I'm glad I was priced out of London.

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  • Опубликовано: 9 июн 2024
  • Is it big city or bust? Do you have to live in the capital to really live at all? Here's my reflections on leaving, and why it's complicated.
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    www.savills.co.uk/blog/articl...
    www.bbc.co.uk/bitesize/guides...
    landregistry.data.gov.uk/app/...
    /// TIMESTAMPS ///
    00:00 INTRO
    00:41 THE MYTH
    01:54 THE MAGIC
    03:05 THE MAYHEM
    11:12 THE MOVING ON
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Комментарии • 956

  • @leenanorms
    @leenanorms  Год назад +80

    Thanks so much for your lovely responses! Love hearing all of your thoughts in here. If you're new to my channel and need more context, a useful watch-next is this video where I discuss privilege, house-buying and the industrial interior design complex! WHAT LARKS ;) ruclips.net/video/wRPJxi4fwXE/видео.html

    • @rjflores438
      @rjflores438 Год назад +1

      Im off to London next weekend for a city break to see my cousin wos moved down there. I used to live their but London always seemed like an abusive relationship where I always had to give her money! Im going call London a psychologically abusive ex who over inflates themselves!.

    • @scholesiefirsttime
      @scholesiefirsttime Год назад

      Interesting content - thank you for being so open & sharing.
      I have a few questions (if that’s okay?) -
      Where did you move to? Do you find yourself going back to London for visits often, every now & then, or never?
      With London being so transient, have your ‘London friendships’ stood the test of time? If so, what did your friends make of your move?

    • @leenanorms
      @leenanorms  Год назад +4

      @@scholesiefirsttime heya! So I've moved to the midlands but I don't share where online for safety reasons - I probably go back at least every fortnight, for day trips only. I definitely have less friends in London but the best ones have stuck around and I go and visit them and they come and visit me - to be hnest london was so busy that I probably see them AS often now I don't live there, I just see a lower quantity of people. Hope that helps!

    • @scholesiefirsttime
      @scholesiefirsttime Год назад

      @@leenanorms Sounds like it’s been a great move for you - great to hear! Wishing you much happiness in the midlands.

  • @abeautifulcountry9353
    @abeautifulcountry9353 Год назад +536

    I'm 52, born and bred Londoner. I've read a lot of the comments on how important it is to be live in a diverse and accepting community and this is so important. But as an older person who still rents, I urge the younger generation to try and find a home to own, even one from a smaller, cheaper town, even if you're a landlord for the property and still living in the big city. By the time you're my age, you own a property outright and won't be at the mercy of insecure and ever increasing price of rentals, and the prospect of finding over a £1,000+ a month when you're old and tired or suffering ill health. I'm looking at the US and so many older people are living in cars/vans because they cannot afford a home anymore.

    • @ayela562
      @ayela562 Год назад +27

      This!!! Where I live in Canada we are almost at the point where young people will not be able to afford home ownership, maybe ever. Not everyone needs to be a homeowner, but given that its one of the biggest steps to stability and intergenerational wealth, it shouldn’t be overlooked. Our entry level homes are being snapped up by investment firms so someone else can grow wealthy off of renters. It’s fuelling the growing gap between the haves and have nots.

    • @Flutterbyby
      @Flutterbyby Год назад +18

      Same for Australia. Buy a home before your health fails, which may not always be in old age. Even if being a landlord initially while you still work in big smoke.

    • @ljames2382
      @ljames2382 Год назад +3

      Great advice.

    • @sommesoul33
      @sommesoul33 Год назад +29

      People cannot afford to buy homes. The costs are insane and there is a lack of affordable properties. It takes years to afford a deposit too. Not everyone is allowed a mortgage. Mortgages increase as well and if you lose your job, how can someone afford it.

    • @TenshiR
      @TenshiR Год назад +15

      I lived in the US most of my life. And for the last 3 to 4 years there I lived out of my sedan while still working a corporate job from 6am to 7pm.
      Currently a new home owner in London not worrying about having to my healthcare and how to stay warm in the back of my car during a New England winter. Happiest I've ever been.

  • @matthewblaen9043
    @matthewblaen9043 Год назад +390

    I am a geography teacher and I am THRILLED to see the Burgess and Hoyt models of Urban Land Use in a RUclips video. Proof that Geography matters even when you are older. 🌍🌍🌍

    • @leenanorms
      @leenanorms  Год назад +38

      Haha hopefully I used it in the right context! To be fair I wish I’d carried on with geography, it’s bloody useful

  • @skid127
    @skid127 Год назад +59

    I am a US girly living in Kent UK. I was at the shop last week and the lady looking at my ID for alcohol said "Wow, I think I would rather be in America than here!" I thought this was very funny as an American who would like to be anywhere but home. I have traveled to 25 countries, and if I have learned anything, no one is impressed by the place that had to grow up in. It's up to us to decide if our lives are worthy and beautiful, otherwise we will prescribe to dreams given to us: move to a big city, a new country, an expensive flat, mansion, etc.

    • @bennyton2560
      @bennyton2560 10 месяцев назад

      that's a good point, the USians I know want to move away as well

    • @jakehowie442
      @jakehowie442 2 месяца назад +1

      As a Brit who has lived in the US south, mainly Texas, I can safely say Texas is mostly better than the UK, if you have a good job.
      The UK has turned into a shitty version of America at this point. The American chains are here, American music is here, NFL and baseball are here, American cars are here, even the politics is here.
      UK transport and infrastructure is crumbling outside of London, overpopulation and overcrowding more of an issue than Texas. Terrible cold, wet weather
      Higher house prices, higher taxes, lower salaries, lack of access to good healthcare in the UK (no NHS is not free)

  • @HeyBrosephify
    @HeyBrosephify Год назад +557

    I definitely agree with the 'London or nothing' mindset being disappointing for the rest of the UK. I live in a pretty deprived part of Cumbria and we just don't really have public transport, and where we do, a single journey bus ticket is £8.10 for a 15 minute drive to the train station. Things like emergency services are based hours and hours away. Feeling quite jealous of London getting things like free school meals for every school child (not critiquing that specific policy, I entirely support free school meals, I just feel like non-London is comparatively forgotten).

    • @leenanorms
      @leenanorms  Год назад +124

      Yes! In London I could go anywhere in the city, any distance, and it would be £1.50. Here I'm lucky if I can get anywhere for under a fiver. Utter madness. Like you it's fine because it's something I can afford, but it sucks that without access to a car or paying £££ for public transport, it's really hard to get around if you're in a low income bracket outside of big cities.

    • @isabbygabbyorcrabby
      @isabbygabbyorcrabby Год назад +78

      When I started uni I met mates from London who informed me that all bus journeys in London for under 18s are free!?! I couldn't believe my ears. So many people at my high school had to be ferried to school by parents on their way to work (parents who btw did not really have the time to play taxi!) because bus tickets were completely unaffordable in my 'city'. I had never heard the free school meals thing and again I'm feeling the same genuine rage! Why does nobody care about kids outside the capital?

    • @eepmeep8550
      @eepmeep8550 Год назад +7

      It's 12.50 nowadays T^T why, stagecoach, why?

    • @leenanorms
      @leenanorms  Год назад +10

      @@eepmeep8550 Stagecoach is for sure a dodgy outfit, I've always been suss

    • @Gandellion
      @Gandellion Год назад

      Yikes man, that sounds really tough.

  • @TomRipley7350
    @TomRipley7350 Год назад +36

    It took me four exhausting years in London (living hand to mouth, flirting for free samples at Borough market, saying yes to everything) to realise I was a Kindle-and-a-cuppa tea kinda guy. Thankfully, my Irish dad had instilled into me the importance of owning property so I had my name on a buy to let before I left on my adventures. Now I’m back in Staffordshire, the only negative is that niggling feeling you’re missing out on something and that can be quite intense sometimes. I miss the diversity and randomness the most, teaching English idioms to a lady from Madrid on the tube to being tipped very generously by Claire Foy when I was a waiter. Ultimately, though, it’s where you find balance and peace. You can be the main character anywhere with the right people.

    • @jakehowie442
      @jakehowie442 2 месяца назад

      Luckily Staffordshire is pretty close to London, so I don’t see what you’re missing out on.
      Also, what you described could happen in Manchester too. London unfortunately sold its soul with mass immigration and money now the main value of the city. It’s more like New York, but New York has more cultural identity.

