Thread: Do you live in a small town?
-
May 19th, 2008 06:50 PM
#1
Do you live in a small town?
I just came back from spending the long weekend on Manitoulin, where the largest town has a population of a whopping 1200. I had a good time. The place was nice and relaxing but I noticed young people as I was driving around and I couldn't help but wonder what they thought about living somewhere so small. It just seems so different compared to somewhere like the GTA. I think there are more than 1200 people living on my street alone.
I would exclude little kids, seniors, and married people from my question as kids are too young to care, seniors love their quiet, and married people seem to have these insular and content lives regardless of where they live.
But for those of you who are unmarried, from about 14-30 years of age, live in communities of 25,000 or less and well away from any major metropolitan area, what do you like and dislike about where you live? Do you think about moving to the "big city" or do you see yourself living in Pleasantville for the rest of your life?
Last edited by Talamasca; May 19th, 2008 at 08:24 PM.
-
-
May 19th, 2008 06:54 PM
#2
No... I mean I live in Toronto.. I can't call where I am living a "town"... I mean.. this is an urban city.
-
May 19th, 2008 07:29 PM
#3
I suppose we do, Georgetown is still reasonably small...for now 
I love that you pretty much know everyone! I love that the feeling of community is alive and well. It's not Pleasantville though, try getting to a store, try getting your hands on a Roti! Ok we have a Bubble Tea cafe now, but it's not very good. We just went through all kinds of trials over our tiny local movie theatre shutting down for good, because we apparently need a bigger Dollarama!
No Starbucks, but a couple of great FreeTrade coffee joints. Dining is getting better, but it still can't compare to the fine dining Torontonians find on almost every corner.
So why did we move here (I from harbourfront, hubby from midTown), we got so much more house and land for what we could have gotten in T.O. (My 1000sq foot condo sold for what we paid for our first 2500sq foot home in 1993!) It is an easy commute via Go to Union Station. Mississauga is 15 minutes away! We are 45 minutes to amazing food shopping in Kitchener!
Do my kids love it here, yes! They do rely on us for a lot of driving around, but I can honestly say they are growing up like we did, with a lot of freedom.
-
May 19th, 2008 07:32 PM
#4
My hometown is a small town in SK of about 2000 people.
_______________

Originally Posted by
danfromwaterloo
Quantum physics might not be complicated enough to describe women, but its the best system we have right now.
Yes. We women are just that complicated.
-
May 19th, 2008 08:10 PM
#5
-
May 19th, 2008 08:14 PM
#6
I do, its callled Ottawa. It sucks.
-
May 19th, 2008 08:16 PM
#7
I've lived 2/3 of my life in towns <75,000 people. A couple were a few thousand or less. The furthest I've lived from an airport was about 4 hours. I have lived in two separate towns where the nearest veterinarian was 3 or 4 hours away respectively. You're out of the way if you don't have an airport. If you don't have a veterinarian you know you're in the middle of no-where and people can't even farm the surrounding area.
Growing up in a small town is generally pretty good. Getting into trouble consists of beach parties, bush parties, alcohol and fist fights. It also gives you a feeling that you have to get out and figure out the real world, which tends to make people pretty adventurous. Anyone who wants any form of education pretty much has to leave once they finnish highschool. You also tend to learn basic automotive, mechanical, outdoors (fishing, hunting, etc) and home building/renovation skills without any effort.
Moving to a small town as a single young adult is considerably worse. The people who have stayed are firmly entrenched in their lives. It's easy to make aquantainces, but difficult to make good friendships. When people have friends they've known all their lives it takes serious effort to join in their groups. Many other singles you will meet are either divorced or with children, even in early 20's.
As for moving to the "big city", some do it out of boredom. Others do it out of necessity. If you're from a town of 2500, and go away to university or college, it's unlikely that your home economy will support your career choice when you're ready to join the workforce. You will often find people from smaller towns moving to where work is instead of complaining that they can't find a job. It's a way of life that's popular on the east coast, rural quebec, and increasing northern ontario.
I dunno if I've answered the question at all, it's definitely something worth experiencing at some point in your life. Smaller towns are very communal and you have to work together with others to get even simple things done.
_______________
Everything in moderation... including moderation

-
May 19th, 2008 08:21 PM
#8

Originally Posted by
jason9945
I do, its callled Ottawa. It sucks.

Been there once. By 6 the entire city vanishes from the streets
-
May 19th, 2008 08:26 PM
#9
-
May 19th, 2008 08:29 PM
#10

Originally Posted by
Bazooka Joe
I dunno if I've answered the question at all, it's definitely something worth experiencing at some point in your life. Smaller towns are very communal and you have to work together with others to get even simple things done.
Great answer, thanks for the insight. I guess it really is a different world. I don't think it would be for me, though. I agree with the Ottawa comments above and that's a pretty big city by Canadian standards. Manitoulin was really nice and all to visit but I think I'd die of boredom if I had to live there permanently. Mississauga is on the dry side as well but at least it has all the amenities you need and it's right next to T.O.
You said you've lived most of your life in a small town. Are you still in one now?
Last edited by Talamasca; May 19th, 2008 at 08:31 PM.
-
May 19th, 2008 09:16 PM
#11

Originally Posted by
jcoltage
I think Toronto's population is tiny compared to true global cities ..
ugh, troll is back.
-
May 19th, 2008 09:20 PM
#12

Originally Posted by
Gunz16
ugh, troll is back.
irrelevant reply? He is right. LA has a population almost that of Canada
_______________
RFD Users who tell it like it is and aren't sheltered by society's wet blanket:
Syne, a-tree, Shaner, Peckerwood, Anonymouse, Cas77, arisk

Originally Posted by
arisk
Banning proper use in a forum such as this simply perpetuates the problem by reinforcing the perspective that all uses of a word are negative.

Originally Posted by
KorruptioN
She must be better than all of us real men, at any cost. Feel like talking down to people who don't fit in her narrow-minded demographic? She's got it in spades.
-
May 19th, 2008 09:34 PM
#13
no its not, LA's population is 8 mill, canada's is 30 million.
I have travelled all over the world and Toronto does classify as a world class city in more ways then one.
I live in a small town about 30,000 but only 1/2 hour from windsor and 35 min from Detroit so it's more like a suburb than a small town.
Everyone does know everyone which can be good or bad.
I do love where I live, yes.
-
May 19th, 2008 09:35 PM
#14

Originally Posted by
Talamasca
Great answer, thanks for the insight. I guess it really is a different world. I don't think it would be for me, though. I agree with the Ottawa comments above and that's a pretty big city by Canadian standards. Manitoulin was really nice and all to visit but I think I'd die of boredom if I had to live there permanently. Mississauga is on the dry side as well but at least it has all the amenities you need and it's right next to T.O.
You said you've lived most of your life in a small town. Are you still in one now?
It's not so much "still" as it is "back", but yes, I'm living in one now.

Originally Posted by
Tijuana
irrelevant reply? He is right. LA has a population almost that of Canada
What's 20 million people here or there? Pretty much the same thing.
IMO the difference is more significant going from 1000 to 1 million instead of going from 1 million to 10 million. The largest city I've ever lived in is only 6 million people though.
_______________
Everything in moderation... including moderation

-
May 19th, 2008 09:42 PM
#15
I live in Seattle now.. I guess coming from Toronto, it's a small town
_______________

Originally Posted by
kuqdew
And FYI, I make pretty good marks in school and is in the gifted class.
Posting Permissions
- You may not post new threads
- You may not post replies
- You may not post attachments
- You may not edit your posts
Forum Rules