I'd consider leaving the country if I got an acceptable job offer elsewhere.
SunnyD said:Now, I'd consider leaving the country if I got an acceptable job offer elsewhere.
I can't wait to move. I love Michigan but I'm done with the weather.
3 more years!
What are you waiting for, lil' Rudeguy to graduate?
By then, maybe you'll have met the next Mrs. Rudeguy and will be stuck in Michigan forever...go now.
Yea...he doesn't want to move and I wouldn't ask him to leave his friends.
I'm already planning my escape to Arizona. I've found a couple little towns on the edge of the desert that look very promising.
Don't ASK him to leave his friends...TELL HIM "We're moving. Deal with it."
Still discussing our possibilities. Arizona is too fucking hot...New Mexico is too close to Texas...:biggrin:
Maybe back to Wyoming...maybe back to Warshington, (although NOT back to Spokane...maybe Seattle area)...maybe to Oregon...but, as much as we'd like it, definitely NOT to Maui...just can't afford that. 🙁
i got out of Grand Rapids when i was 18. I think we come to appreciate more, our home towns as we age. When I go back, it does not seem nearly as bad as it did when i was younger. Went to school, and then moved out to Wyoming the week after i graduated.
I am a socially awkward engineer, so it is very hard to make new friends and find people to hang out with. At first, all of us new hire engineers spent a lot of time together, but I am the only one of that group left. Finding some activities, in my case, mountain biking and hanging out at the only cool bar in town have made me a few friends. Most of my socializing happens at work. It is even harder when you do not spend consistent time in town as we do. We work 14 days and get 7 off, often out of town for part or all of the 14 days. I talk to some of my highschool and college friends but most of us are in vastly different parts of the country and a few of us get together when the holidays come around and a few make it back to Michigan. I have been here almost 4 years now and have made few lasting friendships.
I don't think its possible to actually rebuild good friends like you do when you are younger. The relationships seem alot shallower when you get older. If you resign to this fact and just get a good ability to make small talk it seems the best way to hang out with "strangers". Even some of my adult friends still pretty much feel like strangers lol.i got out of Grand Rapids when i was 18. I think we come to appreciate more, our home towns as we age. When I go back, it does not seem nearly as bad as it did when i was younger. Went to school, and then moved out to Wyoming the week after i graduated.
I am a socially awkward engineer, so it is very hard to make new friends and find people to hang out with. At first, all of us new hire engineers spent a lot of time together, but I am the only one of that group left. Finding some activities, in my case, mountain biking and hanging out at the only cool bar in town have made me a few friends. Most of my socializing happens at work. It is even harder when you do not spend consistent time in town as we do. We work 14 days and get 7 off, often out of town for part or all of the 14 days. I talk to some of my highschool and college friends but most of us are in vastly different parts of the country and a few of us get together when the holidays come around and a few make it back to Michigan. I have been here almost 4 years now and have made few lasting friendships.
I currently live 35 minutes from the hospital I was born in, and 25 min from where I grew up and lived my whole life.
Don't plan on moving.
So then, are you poor, or are you lucky? 😛
I don't think its possible to actually rebuild good friends like you do when you are younger. The relationships seem alot shallower when you get older. If you resign to this fact and just get a good ability to make small talk it seems the best way to hang out with "strangers". Even some of my adult friends still pretty much feel like strangers lol.