Just saw this article today, although it's from November.
Couple moves from Portland, Oregon to Houston, immediately regrets it, and goes back to Portland.
https://www.businessinsider.com/moved-houston-regretted-it-went-back-portland-2023-11
There were a few nuggets that stood out to me that demonstrate how the author poorly planned her transition to Houston and blames Houston for her failures.
Perhaps it's just the planning nature of my personality, but I would never relocate halfway across the country without knowing exactly what I was getting myself into.
Couple moves from Portland, Oregon to Houston, immediately regrets it, and goes back to Portland.
https://www.businessinsider.com/moved-houston-regretted-it-went-back-portland-2023-11
There were a few nuggets that stood out to me that demonstrate how the author poorly planned her transition to Houston and blames Houston for her failures.
Quote:
I stood out for wearing pants and Nikes to the office instead of flowery dresses like my coworkers did; other women had beautiful, pageant-worthy waves, while I had an angled bob with an undercut.
I admired the style of the women around me, but I missed the casual, comfortable, and outdoorsy clothes people wear more often on the West Coast.
No ***** She didn't know that until she moved here?Quote:
I couldn't afford to ski the mountains in Oregon, but I could at least visit them and snowshoe. There aren't any mountains like that in Texas.
She moved to Spring, which is hardly a central location, and anyone who has the ability to search for Houston, Texas on Google Maps could have told her that.Quote:
My daily Houston commute, which could take anywhere from one to three hours depending on my schedule, exhausted me. I thought I was choosing a central location for our apartment, but the scale of Houston was greater than I expected.
Again, Google Maps.Quote:
But when I got to Spring, I found that adjacent to my 300-unit apartment complex was a farmhouse property with several smelly horses, and a FedEx warehouse complete with 18-wheeler traffic.
Her poor choices aren't Houston's fault.Quote:
I spent my higher salary on a second car, gas, tolls, more expensive car insurance, work lunches, happy hours, and networking.
Perhaps it's just the planning nature of my personality, but I would never relocate halfway across the country without knowing exactly what I was getting myself into.