  • @laurenking5080
    @laurenking5080 Год назад +109

    I'm American, and lived in London for four years back in the early 10's (think Olympics.) I LOVED my time there, but often found it a lonely, hard slog that left me with what I call my "crusty" side. I come from the American South, where people are very open, friendly, and giving (sometimes too giving, but still, we are always the first to help anyone out.) London developed my outer shell, and made it much tougher. Visa issues with my non-profit and years of singlehood loneliness led me to move back to the States. Shedding the city exterior took a while, and sometimes I still find myself unable to embrace the softer way of life here. I LOVED London, but in the long run, living there was not sustainable, and damaged my soul a little bit. I still hold a place in my heart for London, but I could not live there anymore.

    • @juliekrol
      @juliekrol Год назад +18

      I agree…I’m from Canada, have lived and traveled to the US so much but living in London that past 2.5 years has made me depressed and angry, so I’m moving to SE Asia for up to a year and then back to North America somewhere…I need happy people that want to sustain a relationship. No one has time for that in London, very cold place overall ❤

    • @swingdude111
      @swingdude111 Год назад +4

      @@juliekrol I think there is a certain level of underlying stress and anger in the city. London is not exactly an easy place to be compared to a lot of European cities. I will get worse as we head into the next recession when people start to get laid off etc.

    • @HarrySmith-hr2iv
      @HarrySmith-hr2iv Год назад +6

      @@juliekrol I think one of the main problems with London (where I was born a poor boy) is it's an international city, a commercial city, all permeated with competitiveness, greed, money spinning and a survival of the fittest mentality..Yes like New York. There is a lot of culture and arts surviving in the hub and periphery of London. But I always perceive London as the ideal home for top Lawyers, top Investment Bankers, and top super wealthy corporate management. I once lived in Toronto for a year. I thought Toronto had parallels with London and New York......hard cities. I don't mean the Canadian people were hard, I mean the atmosphere was work hard and survive endlessly and keep your balance on a financial tight rope.

    • @eattherich9215
      @eattherich9215 Год назад +4

      @@HarrySmith-hr2iv: my parents were incomers during the 50s and London was and still is, where most people went. They both had solidly working class jobs and moved about from rooming house to rooming house all over London, but eventually they were able to buy a three storey house. The mortgage was manageable and the parents raised four children in modest comfort. Us children now in our 60s benefitted from full employment, a low multiple of mortgage to salary ratio, wages that went up every year, enrolment in a pension plan and seeing the property we had bought for historically not very much, rise in value. None of that is going to happen to the generations that came after me and home ownership is a dream that many will not realise whilst living in London. I feel sad for those youger than me but angry, too that successive governments have ceded the potential wealth of ordinary working people to big business and the rich.

    • @HarrySmith-hr2iv
      @HarrySmith-hr2iv Год назад +2

      @@eattherich9215 But London has changed so much since 1950. At that time its population was around 7 million, and 99.5% white. Today, 2023, it is only 46-54% white, depending on whose statistics you believe. If that is what you want, that's your choice. I think many young people, especially Uni students or young graduates, head there because to them its the ultimate destination for fun, adventures, partying and social life. (after having been brought up in remote villages in Wales, Scotland or rural UK.) It's all called the New World Order, but I think it will all crash eventually. Yes, true.... the young have been sold out to big business and the rich, but they don't fully realise it yet. And you can't tell them, because they will give you a teenagers(even tho' they might be up to 30 years old) answer like 'Ah, but every bodys happy, right!'

  • @SimplyMayaBeauty
    @SimplyMayaBeauty Год назад +329

    I feel this from a completely different perspective. I moved to Berlin five years ago and I love it, even though I'm definitely not a typical Berlin resident. I love the diversity, the public transport, the culture, even the grime. And compared to where I'm from, it's still more affordable. I had the privilege to stay for a few months in a tiny German village during covid in a big, beautiful house and superficially it was lovely - green, spacious, clean, full of abundant nature, old castles and pretty little villages. But I was completely lost in that environment. I hated the small town gossip, the endless quiet, the isolation, the lack of diversity. I was trapped in a gilded cage. I now know wholeheartedly that I prefer a smaller apartment and modest living in a big city to even the most beautiful remote home, and I'm willing to make sacrifices to maintain that. I also value my friendships here immensely, and as a foreigner and single person, they're truly priceless. I know plenty of people around me who would love to move away at least part time or plan to in the future, but I know my soul wouldn't thrive in that environment.

    • @anabluu
      @anabluu Год назад +42

      I come with the same perspective! I pulled a lot of strings and turned my life quite upside down to move in a big remote house in a village in Cyprus next to the sea and...I hated it with all my heart. As a queer person it felt incredibly isolating and also I hated the idea of not living in mainland Europe and to be able to get to any country via bus. I left as soon as I could!

    • @KiraFriede
      @KiraFriede Год назад +23

      I moved from Munich to my hometown during the pandemic. And while my hometown isn't the smallest, I still miss all the possibilities and the communities I had in Munich that I am just unable to find here. I find myself commuting to bigger cities in the area or taking day trips to Munich to do stuff. Even just finding a group for creative writing or something like that requires me to go to another city.
      And despite living here for almost 3 years now, I have failed to connect to anyone here.
      And I am part of a church and I am part of a sports club and so on, but that doesn't help much in finding people.

    • @a.morujo6073
      @a.morujo6073 Год назад +8

      here to also say the same!!! i've always lived in a city and i feel lost in smaller places. plus as a disabled, queer person, cities are a lot more welcoming

    • @katarinajovanovic3528
      @katarinajovanovic3528 Год назад +10

      I live in the capital of my small country, think like 8 million people total of which like a quarter live in the capital. I was born here, but my husband is from a small town, like 30.000 including surrounding villages. I like visiting his family there but never for more then a few days, the quite gets to loud, the walls have ears. When we go out it's always the same places and same people. It is quite charming that you can see all your friends in a night out as everything worth going to (and open) is in one short street 😄 but, i would never trade our city life for that. He does have a fantasy of retiring there someday, but i feel that would break my spirit even more when I'm like 70 and there is nothing for me there. No museums, no theater, not even a cinema. What will i do but descend into madness xD

    • @bjulalula9537
      @bjulalula9537 Год назад +4

      Funny, i lived in Berlin for about 8 years, then Toronto and now a middle sized town in Germany again. I think the different cities have suited my age at the time. Hut i am hesitant to Move to a villags/Bug House because i think while it is great for the "little kids time" it does not offer enough for old age

  • @caparies
    @caparies Год назад +21

    Great video. 29 y/o black guy, left London in 2020 (still on a London salary) and it's been the best decision ever - on my way to owning my own home soon (alone). I had anxieties about leaving as a minority but I wasn't going to let that keep me broke, stressed and depressed. Sure, it's fun in your 20s but eventually you have to get your shit together. Don't get me wrong though, I love London. I'd just rather live within my means (and I would come back if I could afford it comfortably).

    • @jakehowie442
      @jakehowie442 2 месяца назад +2

      London the absolute pits once you go outside central. Some of the tower blocks are third world.

  • @LaurKnight
    @LaurKnight Год назад +61

    When I was in Uni (Bath Spa) studying publishing it was really emphasised that the only place to get a job in publishing was in London, and the only way to even get the opportunity was to do unpaid intern work. As somebody from the Welsh valleys who didn’t have parents who could afford to keep me afloat to do unpaid intern work when I was studying that basically immediately ruled out the chance for me to work there. Also London for me was not a lifestyle I wanted.
    Fast forward to six years later, and I moved back to Wales after uni, I work in a ‘normal’ job doing IT I’m able to actually single handedly afford my own house in a commuter town to Cardiff. And living a middle of the road life here is really really great 😊

    • @Shaneswws23
      @Shaneswws23 Год назад +3

      Born and bred in London however I just moved to Guernsey and wow I can't believe I'm saying it I miss London

    • @eattherich9215
      @eattherich9215 Год назад +2

      @@Shaneswws23: I would miss London too. I will never leave unless I could afford to come back.

  • @angelahealey4083
    @angelahealey4083 Год назад +132

    I’ve been really struggling with this feeling lately. I’m 26 and I moved away from home town at 19 for uni and have never returned. Similar to you, I also feel like moving home means there are no opportunities or opportunities are infinitely harder to come by.
    Recently I’ve noticed that I miss visiting the beach in the evenings after work. I’m angry that I can’t pop in and see my parents on Wednesday night - instead I have to plan and organise a monthly trip home. I’m not there to help when they need it. I’m missing out on building a community of people that I can rely on.
    I’m from rural Ireland where there are three options after secondary school:
    1) leave home and move away to a uni (usually in Dublin, Galway or a Belfast) that’s at least 2 - 6 hours away
    2) emigrate
    3) get a job as a labourer, child care assistant or shop assistant
    That’s it. There is no ‘commuting’ to the big city as we’re so far from one. There are 7 busses a day that serve 3 other places. To return home now would mean my career taking a huge blow and I’m angry that I have to pick between earning a decent living that I enjoy and seeing my family and building a community.
    I really don’t have a nice way of tying this up. I just wish ireland would change somewhat.

