Brrrrr!! 😱 Where are you, if you don't mind me asking?
@see_the_sus I truly don't think I've EVER known it to be this cold here.
I wondered as I don't think I've ever heard it getting that cold in the UK.
Are you letting your faucets trickle water so they don't freeze?
@see_the_sus Plus, my other half comes from Chicago so he thinks I'm a weakling for complaining about it!
@Notokay @see_the_sus It really IS a different 'cold', you're absolutely right.
@see_the_sus @Notokay I can imagine. I feel ya though as I've spent most of my life switching between one country or continent after another! My childhood was very peripatetic and so I think it's in my genes now!
@see_the_sus @Florence Faculty brat here, then a dual-career academic. 10 states, three other countries.
@Notokay @see_the_sus I had a guardian who was a musician, with whom I went to live when I was six. Spent the nexgt 10/15 years going around the world on tour etc. Then went to Uni, then worked with a job I could move countries a lot (requirement) and so I think I was lucky really, it gave me flexibility and also a famiiarity with 'the different'.
@Florence @see_the_sus Not just familiarity with 'the different', but flexibility of thinking and understanding. And something monocultural (and sometimes provincial) people call "bravery." I moved from one side of the state to another to take a new job and one of my colleagues called me very brave?
@Notokay @see_the_sus I think people fear what they're unfamiliar with. I was home-schooled because of the traveling. By someone who left school at 15 but had intelligence, an inquiring mind and a freedom of spirit and soul. I always think my education, such as it was, was broader than conventional schooling. It gave me an openness to other cultures and ways of life I doubt I'd otherwise have. For which I'm truly grateful.
@Florence @see_the_sus Oh, indubitably. I homeschooled my kids at various points and it was a fabulous adventure.
@Notokay @see_the_sus That's EXACTLY the way I'd describe it. I totally agree.
@Florence @see_the_sus Of course, one of them is now in London doing research for her PhD dissertation, so I don't know if that's exactly a win (given the state of academia right now)!
@Notokay @see_the_sus I'd call it a win!
@Florence @see_the_sus Heh--thanks. I'll keep it in the category of 'education is never wasted' (except in cases like Josh Hawley).
@Notokay @see_the_sus Hah! I think Hawley knows exactly what he's doing which makes it much worse. To me anyway.
@Florence @see_the_sus Oh I agree 100%.
@see_the_sus @Florence Well, I understand being called brave for traveling around the world by oneself (which I also have done), but for moving across the state to take a job? That's just a head-scratcher.
@see_the_sus @Florence Ha. It seems endemic in this country, TBH. I've seen the same in people from CA to IA to MA.
True. I think what it startled me so much about NYC was that A) it's an island and yeah sure it's got a shit ton of things to do but it's the East Coast and you can visit several states in one day! And B) I naively assumed (I was a mere 27) that people there were more cultured and adventurous. Silly me.
@Florence @see_the_sus Another peripatetic childhood and young adulthood here, both international and stateside! My favorite question (not): "Where are you from?"
@Notokay @see_the_sus Mine too! I usually just say, hopefully enigmatically, 'I'm International'. I dislike that question because where we are 'from' varies in meaning from person to person in as much as I still think of NYC as 'home' as I was born there but have spent more time in CA and WY and Chicago. Sometimes I feel more British. With me it varies from day to day!
@Florence @Notokay
I went from NM to IN and yeah, the humidity was a bear!