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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    Western Canada-prairies, mountain & ocean
    Posts
    6,984

    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.
    My Personal blog on cycling & other favourite passions.
    遙知馬力日久見人心 Over a long distance, you learn about the strength of your horse; over a long period of time, you get to know what’s in a person’s heart.

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Apr 2006
    Location
    somewhere between the Red & Rio Grande
    Posts
    5,297
    I lived where I went to college which was 100 miles from home, then two suburbs of the town I grew up in. DH grew up here too, we're ready to move somewhere different because neither of us really moved around much and don't know anything but this area.
    Amanda

    2011 Specialized Epic Comp 29er | Specialized Phenom | "Marie Laveau"
    2007 Cannondale Synapse Carbon Road | Selle Italia Lady Gel Flow | "Miranda"


    You don't have to be great to get started, but you do have to get started to be great. -Lee J. Colan

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Feb 2008
    Location
    Maine
    Posts
    1,650
    7 cities, 3 countries (US, Taiwan, Canada). Did NYC twice actually, about 8 years apart.

    Adjustment strategy varies. If I am the prime mover, it's easier -- I am moving towards something, maybe have a job or academic program to plug into. It's nice to have friends and family nearby, too.

    It's harder if I am the trailing spouse, as has been the case a couple of times. My most recent move has been the hardest ever in terms of adapting, so I can't say I have a bunch of wisdom to share at this time. You'd think I would be a pro by now, but every move is different.
    2014 Bobbin Bramble / Brooks B67
    2008 Rodriguez Rainier Mirage / Terry Butterfly Tri Gel
    2007 Dahon Speed Pro TT / Biologic Velvet

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Dec 2007
    Posts
    1,333
    In my life I've had 2 very major moves that affected me quite badly. They were as a child of 10 and 15. Not knowning more than a few words of English, it was really hard to just be plunked into a regular grade 5 class (no ESL classes in that town), it was sink or swim, and I learned to swim pretty quickly. I had integrated myself very well in that town, and by the time my family moved to another province, it broke my heart to have to leave my best friend behind. I would say that experience was far more traumatic than the one at 10.

    I went to 6 different schools between grades 1-12. I would say it really affected my ability to make friends. By the time I got to highschool, I had pretty much just given up; it was so hard to keep making and losing friends.

    Since graduating highschool, I haven't moved to another city or country but have moved residences no less than 11 times. During my 3 years in university (1st year was spent at home), I moved 8 times.

    I've been in the same place for the past 8 years, but will likely move again in a few years, hopefully to a nice house.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Nov 2009
    Posts
    10,889
    Since I was 18 I have moved a lot! Just mentioning the states (and one Canadian province) in order, I am from Tennessee, have lived in Nebraska, Kentucky, Wisconsin, British Columbia, West Virgina, Oklahoma, back to Tennessee and, currently, Indiana! Most of that was between age 18 and 28.

    I am now 50 and since age 28 I've only lived in Knoxville and Nashville, Tennessee, eventually moved to Indiana for graduate school and wound up staying here when I found work.


    Whewww and now I am stressing over my first move to a new apartment in 6 years, go figure

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Feb 2005
    Location
    Concord, MA
    Posts
    13,394
    I know you said after HS, but my first move was the most devastating. I moved from MA (a very nice close in suburb of Boston) where it was suburban, but I could still play in the woods, yet I was also just 6 miles from Boston, when I was 15. We moved to the Kendall area of Miami. It sucked. I made friends, but culturally, I was like like a fish out of water. I went from protesting on the Boston Common to girls worrying about sororities. Basically stayed there until my senior year of college, when illness forced me to take a semester off and join my parents who had moved to Scottsdale after I graduated. After that, I had a brief, 3 month stay in suburban Philadelphia (don't ask), when I went back to AZ and stayed until June 1990 (15 years). When I lived in AZ, I lived in Scottsdale, Mesa, Chandler, and Tempe, all suburbs that blend into each other. My last 9 years were in south Tempe, s/o Elliot, between McClintock and Rural (I love saying that... no one here gives directions by, well direction).
    In 1986 we took a vacation to the Cape, for a family reunion. Within 2 days DH and i had decided to move back east (he grew up in Philadelphia). We set a target date of June 1, 1990 and we got on the plane on June 5th, 1990. When we came back from that trip, DH got a job with a company based here and then was able to transfer. I spent 2-3 years fighting to get my teaching license, which I did.
    Since moving here, I have lived in 3 towns, all northwest of Boston. The first one sucked, but it was what we could afford and it was pretty. The second one was where we really wanted to live and have our kids go to school. We would have stayed there forever, but when DS #2 quit college to join the Marines, we took his college $ and sort of impulsively bought the house we are in now. I never thought I'd be living in Concord, but I love my house and having more shopping, and it's much closer to Boston. The town, well, I could take it or leave it. Because I moved basically, from the town next door (well, really 2 towns away, but the schools are regionalized), I didn't change my friends, stores, dr., etc, and I really feel no connection to Concord.
    I expect to stay in MA for the rest of my life. Some of my friends are making plans to move to warmer climes in the next ten years, but I love it here, I like winter sports and I would rather travel and come home to a place that I love. And it doesn't hurt that I have friends in AZ and family in San Diego.
    2015 Trek Silque SSL
    Specialized Oura