    • @hannahr9177
      @hannahr9177 Год назад +11

      I’m from Galway, 25, and can’t move out. Half my friends also live at home, the other half live in expensive shitholes with too many housemates despite earning decent money. Honestly feel like you can’t win in this country. The rural areas are so underserved but the housing crisis is so awful those of us from cities can’t move on. It’s just shit all round.

    • @angelahealey4083
      @angelahealey4083 Год назад +8

      @@hannahr9177 So so so many of my friends are in the exact same position. I'm the only one of my friends who doesn't live at home and that's only because I live with my boyfriend who has a good-paying job. If I was living with flatmates I couldn't afford to move out. You're so right, it's bleak out here at the moment.

    • @jaywalkercrew4446
      @jaywalkercrew4446 Год назад

      You forgot about moving to USA OR Australia 🦘

    • @halfbakedproductions7887
      @halfbakedproductions7887 Год назад +4

      I live 400 miles from my parents. The worst thing about it is being continually pestered about visiting, and being made to feel so guilty about using your precious annual leave for yourself rather than spending it with them.
      There is a real sense of spite from them when you think that you're not going to camp in their spare room for Easter, you're going to Amsterdam instead.

    • @eattherich9215
      @eattherich9215 Год назад

      @@jaywalkercrew4446: America, dear god, NO. It's a hellscape of unhappy people who are screwed over by the establishment and the corporations. Everything is surprisingly expensive for such a big country - whatever happened to economies of scale - and the healthcare system is a SCAM whereby you pay through the nose for USELESS medical plans. Nine millions Americans are enjoying a better quality of life outside the US. I know because they tell us so on the numerous RUclips channels.

  • @jenniferbuhler461
    @jenniferbuhler461 Год назад +79

    Just yesterday I was in a big city and thinking "man, people here have it all" but then I remembered that I hate when it's louf outside and I can't sleep. And that I enjoy nature and that that the small city I live in has everything I need and if not, I'm only 40 mins away from the bigger cities in my country.
    Hearing your story reassures me that it's fine where I am because it's where I would want to live when I'm not in my 20s anymore anyway.

    • @simonh6371
      @simonh6371 Год назад +2

      Exactly Jennifer and you need to remember that most who live in London have to commute a hell of a lot longer than 40 minutes to get to and from work which kind of defeats the purpose of living here, where you pay as much rent for a room as you do for a house or 2 bedroom flat in other parts of the country.

  • @courtneysteininger5273
    @courtneysteininger5273 Год назад +20

    Something I'm thinking about is this myth that young people only exist in cities. Like if you are under the age of 40, particularly if you do not have children, you cannot live in a small town. I live in a town about an hour and a half from NYC, and it is so hard to meet anyone in my age range, though being able to make friends across generational lines brings me much joy. Statistically, there are young people, living in small towns, but there is no narrative about their lives and this makes it harder for people to imagine such a lifestyle and feels isolating while living it.

  • @lydia1634
    @lydia1634 Год назад +43

    As a writer and a parent in the US, I can't unsee how many picture books take place in New York City, a place I've never been. It's, like, all of them, largely because that's where all of the big publishing houses in the US are. NYC and LA are also where all of the late night shows are and where almost all of the entertainment is made. The US, meanwhile, is huge. But the entertainment industry has very little curiosity about any of the thousands of towns and communities outside of those two big hubs. It has major implications in almost every part of our culture, and is a huge contributor to the political schisms and radicalization happening right now. We need stories with specificity about main characters living full lives outside of these giant cities. We need to flip the narrative.

    • @jensendsflowers
      @jensendsflowers Год назад +4

      I work in entertainment and I am so glad you said this. Thank you.

    • @swingdude111
      @swingdude111 Год назад

      I totally agree

    • @tatiyanazzz
      @tatiyanazzz Год назад +1

      I could say exactly the same about Russia (my home country). The media create the image that everything is happening in Moscow and St. Petersburg (and it's true to some extent), like our huge diverse country doesn't exist outside those 2 large cities. I come from a little Siberian town and I went studying at our best university in Moscow. Now I feel the disproportion and inequality in representation stronger than ever.

    • @swingdude111
      @swingdude111 Год назад

      @@tatiyanazzz these cities all have a lot of stature and that's why they have been heavily romanticized in people's psyche.

    • @swingdude111
      @swingdude111 Год назад +1

      @@tatiyanazzz but stature doesn't equate to quality of life as I learnt from living and working in London.

  • @humwengus1204
    @humwengus1204 Год назад +169

    As a uni student now, there's so many people I have heard are flocking to London after graduation. For many of us, this isn't an option as broke graduates. This bright lights syndrome sometimes makes me feel like I'm setting my career up for failure for not wanting to live in a concrete jungle and live where it's "at". But this whole concept of the city having everything fundamentally clashes with my values. As someone trying to move away from hustle culture and embrace slower living, a place like London would only make it worse with so many opportunities on my doorstep. Yet, being from the North has also shown me how many areas cannot access opportunities because they're only in the biggest cities or in the South. There's definitely a North-South divide and hopefully investment in areas outside of London will somewhat equalize opportunities for people from different backgrounds.

    • @babystaybee
      @babystaybee Год назад +12

      I'm living this exact scenario, originally from the North, currently studying in London for a career path that has the London or nothing mentality, but desperately missing the comforts and slower pace of home, causing me to wonder if I've chosen the correct career if I'm about to make myself redundant by moving away from all the opportunities once I finish studying. Honestly just seeing someone else put the same experience into words has made me feel much less alone in my journey.

    • @hberror404
      @hberror404 Год назад +3

      PREACH!!

    • @Lunatheia
      @Lunatheia Год назад

      I’ve already noticed so many who have moved up north. I have high hopes for it equalising but I’m afraid it prices people up there out. Maybe after a couple more decades people will start to earn more in general there anyways though

    • @danbee415
      @danbee415 6 месяцев назад

      London is so great and I'm so jealous I can't afford to live there right now. It's not feasible, it really isn't. It only makes sense if you've got the money. Why put yourself in a rough time for a risky career? Just work somewhere cheaper and buld your way up. This is so much easier as a man since youth isn't really a big deal. I'm also going to argue that if you do delay your gratification, do not miss out on doing youthful fun things like partying. People like to put hard-age gaps on things like that, but there's really no reason for that. Cna also still go partying in a cheaper city anyways.

    • @jakehowie442
      @jakehowie442 2 месяца назад

      You’re right but London gets all the investment from this criminal government

  • @justinehelene4831
    @justinehelene4831 Год назад +64

    I really like how you mention the privilege of having secure and loving parents or family members. I've always thought this was an underappreciated factor in younger generational success ( however you define success) wherever you fall socio economically. It is sad how that was affected by covid.

    • @Bluebird19-ll8su
      @Bluebird19-ll8su Месяц назад

      I know this comment is a year old, but had to reply and say YES! Having parents and family that are loving, supportive and giving you guidance is so important, and can make a huge difference.

  • @emzzn4915
    @emzzn4915 Год назад +135

    I love this video so much. I’m Welsh but spent most of my 20s living in Brussels. I truly felt like a main character living a way better life than I ever could have imagined, filled with parties and events and new friends from all over Europe. When I went through a break up and decided to move to my home town of Cardiff I felt like I’d given up/failed. Fast forward 4 years and I’m now married, own a home, have a great job and love being close to my family and spending my weekends walking along the coast or hiking up mountains. Of course there are some limitations (lack of diversity/culture etc), but I think I might be happier and more fulfilled.

    • @Tammy-bb8xp
      @Tammy-bb8xp Год назад +13

      Welsh culture is still culture :-) it baffles me that ppl often dont consider British / English / Scottish / welsh culture as culture . Culture is not only ethnic

    • @hannelorefly
      @hannelorefly Год назад +1

      I have been considering moving to Cardiff as an alternative capital of the UK (I live in York atm). I have never been there but it gives me an anti-elitist, pro-decentralisation impression (left-wing centre of the UK?) Based on Tiger Bay's multicultural history I assumed that ethnic minorities might feel more comfortable than in rural areas. This is why I am surprised you write there is a lack of diversity.
      When I researched forums, people reported it was their biggest mistake to leave Cardiff, or the best decision of their life to move there. It is significantly more affordable than Greater London and it is close to the sea. It seems like a dream, tbh!

