't wear all Patagonia. etc. etc. etc. People are nice but we are very different and I really wish we were surrounded by a different (more international, more middle class) community. I had no idea this would matter when I was buying a house and hadn't been in this situation. I would have said "location" as well and I did--evidenced by where we bought our house.
We do have social circles and friends all over the city but I wish we had them next door.
Anonymous wrote:I -think- I understand what you're saying. I would fit in much better in Takoma Park, MD, and Mt. Rainier and Hyattsville I think, based on all the people I like who live there.
However, I happen to live in a much-more-convenient-to-downtown neighborhood along the Red Line. It's also scads wealthier according to the 2010 Census and getting moreso.
I don't "connect" right away with my go-gettum' immediate neighbors who earn hundreds of thousands a year (yes, they do) as an equity partner of BL Swiper. I do connect right away with everyone I meet in TP, Mt. Rainier, etc.
Still, I stay put for reasons PP have mentioned: convenience, property values, in my case, supreme walkability / Metro access ... lower crime stats ....
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I love our neighborhood's quiet streets and convenient physical location (we're renting). But I know there are further-out, less convenient locations where I'd fit in better socially (more alternative, more international, more diverse). I think if my husband and I didn't have kids we would definitely look to buy where we are now, since our social life doesn't have to revolve around our neighborhood. However, I think about my kids and the friends they will make through school.
Is it better to be in a great location and be clinging to the bottom of the social ladder (here we'd be lucky to find something we could afford, and then it'd be a stretch for us), or to be in a neighborhood we can afford without such a stretch and where we might find more like-minded families. I do want my children to "fit in" and not feel like outcasts. I also am not very patient with them having playdates when I find the other kids spoiled and rude, and I'm finding that here. I know I'll get in trouble for saying that... I guess I'm just not good with kids. But I am sure there must be lower-key families like ours in this neighborhood too, and it could just take time to fit in.
If we stay in the great-location neighborhood, the investment in our home will be more secure.
so are you trying say you are foreign born?
If so - you will be miserable anywhere you live if you keep fantasizing that in your culture, or your country, everybody does it right (buys the right kind of house, acts the right way, eats the right kind of food) and ends up being perfect parents who have sweet and helpful and non-spolied kids all the time.
Your country or culture isn't superior - and neither is mine - so get over yourself and realize that everybody gets to make their own decisions on how to live and parent and its you who has the problem. You need to learn to accept that people do things differrently and that's ok and that by them just doing it differently and telling you about it does not mean that you have to change they way you live or that you aren't free to tell them how you prefer to do it. It also doesn't mean that they are judging you or even really care all that much. Sure some of them will but the vast majority of people are so wrapped up in their own lives that they are not all that interested in yours as you believe them to be.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do any of the posters saying "Location, location, location" actually live in a neighborhood where they don't fit in socially or socio-economically? (aside from the Cleveland Park poster who found that she didn't and chose to move)?
It's easy to say "location, location, location" until you're stuck in a neighborhood where you have very little in common with 90% your neighbors.
We live in one (beautiful house in upper NW DC which we afforded due to a combination of factors) and we often wish we had moved to Silver Spring, Takoma Park, etc instead. We have a decent enough income but we don't have the same lifestyles as any of our neighbors. I SAH but I don't have a full time nanny. I don't have a vacation home. I don't drive a luxury SUV. I don't wear all Patagonia. etc. etc. etc. People are nice but we are very different and I really wish we were surrounded by a different (more international, more middle class) community. I had no idea this would matter when I was buying a house and hadn't been in this situation. I would have said "location" as well and I did--evidenced by where we bought our house.
We do have social circles and friends all over the city but I wish we had them next door.
I think it's about really you and OP, and not the neighbors. Could it be that you are just projecting a bit on your neighbors? Unfairly? I, too, live in a beautiful house in NW DC (that we afforded on our own), but like you also do not have a full time nanny, vacation home, luxury SUV, and would never spend money on Patagonia. And, I have all kinds of neighbor friends.
Often, when people are holding back, people pick up those unapproachable vibes and respond accordingly. I think it was OP who said she "really tried," but if you are already judging the situation, that's not a lot of effort. I have hung out with friends in Mt. Rainier who have complained about their neighbors, so it's not all hunky dory there. It's attitude, plain and simple. OP, dig down and find the best solution for you and your family.
I'm the OP, and I think there have been quite a few posters who related to what I said and described a similar situation. It must have been one of them who said she'd "really tried". I haven't really tried yet, as we are still new here. And I don't want to give the wrong impression. It seems like there are many nice people here. People have been nice about introducing themselves, and the kids have been nice to our kids. So, really I'm just giving you my gut feeling. The kids seem nice enough, but when we actually do playdates, I find myself surprised how rude the kids have been to me and to my kids. (My kids don't seem to mind, so it's not that bad, I guess. But I mind on their behalf.) But this is just a handful of playdates. I'm sure there are kids here who are not like that at all. I know it takes time. It's hard to describe what I mean. I don't feel relaxed here, like you feel if you are really at home. Like how the one PP wrote that she felt about Takoma Park, and the other about Silver Spring. I'd like the feeling of moving into a neighborhood and having it feel like home.
But I know there is another side to this. There are some people who bring the feeling of "home" with them. Like the previous PP who was so happy with her community. Maybe it's really just that she was lucky, but I also get the sense that she's the kind of person who reaches out and enriches the whole neighborhood with her energy and community spirit. I tell myself I should stay here and be like that. But I still would love to have the kind of place that fits us like a glove. I don't know how to describe it, but feel some PPs understand.
Anonymous wrote:I love our neighborhood's quiet streets and convenient physical location (we're renting). But I know there are further-out, less convenient locations where I'd fit in better socially (more alternative, more international, more diverse). I think if my husband and I didn't have kids we would definitely look to buy where we are now, since our social life doesn't have to revolve around our neighborhood. However, I think about my kids and the friends they will make through school.
Is it better to be in a great location and be clinging to the bottom of the social ladder (here we'd be lucky to find something we could afford, and then it'd be a stretch for us), or to be in a neighborhood we can afford without such a stretch and where we might find more like-minded families. I do want my children to "fit in" and not feel like outcasts. I also am not very patient with them having playdates when I find the other kids spoiled and rude, and I'm finding that here. I know I'll get in trouble for saying that... I guess I'm just not good with kids. But I am sure there must be lower-key families like ours in this neighborhood too, and it could just take time to fit in.
If we stay in the great-location neighborhood, the investment in our home will be more secure.