Joe the meek
Active Member
The closest thing I ever had to a hometown was the town where I went to high school (where I spent most of my time "in one place" growing up). That said, I have absolutely no desire to EVER move back to the coal regions Pennsylvania because I thought it was a depressed area).
Today, eating lunch at a local BBQ shop, I overheard a couple of teenagers talking about how they hated the county they live in (where I now live) and how they all can't wait to get out of school and leave the area. Funny, they sounded just like me when I was a teenager, and now that I'm pushing 50, having what some would call a career, and actually have what I think is a nice place to live, and hope to finish raising my family here. Funny thing is if I were those kids living in this same county as I do now, I'd probably feel the same way they do. Time apparently does make a difference on ones perspective.
Made me think, how many here have "moved away" from home and have a longing to move back?
For me, my home is now where I'm at, and hopefully before my dad passes on, he'll come live with me, and I never will move back to what I consider my "hometown".
Today, eating lunch at a local BBQ shop, I overheard a couple of teenagers talking about how they hated the county they live in (where I now live) and how they all can't wait to get out of school and leave the area. Funny, they sounded just like me when I was a teenager, and now that I'm pushing 50, having what some would call a career, and actually have what I think is a nice place to live, and hope to finish raising my family here. Funny thing is if I were those kids living in this same county as I do now, I'd probably feel the same way they do. Time apparently does make a difference on ones perspective.
Made me think, how many here have "moved away" from home and have a longing to move back?
For me, my home is now where I'm at, and hopefully before my dad passes on, he'll come live with me, and I never will move back to what I consider my "hometown".