    • @pendafen7405
      @pendafen7405 Год назад

      @@hannelorefly Welsh born or raised people don't necessarily want a massive influx of Saes looking for cheaper living, though...

  • @jennybacon2429
    @jennybacon2429 Год назад +69

    Bristolian here! I've never been someone who wanted to live in London, but I love living in a mid-sized city and always have (well, I live in the suburbs, but still, I'm close enough). I think there needs to be a larger conversation about house prices in general in this country, like you say many Londoners have left the city but a lot of them still crave the city lifestyle so have moved to places like Bristol or Manchester instead of less popular towns, driving the costs up. Bristol is apparently the worst for it because we're like a mini London in a sense, a melting pot of different cultures and identities, full of the arts and we generally have the same kind of appeal. We now have the same problem that it's becoming too expensive for people to live here and people are being forced out. Rents are through the roof, as are house prices if you intend to buy. I'm lucky enough to own outright thanks to inheritance, but I've seen similar houses to mine in my neighbourhood being sold at about 50-75k more than they were worth just before the pandemic, and about 100-125k more than 10 years ago. It's not just a London problem anymore, it's a city problem in general which is such a shame as they are great places to live!

    • @sexydoorframes
      @sexydoorframes Год назад +1

      Yeah. I grew up in a what somewhat "rough" poor area and even our houses are creaping closer to 200k for absolutely no reason. The area hasn't been improved or anything like that, other than new housing estates. The main school in the area got an physical uplift that was needed as it was one of the worst schools in the UK while I attended, but the behaviour of students hasn't changed and thus, it would'nt be the school you chose if you have any other options. We have new housing estates going up, with prices from 200k to 250k. It's ridiculous. Not many people in this area could afford that. Housing price for a 4 bed house 10 years ago was like 100k. Now you'd be lucky to get a flat for that price. And they are building these new estates without ever thinking about building a new GP surgery or anything like that. You could barely get an appointment years ago and it's gotten even worse because of these new estates bringing in more people, without thinking about the increased demand. The housing estates are also badly built and are built to stuff as many houses on the plot as can be. Not many local people can ever dream of buying a 200k house. So a lot of locals can't afford to buy a home in the area. And it's still a area where there are parts of it where you'd avoid at night or even day!

    • @hannahbradshaw2186
      @hannahbradshaw2186 Год назад +2

      I did my uni exchange to Bristol 5 years ago from Sydney and I left a piece of my heart there. I love that city so much and would move there in a heartbeat if I could 😭😍

    • @f6876
      @f6876 Год назад

      Bristol is such a cool and vibrant city, it’s a shame that the locals are being priced out.

    • @Obatala_Vibez
      @Obatala_Vibez Год назад

      @@Scarlett-nu8gh that’s the thing I moved out of Bristol 2020, to London, everyone said I was crazy, and yes things are more expensive (although Bristol was/is becoming a mini London) but I know have a better paid career! Swings and roundabouts. I personally don’t regret my decision but as I said, it’s a personal decision that worked for me.

    • @AlexPacker
      @AlexPacker Год назад

      I grew up in Bristol until I was 18, went away for uni and haven't been able to afford to return. It's not like I make bad money either! Most of my family have since moved to Weston-super-Mare. It has a reputation, but it's actually a nice place to live with clean air, good houses and lots happening at an affordable price

  • @SamWest96
    @SamWest96 Год назад +70

    I'm a born and bred Londoner, south of the river. My parents moved us away when I was 11 and I was heartbroken. I've lived in Wiltshire, North Wales and Hampshire since then. I always vowed I'd go home one day. Then I had my daughter. My whole world changed and I realised I would never feel happy raising my daughter in London for a whole variety of reasons - probably a video's worth! I don't think we'll stay in Hampshire, it's not entirely our vibe, but we'll definitely not be moving to London.

    • @TheTruestGrit
      @TheTruestGrit Год назад +3

      As someone who grew up in the North of England I actually feel the exact opposite! London has so much more diversity, culture, and opportunity than where I grew up and I'd love my kid to be surrounded by that. Kinda hurts that they won't have a notthern accent tho 😅

    • @SamWest96
      @SamWest96 Год назад +1

      @@TheTruestGrit totally get where you're coming from on that one! I live between Portsmouth and Southampton which are both surprisingly diverse cities so I feel like we still get that while also having cleaner air and greenery. Also we have the opportunity to buy a home here which just wouldn't be possible for us any closer to London than we currently are, let alone in zone 4 where I used to be!

    • @jakehowie442
      @jakehowie442 2 месяца назад

      Is it the crime or segregation in London? South London, Croydon are bad

  • @rebeccatries8038
    @rebeccatries8038 Год назад +27

    I love embracing not aspiring to be a Matilda because she’s a prodigy, but because she finds love and warmth and a good place to read.
    I’ve been ReContextualizing my idea of what it means to be a main character in the adventure of my life as someone who realized they’re London (New York) was a place I could visit 100 times but never live. I love New York, but I’m too anxious to feel nourished there, even as I feel pressured to legitimize myself as an artist by living there.
    It’s so relieving to release the idea that my creations, my actions, my home, my life are less beautiful, or meaningful, or cool because I never made it to Williamsburg.
    It’ll take decades to restore my middling house in my middling town, but I can be my own Ms. Honey, adopt myself, and roller skate in my living room if I want.
    It’s sick.

  • @sanketsharma2190
    @sanketsharma2190 Год назад +61

    As a foreign student currently studying in London, making it here is seen as the ultimate achievement. Simultaneously though, surviving in London seems like this Herculean task that feels like it will take everything from you. I can totally see how it would be better for you to just move out.

    • @jakehowie442
      @jakehowie442 2 месяца назад

      Making it in London for what 😂 It’s not the American dream dude. There are very few other benefits living in London, when you are rich. It’s just better restaurants and clubs.
      At least New York has skyscrapers to look down at the peasants

  • @gracesmith6079
    @gracesmith6079 Год назад +30

    I'm so glad you made this video. I grew up in the midwest of the United States and always believed I would move to a big city on the east or west coast. Instead, I ended up in a smaller city about an hour drive from my family. It took me years to realize that I was allowed to be happy with the choice I made that was informed by what was important to me and how I actually spend my time (not to mention the financial realities of getting a graduate degree in the U.S.), instead of beating myself up for not moving to a city that would have seemed like an impressive place to live to somebody else. I used to feel inferior when I heard people from bigger cities talk about the midwest with disdain, but the older I get, the more I realize I made the right choice for me, and at the end of the day, I want to be defined by my what I do and who I love, not where I live.

  • @runarae2842
    @runarae2842 Год назад +25

    So so relatable. At 19 I moved to NYC and after 7 years only maybe 3 of which I look back at as enjoyable I realized I desperately needed to be near trees and out of the most anxiety producing place imaginable. I was ready to let go of my "New Yorker" badge and be happier, live a far more earth-conscious life where this was simply easier, have space to garden and exist at a more sustainable pace. The one thing I miss most is being in a place where people from everywhere overlap. Cultural homogeny is the worst thing about the smaller city I live in now. I really appreciate you pointing out that for many, living in 'the city' means (more) safety to be non-white and queer. As a white cis person living in a smaller historically redlined city it feels important to acknowledge and find actionable ways to change this. Thanks for all your lovely videos, honesty and humor!

  • @geniej2378
    @geniej2378 Год назад +44

    It’s such a good thought- all our stories and narratives centre a main character, having exceptional stuff happening to them. And all our historical figures too. It can be a shock and an identity crisis to realise that’s not going to be your lived experience and does that make you a failure? Less special? Is your purpose not to change the world in some way? Great thought provoking video as always Leena!

  • @KatzePiano
    @KatzePiano Год назад +80

    Having come from a big city (Birmingham), I've never felt a pull towards other big cities. London always seemed too big for me and I visited family there enough in my childhood that I had no illusions about what it was like. Long before I had the option of where to live, I knew I wanted to live somewhere small and old (eg. Oxford was my plan for a while), and thankfully my dreams came true, though not in Oxford. Funnily enough, Edinburgh is also a capital city, but far smaller than London, and fulfils my desire for small and old, while also having lots of exciting and fascinating things going on.

