Anonymous wrote:I’m not sure moving is the fix you expect it to be.
You can walk now. Really. Put on shoes and go on a walk. Start hiking for errands.
People are busy everywhere and it’s difficult to make friends. No guarantee you’ll make any in your new location. My husband struggled to make friends and it’s been that way everywhere we have lived.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op sitting here reading every response and literally tearing up. I hate it here so much. Thanks to all the Chicagoans for chiming in.
honestly, this doesn't look that bad:
https://www.mountprospect.org/community/about-mount-prospect
your reaction suggests that you have some other issues going on. i say that as life-long (50 years old now) city person, and a psychologist. it's ok to move to a place that suits you better, and not all places are the same. but moving 20 miles is unlikely to be a major fix for anything.
A 20 mile move can be a major fix for someone who’s unhappy.
+1! 20 miles is neighborhoods apart. And the “psychologist” is really trying to diagnose that OP has something else going on based on their posts on a message board? Lol.
i am not diagnosing anyone (what was the diagnosis?) but her assessments seems extreme given the circumstances. i don't like suburbs, either, and never lived there. but it's a preference, not a calamity.
You made an assessment of OP “your reaction suggests that you have some other issues going on.”
That’s wildly inappropriate for a “psychologist” to post. But anyone can post here claiming to be any profession. A real psychologist would never have said that.
- a lawyer
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op sitting here reading every response and literally tearing up. I hate it here so much. Thanks to all the Chicagoans for chiming in.
honestly, this doesn't look that bad:
https://www.mountprospect.org/community/about-mount-prospect
your reaction suggests that you have some other issues going on. i say that as life-long (50 years old now) city person, and a psychologist. it's ok to move to a place that suits you better, and not all places are the same. but moving 20 miles is unlikely to be a major fix for anything.
A 20 mile move can be a major fix for someone who’s unhappy.
+1! 20 miles is neighborhoods apart. And the “psychologist” is really trying to diagnose that OP has something else going on based on their posts on a message board? Lol.
i am not diagnosing anyone (what was the diagnosis?) but her assessments seems extreme given the circumstances. i don't like suburbs, either, and never lived there. but it's a preference, not a calamity.
Anonymous wrote:100% do it. Not only for all the reasons you mentioned, but giving your kids the opportunity to spend time with your grandparents is a real gift to everyone, too. I'm feeling sentimental bc my brother did this with our grandparents and his kids were able to enrich my grandparents' final years and also benefit from that relationship. But also, 1400sf is plenty of space and Chicago is fantastic!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op sitting here reading every response and literally tearing up. I hate it here so much. Thanks to all the Chicagoans for chiming in.
honestly, this doesn't look that bad:
https://www.mountprospect.org/community/about-mount-prospect
your reaction suggests that you have some other issues going on. i say that as life-long (50 years old now) city person, and a psychologist. it's ok to move to a place that suits you better, and not all places are the same. but moving 20 miles is unlikely to be a major fix for anything.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op sitting here reading every response and literally tearing up. I hate it here so much. Thanks to all the Chicagoans for chiming in.
honestly, this doesn't look that bad:
https://www.mountprospect.org/community/about-mount-prospect
your reaction suggests that you have some other issues going on. i say that as life-long (50 years old now) city person, and a psychologist. it's ok to move to a place that suits you better, and not all places are the same. but moving 20 miles is unlikely to be a major fix for anything.
A 20 mile move can be a major fix for someone who’s unhappy.
+1! 20 miles is neighborhoods apart. And the “psychologist” is really trying to diagnose that OP has something else going on based on their posts on a message board? Lol.
i am not diagnosing anyone (what was the diagnosis?) but her assessments seems extreme given the circumstances. i don't like suburbs, either, and never lived there. but it's a preference, not a calamity.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op sitting here reading every response and literally tearing up. I hate it here so much. Thanks to all the Chicagoans for chiming in.
honestly, this doesn't look that bad:
https://www.mountprospect.org/community/about-mount-prospect
your reaction suggests that you have some other issues going on. i say that as life-long (50 years old now) city person, and a psychologist. it's ok to move to a place that suits you better, and not all places are the same. but moving 20 miles is unlikely to be a major fix for anything.
A 20 mile move can be a major fix for someone who’s unhappy.
+1! 20 miles is neighborhoods apart. And the “psychologist” is really trying to diagnose that OP has something else going on based on their posts on a message board? Lol.
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand what is wrong with chain restaurants and coffee shops. They have all grown to be chains because what they offered was good.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op sitting here reading every response and literally tearing up. I hate it here so much. Thanks to all the Chicagoans for chiming in.
honestly, this doesn't look that bad:
https://www.mountprospect.org/community/about-mount-prospect
your reaction suggests that you have some other issues going on. i say that as life-long (50 years old now) city person, and a psychologist. it's ok to move to a place that suits you better, and not all places are the same. but moving 20 miles is unlikely to be a major fix for anything.
A 20 mile move can be a major fix for someone who’s unhappy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Op sitting here reading every response and literally tearing up. I hate it here so much. Thanks to all the Chicagoans for chiming in.
honestly, this doesn't look that bad:
https://www.mountprospect.org/community/about-mount-prospect
your reaction suggests that you have some other issues going on. i say that as life-long (50 years old now) city person, and a psychologist. it's ok to move to a place that suits you better, and not all places are the same. but moving 20 miles is unlikely to be a major fix for anything.
Anonymous wrote:You're going to let them go to a Chicago public school? That sounds interesting...
I basically have this set up in a DC 'burb with good schools and walkability (Falls Church City). So I see the pluses. We do still use our car a ton, though. Walkability in the rain and winter is tough with kids.