#253512 - 11/18/12 06:05 AM
Re: living in small town?
[Re: picard120]
|
Cranky Geek
Carpal Tunnel
Registered: 09/08/05
Posts: 4642
Loc: Vermont
|
Accept the following things-
- You will drive an hour to work each way. Or more. Or accept that you don't have a good job - You will have to plan on sleeping at work, at a friend's, or two hours of driving for any real storm which will be after you've shoveled your driveway. - You will have nothing like pizza/chinese/deli delivery, and UPS/FedEx will never find you, so they have to hold any package at their office and you have to find time to go to them. - You will be waiting on police/fire/EMS if you need them. - When power gets lost, guess what, town folk get priority before you. Of course they'll strip the crews for getting a small town off their work site so that city folk get power. So you're in the dark for a week or three every year. - High speed internet? HAHAHAHAHA!! - You are on a well and a septic tank.
There was more to this, but it was basically just a rant about how cityborn have ruined small towns, to the point where those people who don't leave just to get a job they can survive on now sleep behind double locked doors and with a loaded shotgun by the bed in a town where people didn't lock their cars or their front doors 30 years ago.
_________________________
-IronRaven
When a man dare not speak without malice for fear of giving insult, that is when truth starts to die. Truth is the truest freedom.
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#253515 - 11/18/12 03:43 PM
Re: living in small town?
[Re: picard120]
|
Enthusiast
Registered: 08/17/09
Posts: 305
Loc: Central Oregon
|
I live in a town of around 20,000. After retiring from the Navy, my wife and I move here with three small children. Packed up and left Norfolk behind. Best thing we ever did. I also like being about 45 minutes from great hunting, fishing and hiking. Bend (the near big town of 80,000) is were all the fine city folk come to visit. Nice folk but I am glad they go to Bend. Blake www.outdoorquest.blogspot.comwww.outdoorquest.biz
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#253517 - 11/18/12 03:55 PM
Re: living in small town?
[Re: ChristinaRodriguez]
|
Geezer
Registered: 06/02/06
Posts: 5359
Loc: SOCAL
|
Working For The Weekend ... Sorry, Christina's post just pulled this thought from the back of my mind.
_________________________
Better is the Enemy of Good Enough. Okay, what’s your point??
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#253526 - 11/18/12 09:30 PM
Re: living in small town?
[Re: picard120]
|
ô¿ô
Old Hand
Registered: 04/05/07
Posts: 776
Loc: The People's Republic of IL
|
Living in a small town is nice. However, commuting more than an hour each way can really grind a person down. IMO, it is intrinsically beneficial to live and work as close together as possible. Time spent commuting is, for the most part, wasted time. Sure you can fill it with this and that, but given a choice, I would prefer have the time back to spend as I would choose.
I believe that many convince themselves that their commute is 'me' time where they can catch up on reading, etc. But given a choice, I bet all would rather be somewhere else.
Commuting is expense from more than a monetary point of view.
_________________________
Gary
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#253534 - 11/18/12 11:22 PM
Re: living in small town?
[Re: picard120]
|
Journeyman
Registered: 05/15/11
Posts: 87
|
There are many areas that a good living can be made and still have privacy, acreage, short commute (or none), and all the important stuff that families can enjoy. My wife works on a branch campus of a large university, the back of their property nearly abuts ours. We are 10-15 minutes from our childrens grade schools/daycare. We have a county seat city and courthouse of 15,000 within site of our highest hilltop. Lots of cool topography, forests, fields, nice mix stable (not boomtown)suburban/rural mix. We enjoy an hour drive to the Pittsburgh region to do zoo/museums/etc..... I serve on a non-profit board there. While a "remote" backwoods local has some advantages, I enjoy being on the fringe. We still have well/septic, I have access to both, but opt out due to the distance to road (3/4 mile)so we have I ran 1000' waterline when I ran natural gas line to our house. I LOVE heating with NG, if our well ever goes bad I can just tap into the public water. You can just hear the cars below our 20 acres on the road. I can WIZZ in the front yard, hunt on our land, log, etc.... We are "hidden" and many people (even public service providers) dont even know we are back here. We still need to be prepared for plowing snow (fire/EMS protection)road maintance....etc... There ARE gems out there, convienence, privacy, good schools/parenting networks.... you just need to look.
Ironwood
Edited by Ironwood (11/18/12 11:23 PM)
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#253538 - 11/19/12 12:35 AM
Re: living in small town?
[Re: ]
|
Journeyman
Registered: 11/15/10
Posts: 90
Loc: Maine
|
Commuting is expense from more than a monetary point of view. Amen to that. My Mother used to commute during a nursing school rotation from the outskirts of Chicago to Cook County Hospital by train. She hated it. Yes, that is a pain in the derriere. Better than driving, but still not that great. I commuted from one city to another by train for grad school (liked where I was living, rent was much more reasonable than in Boston where the school was, so didn't want to move)...it was over an hour train ride. It was doable, because I used the train ride to read/study, but I don't miss that commute at all!!
_________________________
The rhythm is gonna get you...and if it's v-tach or v-fib, the results will be shocking!
|
Top
|
|
|
|
#253545 - 11/19/12 08:17 AM
Re: living in small town?
[Re: picard120]
|
Veteran
Registered: 12/05/05
Posts: 1563
|
OK. Here is a guy who did just the opposite
I work in a medium size town . Used to live there too but moved to a LARGER town about 25 minutes away.
Logic was that in the larger town was more people friendly and we were closer to things we liked. Smaller twon was almost limited to work and business. Was almost owned by companies and establishments. So, instead of worrying about work-related commute we were fed up with how many times we had to drive when we wanted to go shopping, visting friends, or other activities.
Now, we are closer to what we want and can tolerate the distance to work. I really don't miss living in that town. The daily commute is offset by weekend driving which is now shorter and more pleasant
|
Top
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
1
|
2
|
3
|
4
|
5
|
6
|
7
|
8
|
9
|
10
|
11
|
12
|
13
|
14
|
15
|
16
|
17
|
18
|
19
|
20
|
21
|
22
|
23
|
24
|
25
|
26
|
27
|
28
|
|
|
0 registered (),
626
Guests and
62
Spiders online. |
Key:
Admin,
Global Mod,
Mod
|
|
|