    • @andreeapopa8568
      @andreeapopa8568 Год назад +4

      Edinburgh is an absolute gem

    • @doppelganger1997
      @doppelganger1997 Год назад +1

      I feel similarly. I used to live in a small town in Buckinghamshire but then moved to York (because I love old architecture and small city vibes) and it was the best place I've ever been. I now live in Oxford (for uni) but after nearly 3 years I'm feeling bored here. I really miss York but since it's up north it feels slightly secluded from my friends and family who live in the south east. It's difficult to find a place that encompasses all your needs and wants...

    • @jonesroberts3640
      @jonesroberts3640 Год назад +1

      Birmingham is not a nice city its very rough full of poverty and crime and lots of racial divisions and segregation and Birmingham is pretty much boring and a depressing city its slow and has a rural feel cannot ever compare to London which is vibrant and colourful city .

    • @halfbakedproductions7887
      @halfbakedproductions7887 Год назад +4

      It's funny how Londoners talk about how they grew up there and we all think they're so lucky. Only for them to relocate because they're bored of London, the quality of life is crap and it's too expensive.
      I'm from Edinburgh and have the exact same feelings about Edinburgh, and have done the exact same in leaving. I'm tired of it and it has no magic or serious differentiating features anymore. I absolutely 100% cannot afford to properly settle there even if I wanted to, and when I do visit I just get bored very quickly and don't want to be there.
      And I don't even have a family home there anymore because my parents separated and sold it.
      Funny how students and tourists who were there for 10 minutes love to lecture me on how dismally wrong I am about my own hometown that I lived in for 22 years. Cheers, much appreciated.
      I prefer my current location which is a medium-large town within striking distance of London. Weather's better, it's easier to get around and is well connected, great job opportunities with easy access to London. Housing costs actually slightly less.

    • @TheSpoovy
      @TheSpoovy Год назад

      ​@@jonesroberts3640 Birmingham has a rural feel? 😆 Now I've heard everything.

  • @folaigh4209
    @folaigh4209 Год назад +37

    I can relate to some of this: though I was born and raised in my ‘big city’ (Amsterdam), staying here has become increasingly difficult. I too see the schism in my friend group: those who can buy property here and those who can’t. I’m still in a position of renting an affordable apartment that is somewhat protected by regulation, but that could all change. I am angry about the way our politicians have devalued homes to property and investments. I totally get why people leave, I just don’t have a different hometown to go to!

  • @erinjohnson3188
    @erinjohnson3188 Год назад +15

    “But they’re also kind of missing out on you, like they’re loss.” I totally get fomo sometimes and this is such a lovely sentiment. Go where your life IS not where you think it should be. :)

  • @aishahb8336
    @aishahb8336 Год назад +108

    I'm glad you lightly touched on the anxieties of being a minority because I'm a mixed race queer woman born and bred in London. I grew up on benefits and have always lived with my parents(who rent). I went to uni in Loughborough and have visited areas outside of London several times but the fact that my Black, Asian and Queer community wasn't as prominent outside is my key factor in staying here. Even though it's incredibly expensive, I still value those connections more than anything, especially as someone who can't drive and has family that also can't drive and wouldn't be able to afford a car. If all goes well, I'm hoping to buy a flat here soon even though I work fairly remotely 90% of the time. All that being said, I totally understand your viewpoints - especially with the access to green space part during the PannyD and I'm glad that you've found your home outside ☺️

    • @tabzywabzy
      @tabzywabzy Год назад +13

      This was one of the biggest culture shocks to me having been born and raised in London. I lived in a few different towns before winding up in Bradford because of my partner - experienced racism within a few weeks of being there, for the first time in my life. I have learnt to hide my queerness but I can't hide my skin tone.
      I really really miss being in London and feeling like I belong and am valid. I've been in an out of therapy ever since moving away because there's a huge part of my identity that I lost when I moved away, but realistically I can probably never move back. 10 years this year!

    • @nuloo
      @nuloo Год назад +7

      This resonates so deeply! Although I have many privileges as a white person, I'm also queer, trans, and Jewish, and I feel so much safer and have much greater community living in a big city.

    • @SamWest96
      @SamWest96 Год назад +2

      I remember being completely shocked when my parents upped and moved me out of a part of London where as a white person I was very much the minority of my area and school, to the West Country. While I obviously don't have your experience, I can completely understand your pov. Funnily enough, my friend (from Wiltshire) told me excitedly that I'd love Loughborough uni - so diverse! When I visited I was just a tad disappointed.

    • @jonesroberts3640
      @jonesroberts3640 Год назад

      London is very multicultural and very tolerant to different races other Uk cities are very racist and segregated with no integration at all people are backwards and bigoted.

    • @tomh2121
      @tomh2121 Год назад +8

      It’s part of the reason I love living in Manchester because of how cosmopolitan and international it is, but being a lot more liveable and manageable than London. I’m from the London area but lots of us have moved up this way

  • @brogantatexo
    @brogantatexo Год назад +13

    Such a great chat. I’ve lived by the sea in Bournemouth my whole life, but when I started my career, I was told I wouldn’t ‘make it’ without being in London. Luckily we have a direct train to Waterloo and I was happy coming up once a week, but now it’s even better that I can come and go as more things are virtual. I love London, but I also love the seaside and my bigger home. Thanks for the conversation!

    • @realfreedom8932
      @realfreedom8932 Год назад

      I am thinking of moving to Bournemouth. I have read that homelessness and addiction is a massive problem. Which part of Bournemouth is the safest/nicest?

  • @ciara1045
    @ciara1045 Год назад +14

    the london or nothing mentality is so true! I went to uni in Bristol with a LOT of people from london/the home counties and I experienced people from London having completely different lifestyles to me and in a lot of cases disdain for what my life was like - I had people laugh at me because I said I saw cows everyday, people not believe the reality of public transport outside of London and people complaining that their life in london was waaay more boring than mine. Honestly I think people who have lived in London for a long time need to check their privilege and realise that the UK isnt just London

  • @Yvaia
    @Yvaia Год назад +11

    I come from a small European country, housing around 2.5 million people. When I was in school, all I wanted was to escape somewhere where it didn’t feel like you had to fit specific boxes to feel like a worthy person. After I graduated high school, I came to London to study - that was 2014, and now I’ve been living here for 8 years. This video rings a lot of bells for me - there’s things I adore about London - it’s a city that is always alive, there’s always something going on, you can find people from all corners of the world, with all types of lives and styles, and usually people don’t care about the way you choose to express yourself. But it’s also someplace where it feels like you need to be doing something all the time, hustling all the time - I have this weird guilt if I don’t do something for two evenings in a row, and there’s the low thrumming stress and need to achieve always around the corner. My roommates, who are a couple, are now moving away to Bristol - while a few years back I couldn’t have imagined why anyone would leave London after making it here, now I really see it. I don’t expect to stay here forever. Like you, I crave a bit more steadiness, a bit more calm, and smaller goddamn rent prices (holy shit, seriously…) Thank you for the really insightful video, it was great to listen to someone from a slightly similar perspective.

  • @animalkin7127
    @animalkin7127 7 месяцев назад +4

    “…and aren’t we all kind of missing out on all the places we’re not? All the chances, all the moments; because we’ve traded it for all the places that we’ve actually chosen to be”
    That really got me in the heart

  • @quinnrhodes3617
    @quinnrhodes3617 Год назад +78

    This is a brilliant video and it actually made me really emotional in a way I wasn't expecting it to. Thank you so much for your incredible research, honesty, and story-telling. (Also I'm AGAIN super tempted to go and buy the brown cord jacket from L&Y because you make it look so good!)

    • @leenanorms
      @leenanorms  Год назад +6

      Quinn! I didn't mean to make you EMOSH! Thank you so much for this thoughtful comment, it means a lot. I am biased, but I DO feel like that Jacket goes with everything ;)

    • @reminiscentoss681
      @reminiscentoss681 Год назад +2

      I also ended the video feeling super and unexpectedly emotional!