    2011 Guru Praemio
    Specialized Oura
    2017 Specialized Ariel Sport

  7. #7
    Join Date
    Apr 2008
    Posts
    3,176
    I was born in Berkeley, CA and my family lived in the SF bay area for a while after that. My dad's sales territory was changed to Salt Lake City for a year or two, and we moved to Southern CA where I lived through high school. After that:
    Study abroad: France
    UC San Diego
    UC Berkeley
    Study abroad: Norway
    UC Santa Barbara
    crazy life in San Diego County
    move to Salt Lake City. Been here for 20 years, still believe that it is possible to go someplace else.
    Each day is a gift, that's why it is called the present.

  8. #8
    Join Date
    May 2010
    Location
    Denver
    Posts
    1,942
    Richmond & Charlottesville VA, Nashville, Lebanon, & Murfreesboro TN, Albany GA, Naples FL, Charleston, Columbia, and Hilton Head SC, back to Richmond, and now Denver.

    I worked as an archaeology field tech for awhile so I moved a lot but I only counted the long-term projects in these cities.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    May 2006
    Location
    Suburban MA and Western ME
    Posts
    1,815
    Quote Originally Posted by badger View Post
    I went to 6 different schools between grades 1-12. I would say it really affected my ability to make friends. By the time I got to highschool, I had pretty much just given up; it was so hard to keep making and losing friends.
    That's nothing, Badger! From Kindergarden through the 8th grade, I was in 14 different schools. Stayed in the same high school all through, despite moving at least three or four times.

    By the time I was 30, I had moved 30 times. Mostly southwestern Ontario (Mississauga, Cambridge, Waterloo, Kitchener), but also Calgary and Edmonton.

    Fifteen years ago, I moved to the US. I have moved 3 times since being here, but have lived in our current house for 14 years - the longest I have EVER lived ANYWHERE, by triple! I have told my DH that the only way I am leaving this house is in a pine box .

    I think moving so much certainly impacted who I am. I make friends easily (despite telling my parents in the 3rd grade that I was never making friends again), and am far from awkward in any social situations. Unfortunately,, my younger brother was impacted more negatively by all the moving...

    And no - we weren't a military family!

    SheFly
    "Well behaved women rarely make history." including me!
    http://twoadventures.blogspot.com

  10. #10
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    Katy, Texas
    Posts
    1,811
    In the US I have lived in New Mexico, California, Utah, Georgia, North Carolina, Massachusetts and Texas. Overseas I haved lived in the Netherlands, Belgium, France, England, Oman, the Netherlands again, Belgium again,and finally, the Netherlands again.

    I am married to a mechanical engineer in the oil and petroleum industry. He has also lived in Saudi, Korea and Doha while I was in the Netherlands keeping the kids in school and centralized.

    I imagine a military wife might move more often, but they often have the advantage of a support group of people in a similar situation instead of being thrown out onto the economy and social structure of a new environment every time.

    It's been interesting all the way around.
    marni
    Katy, Texas
    Trek Madone 6.5- "Red"
    Trek Pilot 5.2- " Bebe"


    "easily outrun by a chihuahua."

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Nov 2007
    Location
    Western Canada-prairies, mountain & ocean
    Posts
    6,984
    Hey SheFly, easy does it.

    Remember, you did not have to learn English in Gr. 5, etc. Any child immigrating to North America from non-English speaking countries, has a serious challenge in learning a language that the dominant culture mandates/legislates on its citizens.

    Badger, were you raised in Japan? I know that you are part Japanese. Or maybe it was somewhere in Europe?
    Dearie clearly remembers when he had to learn English when he immigrated from Germany when he was 7.

    SheFly, I grew up no English in Kitchener-Waterloo until kindergarten. It was an enormous shock on first day of school. It literally feels like being in a different world.
    Last edited by shootingstar; 09-26-2010 at 05:35 PM.
    My Personal blog on cycling & other favourite passions.
    遙知馬力日久見人心 Over a long distance, you learn about the strength of your horse; over a long period of time, you get to know what’s in a person’s heart.

 

 

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