Reminds me of when I ran into some international students and they asked me “what is in Indiana? Who would ever live there?” Sometimes people just are born or end up places and social ties, debt, or whatever keeps them there. Moving is easy for some, remarkably hard for others.
Sure, but also people just like it. I live in Illinois about 2.5 hours out of Chicago and I love it. We have all 4 seasons, the population is roughly 400k, we have basically everything a major city has, way less traffic, cost of living is minimal (comparatively), I can travel 10 miles out and it’s farmland where we can run ATVs and dirt bikes, hunting (not my thing personally), you can easily go into Chicago if there’s a huge concert or event (we get a lot locally too).
I get that it isn’t everyone’s thing with snowing a few times a year, or you’re not an hour from a beach. But that would eventually get old after a while I’m sure.
Just saying there are plenty of reasons to pick “why would you live there” places.
Reminds me of when I ran into some international students and they asked me “what is in Indiana? Who would ever live there?” Sometimes people just are born or end up places and social ties, debt, or whatever keeps them there. Moving is easy for some, remarkably hard for others.
Sure, but also people just like it. I live in Illinois about 2.5 hours out of Chicago and I love it. We have all 4 seasons, the population is roughly 400k, we have basically everything a major city has, way less traffic, cost of living is minimal (comparatively), I can travel 10 miles out and it’s farmland where we can run ATVs and dirt bikes, hunting (not my thing personally), you can easily go into Chicago if there’s a huge concert or event (we get a lot locally too).
I get that it isn’t everyone’s thing with snowing a few times a year, or you’re not an hour from a beach. But that would eventually get old after a while I’m sure.
Just saying there are plenty of reasons to pick “why would you live there” places.