  • @tiffanyferg
    @tiffanyferg Год назад +9

    Ahhh I love this video, thank you for sharing your experiences!! I need to send you a voice memo with all my thoughts bc I can’t type them out lmao

    • @leenanorms
      @leenanorms  Год назад

      GIMME THEM VOICENOTES, I’d love to hear thoughts x

  • @stephaniecairns5608
    @stephaniecairns5608 Год назад +18

    This is such an interesting video (as always!). I'm from a small town in Canada, and I've been living in London for a year now. I like it, but I'm beginning to think it isn't for me. The cons - the really poor quality of housing compared to back home, the very low salaries and high cost of living, the crowds, the grimy streets - don't necessarily outweigh the pros (no matter how obsessed I've become with seeing cheap West End shows and exploring London's endless bookstores). I don't associate leaving London with failure or a lack of ambition - I just think it's a shame that such a cool city has such a low standard of living. If I end up moving back to Canada (or to the US, or Europe, or elsewhere) I won't be sacrificing my career - in fact, I'll probably just end up with a much better salary.

  • @gerdagrase3172
    @gerdagrase3172 Год назад +17

    I do wonder whether a good part of the issue with Big City Dreams is that the reality of them is permanently rushed. I spent 5 years in Edinburgh and while yes, it is at least technically a city, the people there seem to actually focus on the life parts of life. When I head into London for my job, all I see are employees worrying about their employee lives. Which is perfectly fine if that is what you want to do, but in reality I aspire to be more like those old ladies walking their dogs on a cold August morning on Portobello beach - living a life about the little things with the people you love.
    I also have some thoughts along the lines of Big City, something, something, big time consumerism, but maybe that's for a different time. :D

    • @jakehowie442
      @jakehowie442 2 месяца назад +1

      I would say London has been heavily influenced by New York, started with American banks and its also American food and consumerism…money is all values. People no longer care about each other and don’t have many local communities left

  • @mariealexandrinne6997
    @mariealexandrinne6997 Год назад +37

    I love the message here. It's ultimately your life to live, and being the side character who doesn't go through much drama but lives a peaceful and fulfilling existence sounds great to me. Team side-character for the win!

  • @TwelvetreeZ
    @TwelvetreeZ Год назад +7

    I lived in London for two years from 2014-2016, and I've moved to steadily smaller places ever since. I always felt I should "make something of myself" by living in a big city, but I just felt alienated the whole time I was there, and the rental market was a massive headache. I was lucky I could live with my aunt for most of my time there, but it didn't really feel like independence. The only thing I enjoyed about living in London was the museums - if I could pick up the British Library and plop it down somewhere near Lancaster, I would! When the plague hit, I spent the last few months of my degree in my parent's house in Cumbria, and now I live and work in two museums in the Central Lakes - the public transport is rubbish and everything closes at 5pm (except the pubs), but I've honestly never been happier! Can't believe my luck really

  • @Lifescapers
    @Lifescapers Год назад +5

    I love your essays. So thoughtful, well researched, strong point of view, funny, relevant, well written... Thank you for creating and posting them. There is so little content of this quality on the net and I'm glad you're here.

  • @Mariamomo_
    @Mariamomo_ Год назад +9

    I feel this. Coming from a town where nothing happens, you see your only options as marrying and having a family, or moving to London and climbing up the corporate ladder. All of my friends from primary and secondary school minus one have moved to London. I feel the pressure to move on and off. I adore London, especially because I can find lots of places to get in touch with my Jamaican roots, but in other ways I don't think the housing situation is worth the hassle. There is a feeling amongst the people I know that if you don't make it to London, you're essentially a failure.
    I've been to plenty of cities like Bristol, Liverpool, Nottingham and absolutely loved them, but being from such a non-descript place makes that pressure to move away even more real.

    • @jakehowie442
      @jakehowie442 2 месяца назад

      Manchester and Birmingham have quite big Jamaican communities. Not like Notting Hill carnival vibes but there are others.
      London is aight, nothing special

  • @Megara_baila
    @Megara_baila Год назад +13

    Ahhhh I am going through all these motions.. Turn 30 this year, moved to London when I was 24. I work in the charity sector and I'm struggling to figure out how I would have a better quality of life outside of London given the dramatically lower salaries... Also I think leaving as a single person is a different challenge. Anyway, I am on the look out for a new city to call home. We'll see!

  • @kaywilson3233
    @kaywilson3233 Год назад +82

    Having moved from London to Nottingham a year ago my only regret is not doing it sooner! London was soooo aspirational growing up in Watford, and I'm happy I was there for a time. But when you're in London you really think life stops outside it, I've found the reverse to be true, especially since I can afford to enjoy myself now. Seeing what my life could be like outside of the M25 was like coming out of Plato's Cave lmao

    • @umarahabid1102
      @umarahabid1102 Год назад +6

      Big up Notts!

    • @undefinedreb971
      @undefinedreb971 Год назад +6

      I’m from Nottingham, now living just outside of London and full of existential questions! Hope you enjoy living there. The bars are great, if you’re into that sort of thing 🥂😂

    • @kaywilson3233
      @kaywilson3233 Год назад +3

      @@undefinedreb971 Oh deffo! The bars and pubs are great, I think growing up in a uk chain copy paste high street has made me really appreciate the amount of independents here :) I hope you get those questions answered, and London is great in many ways it’s so worth giving it a go! As long as you’re honest with yourself about whether you’re actually enjoying it, you’ll be fine!!

    • @undefinedreb971
      @undefinedreb971 Год назад +1

      @@kaywilson3233 Enjoy them! And thank you! Think the way forward will be to not overthink it and see where I end up... We'll see how that goes!

    • @oliverfox3438
      @oliverfox3438 Год назад +4

      Also can we all agree how great the public transport is in Nottingham. Thank god it's not owned by Stagecoach.

  • @catrionainglis3605
    @catrionainglis3605 Год назад +17

    During my undergraduate degree I had this sense of London as the aim. It felt like success. Then I lived in London for three months and I struggled with feeling like a failure because I didn't enjoy it. I'm still working through some of that I think I just might be a small city kinda gal.

    • @swingdude111
      @swingdude111 Год назад

      Why didn’t you enjoy it?

    • @simonh6371
      @simonh6371 Год назад +1

      If you didn't like it here that means you are normal.

  • @vacafuega
    @vacafuega Год назад +2

    I too had dreams of London, I lived there briefly as a toddler and when my parents moved away it became the place where the people who loved me lived, that I never went to and had lost. Wound up living there for just under two years a decade ago, after the family members were already gone sadly. I was so in love but it chewed me up and spat me out, it can be a very cold city - if you have a problem, you are much more likely to get left behind than to be helped. Was assaulted in a crowded tube carriage for example, everybody saw but nobody said or did anything. Thankfully I was able to leave and now live in a small rural town - miss some things but overall so much more content, peaceful, healthy... and less poor!!

  • @notanniewarren
    @notanniewarren Год назад +25

    This felt like watching me explain my life to myself. My experience maps almost perfectly onto yours - I was born in the Midlands and moved to London in 2012. I worked in publishing. My job went remote and I started freelancing and then the pandemic hit, and I moved back to the Midlands. Now I live with my boyfriend on a houseboat. It's a quieter life for sure and I miss London from time to time - it will always have a place in my heart. But I turn 30 this year and I've never felt happier or more peaceful than I do on my little boat in my new city ✌🏼

  • @bethanrumsey4634
    @bethanrumsey4634 Год назад +6

    I think you covered the senitments wonderfully. I used to live on London's doorstep and thus it was a very forgone conclusion that I would go to uni and get a job in London. I wanted to be an editor too, and I knew I could (basically) only do that in London. It took until the pandmeic and not being able to find a placement, as well as my family moving away from London to realise there was nothing in London that was actually appealing to me. Even having a job there seemed very stressful- there's a certain kind of person that thrives in competitive jobs and I'm not that. It meant letting go what I thought of as a dream career, but I've realised watching friends and other graduates go through their working life that dream careers are a scam. I'm quite happy where I am. Got a good office job. My location is cheap, close to cities, and I don't need a car. I'm glad of my choice, though its not a job people would consider "making it big". I dread to think what might have happened if the pandemic didn't happen and I ended up trying to scrape by to "make it big" just for the feeling of success the job would have brought.

  • @NoOneEatsParsley
    @NoOneEatsParsley Год назад +18

    I lived in London for a few years in my mid-late twenties, the day a complete stranger unlocked the door with a key and walked into the room I was renting in a shared house while I was in it was the day I realised that I needed to leave.
    I moved to Gloucestershire and bought a house near Cheltenham (shared ownership because I had drained my savings on London rent and deposits I never got back), I grieved London for a about 6 months but I fell in love with the Cotswolds and will never go back, people say it’s expensive here but my mortgage and rent combined for that house was more than the 1 bedroom in London was costing me 👍

  • @Chareads
    @Chareads Год назад +3

    In 2021 I moved to Brighton after 10 years in London. I was living on Broadway Market - the dream street full of cute cafes and 3 bookshops sandwiched between the canal and a park - but someone was shot outside my door, we were told to keep inside one night because 'people were running around with machetes', I witnessed several muggings and barely escaped one myself. I knew I wanted more space and more nature which was mostly why I left, but I feel like my shoulders untensed within weeks. It's so hard to see how rat-racey and stressful and anonymous London is when you're in it. Great for a couple of fun young years but dear god I hope my not-urban-at-heart friends shake themselves out of it soon and start building a life elsewhere that's more attuned to their values than all the expectations we put on London. So nice to hear your experience of moving to Coventry Leena. Keep up the top quality vids.

