Are you always this defensive and immature?Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think transplants seem more infatuated with the area in general. They seem to view the city through perpetual rose colored glasses.
On the other hand, natives don't seem all that impressed. They don't seem to have the same thrill or appreciation that the transplants do, when seeing monuments or Dupont Circle other "DC" things
That's funny, because as someone who you'd define as a "transplant" (horrible word, I'm not a spare organ) I view the area through shit colored glasses.
I find the people who grew up here and returned after college to be very unimaginative, uncreative and highly conservative. But then I'm only meeting parents of kids the same age as my own, so I expect all the really truly interesting people are out doing their interesting things.
Get the f*ck over yourself. People all over the world go to college and return home. They're not all "unimaginative, uncreative, and highly conservative." Besides, YOU chose to come here. What does that make you?
This. I have been here 20+ years and cannot wait to get the hell out.Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think transplants seem more infatuated with the area in general. They seem to view the city through perpetual rose colored glasses.
On the other hand, natives don't seem all that impressed. They don't seem to have the same thrill or appreciation that the transplants do, when seeing monuments or Dupont Circle other "DC" things
Transplant here, and I detest this area. I cried when I found out we had to move back after being away for ten glorious years.
Now I'm here, and it's all about escaping at the first opportunity. There is no thrill, just dread.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Native here. DC transplants to me seem unnaturally enthused with the city. I am 27 and when people find out I grew up here I get a lot "Wow!!!! Really?!! I can't imagine having grown up in DC!! OMG!"
I always kind of have to hold back laughter because it just seems so absurd to me.
I think many of the transplants see DC as some sort of Gotham/metropolis, which i can understand, since many came from small towns. But having grown up here, DC really feels like a small town to me, in many ways, so I don't understand the shock at people imagining kids growing up here.
I lived in Atlanta and transplants would act like this. This behavior isn't unique to DC. There are also many people, including myself, who find DC small and unimpressive.
In what ways do you find DC small and unimpressive?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Native here. DC transplants to me seem unnaturally enthused with the city. I am 27 and when people find out I grew up here I get a lot "Wow!!!! Really?!! I can't imagine having grown up in DC!! OMG!"
I always kind of have to hold back laughter because it just seems so absurd to me.
I think many of the transplants see DC as some sort of Gotham/metropolis, which i can understand, since many came from small towns. But having grown up here, DC really feels like a small town to me, in many ways, so I don't understand the shock at people imagining kids growing up here.
I lived in Atlanta and transplants would act like this. This behavior isn't unique to DC. There are also many people, including myself, who find DC small and unimpressive.
Anonymous wrote:Native here. DC transplants to me seem unnaturally enthused with the city. I am 27 and when people find out I grew up here I get a lot "Wow!!!! Really?!! I can't imagine having grown up in DC!! OMG!"
I always kind of have to hold back laughter because it just seems so absurd to me.
I think many of the transplants see DC as some sort of Gotham/metropolis, which i can understand, since many came from small towns. But having grown up here, DC really feels like a small town to me, in many ways, so I don't understand the shock at people imagining kids growing up here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think transplants seem more infatuated with the area in general. They seem to view the city through perpetual rose colored glasses.
On the other hand, natives don't seem all that impressed. They don't seem to have the same thrill or appreciation that the transplants do, when seeing monuments or Dupont Circle other "DC" things
That's funny, because as someone who you'd define as a "transplant" (horrible word, I'm not a spare organ) I view the area through shit colored glasses.
I find the people who grew up here and returned after college to be very unimaginative, uncreative and highly conservative. But then I'm only meeting parents of kids the same age as my own, so I expect all the really truly interesting people are out doing their interesting things.
Anonymous wrote:I think transplants seem more infatuated with the area in general. They seem to view the city through perpetual rose colored glasses.
On the other hand, natives don't seem all that impressed. They don't seem to have the same thrill or appreciation that the transplants do, when seeing monuments or Dupont Circle other "DC" things
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My grandparents were born/raised in DC and owned a restaurant on Capitol Hill for decades. My father was born and raised in DC too....rode the streetcar out to Glen echo, walked the exorcist stairs to get to elementary school, worked for the FBI when Kennedy was shot...met my mom and was married in DC. My siblings and I were all born in DC, but we moved away when I was 5. We visited relatives yearly, but I didn't move back until I was 23 and then stayed until I was 40. What am I? Native or transplant? And to answer the question, I never saw any distinct differences between the two groups.
To answer your question, you are most definitely a transplant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I moved here in 2000. In that time, I've met 2 natives. So I can't really compare them to transplants.
Interesting. I live in DC but grew up in "close-in" MD suburb. It seems like many, many people I know from HS still live around here.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Native. Before I was born (in the 70s) my parents had been here for over 20 years. My kids were born in DC too (Sibley second generation).
........
This is all so true.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I moved here in 2000. In that time, I've met 2 natives. So I can't really compare them to transplants.
Interesting. I live in DC but grew up in "close-in" MD suburb. It seems like many, many people I know from HS still live around here.