Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just moved to Vienna and its hands down the best city I have lived in which includes paris london madrid stockholm cities in afria and south america. Def come here with children!!!!
I have the opportunity to do just this with work but can't convince DH. Ugh! I have small kids that I know would just love it in Austria/Europe.
What do you do for a living? I would love a job with that kind of option.
Were you able to go, first PP? I'm very late to reply, but +1 to PP's question if you don't mind sharing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just moved to Vienna and its hands down the best city I have lived in which includes paris london madrid stockholm cities in afria and south america. Def come here with children!!!!
I have the opportunity to do just this with work but can't convince DH. Ugh! I have small kids that I know would just love it in Austria/Europe.
What do you do for a living? I would love a job with that kind of option.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most of europe is racist. Vienna not more than other cities. And sorry most of the rest of the world is racist as well.
I am just relating the experience of my friends who moved there. They had lived in Paris and Edinburgh before and said that Vienna was noticeably racist in a way that paris and Scotland were not. I have headd the same ghing from others, including in this thread.
I agree with this. I'm from London, and lived in Vienna for a while. I'm white, I found it to be a great place to live in a lot of ways (comfortable, easy place to live, lots to do, especially with kids, easy to get around, great access to other European destinations, lots to do in the country outside Vienna, etc) but coming from London it felt very non-diverse and extremely, extremely traditional. I felt like with everything there was only one way to do things. I don't even consider myself to be a non-conformist but being there made me want to do everything differently just because I hated how traditional and conventional everything seemed.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Im surprised no ones mentioned Ireland!!
I am not surprised. I have never heard anyone who has been, say they’d want to live there year round.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most of europe is racist. Vienna not more than other cities. And sorry most of the rest of the world is racist as well.
I am just relating the experience of my friends who moved there. They had lived in Paris and Edinburgh before and said that Vienna was noticeably racist in a way that paris and Scotland were not. I have headd the same ghing from others, including in this thread.
I agree with this. I'm from London, and lived in Vienna for a while. I'm white, I found it to be a great place to live in a lot of ways (comfortable, easy place to live, lots to do, especially with kids, easy to get around, great access to other European destinations, lots to do in the country outside Vienna, etc) but coming from London it felt very non-diverse and extremely, extremely traditional. I felt like with everything there was only one way to do things. I don't even consider myself to be a non-conformist but being there made me want to do everything differently just because I hated how traditional and conventional everything seemed.
That does seem like it could feel stifling after awhile. I’m crossing Vienna off my list.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Most of europe is racist. Vienna not more than other cities. And sorry most of the rest of the world is racist as well.
I am just relating the experience of my friends who moved there. They had lived in Paris and Edinburgh before and said that Vienna was noticeably racist in a way that paris and Scotland were not. I have headd the same ghing from others, including in this thread.
I agree with this. I'm from London, and lived in Vienna for a while. I'm white, I found it to be a great place to live in a lot of ways (comfortable, easy place to live, lots to do, especially with kids, easy to get around, great access to other European destinations, lots to do in the country outside Vienna, etc) but coming from London it felt very non-diverse and extremely, extremely traditional. I felt like with everything there was only one way to do things. I don't even consider myself to be a non-conformist but being there made me want to do everything differently just because I hated how traditional and conventional everything seemed.
Anonymous wrote:Im surprised no ones mentioned Ireland!!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I just moved to Vienna and its hands down the best city I have lived in which includes paris london madrid stockholm cities in afria and south america. Def come here with children!!!!
I have the opportunity to do just this with work but can't convince DH. Ugh! I have small kids that I know would just love it in Austria/Europe.
Anonymous wrote:Portugal expat:
Thinking of doing the same as you. What are your thoughts on places to settle in? We would be looking to rent in a city or town that has a large number of expats, and convenient to airports for flights within Europe.
Any advice you can give for this process would be really appreciated.