    • @jakehowie442
      @jakehowie442 2 месяца назад

      Shouldn’t have voted for Sadiq Khan, somehow made the city worse with ULEZ, knife and gun crime, gangs, sky high property prices

  • @aglaurendance
    @aglaurendance Год назад +3

    I grew up with a Dad in the US military, so I’ve had a wide variety of living situations, from an inner city (in Southern California), to living on base with hundreds of other military families, to the suburbs, to a term spent at Cambridge University, and to my favorite of them all- a farm in rural Somerset, England. Whilst it was incredibly jarring to move from essentially a sunny city in California to a rainy rural farm in England (my Dad did a personnel exchange and became part of the Royal Navy for several years, which is what prompted that rather odd move), it was also absolutely wonderful. I felt almost immediately at home, living on a farm with several hundred cows and sheep, several dogs and cats, and the farmer’s six children. The slower pace of life took awhile to get used to, but I came to absolutely treasure it and, to this day, I can trace my love of being around trees and green fields to living on that farm. For the first year or so of my family’s time in England, our paperwork to be able to use the NHS was slow to go through, so we had to drive three hours west to go to an American military base in London for our healthcare (I was 12 and my sister was 8 when we moved there, so as kids, we still needed the doctor a lot). I consequently dreaded driving to London, because it meant the unpleasantness of the doctor or dentist and because it was so loud and crowded and noisy in comparison to my beloved farm. I have an aunt and uncle who live in NYC and one of my closest American friends from uni lived in London for years with her husband. They all love the big cities, but they’re not for me. I now teach primary school in the suburbs of an American city- I have no desire to move to the city itself and am frequently finding myself near the lakes and nature parks. Combine the easy access to the beach in California and the beauty of the trees and pastures on the farm and I’ve become rather a nature lover and not someone who particularly enjoys the cities as a place to live (but I do love visiting them). I know my access to public transport in Somerset was nowhere near as good as it would have been in London, but it was still amazing compared to what’s on offer here (and the metro region I live in is one of the better ones for public transport in the US), so I even miss that.

  • @freedomtrail8255
    @freedomtrail8255 Год назад +6

    Really enjoyed listening to this. It’s something that’s not raised enough. I live in the North East. Cheap houses, some lovely beaches and countryside. I have no mortgage. For me it feels like a win win. I do happen to love London but it is annoying how much investment goes on there in comparison to the Midlands/North. Definitely there is no ‘levelling up’!

  • @ThisIsNotRelevant
    @ThisIsNotRelevant Год назад +25

    As an outsider, I absolutely love London. I love watching it on the TV and thinking “I would absolutely love to live there” but ultimately, it’s not where I see myself. Like you were saying, London’s a complete anomaly compared to the rest of the UK and my mindset is definitely shifting to where now I want to see the vibrancy and acceptance and multiculturalism of London to be the norm for the rest of the UK. Not to say all other British cities/towns lack this, just to clarify but if this reach was wider, concentration in London may not be so high!

    • @simonh6371
      @simonh6371 Год назад

      Vibrancy lol oh yeah you get that, like right now for the last half an hour a little wkstn has been zooming in circles around the small estate I live in, on a ridiculously loud motorbike with no numberplate or lights on, so that I literally feel the vibrancy of the vibrations every 2 mins when he passes and shout obscenities and imagine doing horrible things to him, but of course I can't even go and ask him nicely to stop, nor will any of the other hundreds of people whose evening he is blighting. It's vibrant alright but I can do without that.

  • @opollitico
    @opollitico Год назад +6

    I always find your explorations of complex topics, like class, so incisive, Leena. Once again, a throughly informative and entertaining watch! Thank you ❤️

  • @zoeamz
    @zoeamz Год назад +16

    I'm not from the UK but I studied there and after graduation almost all of my friends moved to London for work, while I moved back home (abroad). I love London (as someone who has only visited) and I would love to live there and give it a go, but the stories I hear about the housing and rental market are so deterring! Not that it's easy where I am now, but the scale of it in London just makes me not even want to try 💔

  • @corneliusowl6024
    @corneliusowl6024 Год назад +7

    I come from an incredibly working class, incredibly poor Northern town and after uni hauled ass to London several times on unpaid work experience opportunities to try and get an in with the field I wanted to work in. I rapidly realised that the culture within that industry wasn't for me, but I also realised - including looking at friends who have now gone into that field successfully-that the amount of sleeping in precarious settings in London (rent, housemates, other people's sofas) that was needed and that they embraced to get to where they are was not something I could cope with or felt safe about.
    Other circumstances at home also intervened at the time (needing to support other family members and earn a wage I could actually share) as well but it was a bitter pill at the time even though I knew it was the right one. I love visiting London (when I can afford the train and somewhere to stay) but I am mostly glad I stayed in my home town and - because it is quite poor-saved up and got a mortgage to move my family somewhere closer. Sometimes I do wonder what I would be like if I'd not had those terrible (did I mention totally fucking unpaid) work experience "opportunities" - without them I might have taken longer to realise that it was never for me.

  • @tdb7992
    @tdb7992 Год назад +4

    When you spoke about not being able to live alone due to costs; man, I felt that. I'm in Australia and lived in Melbourne for 11 years. It's one of the coolest cities on Earth and I moved there when I was 20. I was out every night having fun with friends and lived pay cheque to pay cheque. Eventually I moved back to Perth and could finally afford to live on my own. It was so liberating. And I am so lucky that I moved when I did, because Covid soon hit, and Melbourne went through the longest lockdown on Earth. I couldn't imagine working from home and being in lockdown with flatmates. That would've driven me insane.

  • @liv97497
    @liv97497 Год назад +8

    My graduate thesis was actually on living in segregated spaces in the city (by that I mean slums, encampments, occupations, etc) and how they do/don't belong to the city itself. It's a fascinating subject and when you understand how much citizenship and the exercise of it, and participating in the city, is tied to dwelling, and how people can get excluded from basic things in life by not having an official address, it makes you so incredibly angry at these processes. I live in a whole other country, with a different history and a different culture regarding social housing and the government's job on supporting people, but there is SO much in common with what you've pointed out. I could talk about this for days!

  • @N_Garamond
    @N_Garamond Год назад +4

    I thought this was a beautiful video essay! You hit on a lot topics that I either related to or just understood. Thank you for sharing this journey into and out of the city. I also appreciate you acknowledging things like when people say "I can't afford to live ____" they mean "at the standard of living I find acceptable" when we know many do live at very terrible standards with no other choice. My only addition is that for the people originally from these ultra-expensive places, my heart breaks when they cannot afford to stay in their own hometown, that their experience of the city may be very different than someone who loves it but didn't grow up there. obviously this video was about your experience so you can't touch on everything, and again I appreciate when you stepped out of your own viewpoint too.

  • @matastrakova2179
    @matastrakova2179 Год назад +10

    This is so relatable! London has always been my dream and then I went to uni there in 2018. Even tho I´ve never been there before, I´ve never felt more home than there. Living there is incredibly financially challenging and I had to move back home because of pandemic, which saved me in many ways since I had a lot of mental issues at the time as well.
    I lived there for 1,5 years and I still feel more homesick than I´ve ever felt about town/country where I grew up and lived for over 20 years.

