Moving/living in different cities/countries in life
So how many different cities/towns/countries have you lived after you finished high school? I'm using that cut-off, because that's when you're more adult and not bound to parents' moving desires/agendas.
How did you adjust?
Let's see I've lived in 3 different cities. Have lived in Canada all my life in 2 provinces. (Yea, my life is narrow except for the reality of non-English speaking relatives, including my mother.) Each new city coincided with a major turning point in life. So yea, some uncertainty each time and really not knowing what to truly expect.
Rolling stone gathers no moss
Let's start this off with saying that I was born and raised a military brat. My Dad was career US Air Force. I didn't go away to college (university), home left.
So if we use that as the starting point...
I graduated from university in Tucson, Arizona while my parents moved to Austin, TX. I never considered Austin "home" that was where my parents lived. I lived in Tucson a total of 6.5 years (starting with the last 2 yrs of HS). Counting my parent's house, dorms, and apartments - I had 4 different addresses.
Phoenix, AZ - 4 different addresses in 10 years (said "I do" and "I don't")
Flagstaff, AZ - slightly less than 1 year
Williams Creek National Fish Hatchery, White Mountain Apache Reservation (in the mountains of eastern AZ) - 5 years
Anderson, CA - 3 years (far northern CA, which is culturally different than the rest of the state)
New Orleans, LA - well the suburbs - 8 years
Seattle, WA - 11 days so far :p
Since I grew up moving - I've only had two stints my entire life at 8 years the same address, two stints of 5 years at the same address, and everything else has been less than that - I guess I don't know how to stay. Military kids learn to make friends fast, and don't really sweat it if you don't get along with someone as one of you will be moving away fairly soon. I wouldn't say relationships are shallow, more like hard and fast. We've been the subject of multiple studies. :rolleyes: We also have high divorce rates because we don't really know how to "sit, stay".
In general, I tend to be a loaner, have long ago learned how to amuse myself. If someone wants to come along, that's great, but I do tend to forget to invite others. :o