  • @RachelBowers18
    @RachelBowers18 Год назад +3

    This resonates so much! Thanks for vocalising this better than I've been trying to 👏👏

  • @hosware
    @hosware Год назад +12

    As someone who grew up in the suburbs of Greater London you won’t regret your decision. I moved to Yorkshire as far away as possible and wouldn’t miss anything if I never went back. It’s become a population controlled zone of high taxes, restrictions, surveillance, fines and debt that people submit to under the delusion they’ll only be successful if they stay. Reality is most are unhappy, frightened, anxious, broke and lead superficial lives desperately trying to convince themselves they’re making the right decision to stay. Well done for making the best decision of your life

    • @jakehowie442
      @jakehowie442 2 месяца назад

      Where are you from in London mate? London is a metaphor for what has gone wrong is this country!
      Big government control, high taxes, high surveillance, lack of freedom, mass immigration taking over British cultural values and identity

    • @hosware
      @hosware 2 месяца назад

      @@jakehowie442 northwest London, Watford

  • @EricaInTokyo
    @EricaInTokyo Год назад +3

    It’s crazy how much of this resonates with me. I’m a little older than you (almost 36) and I moved to where I am now, Philadelphia, in 2007. I’m at the point now where finding an affordable apartment that isn’t the size of a shoe box and that’s also in a safe neighborhood is getting harder and harder. I recently looked into my options for buying a house, and I’m not eligible for a high enough mortgage in order to even buy anything (unless it’s in a remote and very high crime neighborhood). For many years I’ve lived paycheck to paycheck here. And no, Philadelphia isn’t the largest city in the US but it’s still considered a large city. We’re also about a 1.5 hour drive from NYC. And many people are moving here from NYC because they’ve gotten priced out of NYC, and that in turn has added to rent and home price increases here. I don’t own a car and I love that I don’t need one here. I love that everything is within walking distance. I love our culture and quirks. And I also can’t really afford to move anywhere else. You can absolutely be poor while living in a large city.

  • @clover3124
    @clover3124 Год назад +9

    About 6 months ago, I moved to a major city in the US that has a reputation for being boring. Despite getting a good job offer I almost didn't take it because of the reaction I got from friends and family when I told them where I would be moving. I took the job and it's been amazing so far! It's not boring at all. But sometimes I'll talk to someone I haven't seen in a while and they'll react in a way that makes me feel like a failure. I'm really enjoying my life right now, but that response always throws me off for a minute.

    • @KatheD
      @KatheD Год назад

      I so want to know, which major US city has a reputation as boring? It's probably in the midwest...

  • @rebeccacooke2707
    @rebeccacooke2707 Год назад +4

    Leena, this was one of my favourite ever videos of yours - which is saying a lot because I'm here for the books, baybee! I've also lived, loved and left London and now live in its antithesis - an off-grid island in New Zealand. But luckily I can always go back as my sister bought a flat in Fulham last year, which was only possible for her (A Paediatric consultant!) with a high-earning partner, and a gift from his parents. What a state housing is in there. I sometimes mourn the life I could have lived if I had stayed but ultimately know, I don't want to live in a sandcastle that could collapse under the trampling feet of landords.

  • @adsimal
    @adsimal Год назад +3

    I love this video! I was born and raised (and still live) in Toronto, so the biggest city in Canada. I moved away to the UK for a year, and then did university in a much smaller Canadian city. It's definitely unlikely that I will ever leave Toronto, but it is so unaffordable here without a well-paying job, AND a partner. I think one thing the UK has over Canada is the rail system and of course smaller size overall, so even if you move out of London it's still relatively accessible. We don't have the same connectivity here. Transportation can be a real pain.

  • @scoodler
    @scoodler Год назад +3

    I live in the SF Bay Area. I've seen the cost of housing more than triple in less than 8 years in SF, Oakland and Berkeley so I can definitely relate to the feeling that this area no longer wants someone like me. I want to eventually move to a more affordable area, but I have no partner or even a close friend that would move with me, so I'd have to go it alone, which, to be honest is a daunting idea. I should also mention that I am an artist and occasional art curator , so one of the main reasons I've hung on is that I have built up a network of creative people over the years, The comradery is here, but the income from the creative work is sporadic at best. Some of my friends feel equally anxious about money, but also don't know where else to go. Others are married and able to get by on the dual income or have supplemental help from their parents. Many others have left the area altogether, because they can't afford the rent. Ironically, this is supposed to be a great place culturally, but many of the actual living artists have been priced out.

  • @Juliasayzhi
    @Juliasayzhi Год назад +4

    I currently live in NYC but so much of what you've talked about is my constant internal debate. I work in publishing and the emphasis on everything being so NYC-centric is crushing -- I never had a strong desire to move here, but have grown to love it in many of the same ways you describe London. But the rents and prices of things are absolutely insane, I don't like this intense hustle culture, and I haven't felt truly stable once since moving here. Lots to think about, but glad you chose what was right for you

  • @helengalt9750
    @helengalt9750 Год назад +4

    If the UK’s public transport system was better overall (affordable, accessible for all etc…) then we could all visit the beautiful cities up and down the country more frequently. Congratulations on being a new homeowner. ❤

  • @paulrobson7887
    @paulrobson7887 Год назад +3

    I’m from Newcastle and moved to London in my twenties, it was the only place I wanted to be and really thought I’d ‘made it’ and never saw myself living anywhere else. Fast forward 20 years and realising I was 40 and paying a grand a month for a run down bedsit in a grotty part of north London and this was never likely to change was a turning point for me. Although I didn’t move far (Berkshire) and still can’t afford to buy, I’m very happy that I pay the same amount of rent for a 3 bedroom house with a garden. I left London in 2019 and so glad I did before the pandemic hit. My life is now much more peaceful and relaxed, I work remotely from home and actually dread the rare occasion I do have to go into London for work. TBH I’d happily never go back there again. Totally a case of ‘been there, done it, bought the T-shirt’ but now I’m so over it!

  • @knifeandfork821
    @knifeandfork821 Год назад +5

    I was born and raised in London and I'll always love it, but I have to admit - moving to a small boring part of the country provided me with more job opportunities and income than I ever had in London . Also , ironically , when I visit london now , I'm able to leisurely enjoy what the city has to offer more than I could when I actually lived there, lol. So yeah , I agree with the sentiment of this video- moving out of london isn't a bad idea at all.

  • @trinity3272
    @trinity3272 Год назад +5

    As someone from Newcastle, most people I grew up around were disgusted by London. When I moved to liverpool it was seen as me moving to the big city

    • @TheTruestGrit
      @TheTruestGrit Год назад

      I'm from Sunderland and yeah same. I'm the only one of my friends that moved to London (actually, basically all my friends have moved back to the North East by this point). It's funny because I know people who moved here from overseas who knew way more people when they moved here than I did.

  • @neonMETEOR
    @neonMETEOR Год назад +1

    You are so articulate and fun to watch. You’re everything I would love to be in videos :-) this video is seriously valuable and interesting

  • @beccabooked
    @beccabooked Год назад +4

    What a beautiful message 🥹 Middle of the road house, career and a quiet life is the life for me and I love how you articulated that being content with where you are is such a gift. I’ve never left my hometown and never regretted it, and your perspective on this was really interesting!

  • @Elspm
    @Elspm Год назад +3

    Separately, it's lovely reading all the comments of people saying how happy they are to have settled in Edinburgh. However, it's getting really screwed on house prices for locals.

  • @laurenbentley9180
    @laurenbentley9180 Год назад +4

    Same story, but with Vancouver. I wanted it but it didn't want me. Plus we had two kids of different genders with absolutely zero prospects of getting into a 3 bedroom once they were teens. After six years living in a basement, we made the move to a smaller city an hour away. I do miss Vancouver though, for all the same reasons: transit, walkability, the "small town" feel of the neighborhoods, the cultural access, diversity, etc.

  • @emmahasnerdytiemz
    @emmahasnerdytiemz Год назад +1

    This was really emotional to listen to!
    In case you weren't sure - you are incredibly talented, you are my favourite RUclipsr and I've been watching you for years. It is so interesting that lots of us go through the same thought process. I've been living in beautiful areas in and around London for the past 4 years and I know in order to live the 'normal' life (house, children, dogs) that I want I'm going to have to leave so it's reassuring to see you go through that narrative too.
    Sending love to all those of us who aren't bankers/management consultants/landlords and therefore can't live in London

  • @seanlotr
    @seanlotr Год назад +1

    Thank you for making this video i am originally from a suburb of London on the essex border, as I couldn't afford to buy or rent in London, as of last year I moved to Basingstoke where I am currently renting but planning to buy a apartment in the next couple of months. I don't feel anyone is missed out not living in London,in my opinion with the age of the internet everything is available anywhere you just need to find it.

  • @AmandaGallagher
    @AmandaGallagher Год назад +10

    as someone who lived in nyc for 6 years and london for only 8 weeks for a study abroad program, london is irrevocably better.
    this video vocalized everything i felt when my partner and i left nyc for philadelphia. for so long i felt the popular sentiment of “new york or nowhere,” but i feel like that mentality can hold people back from experiencing joy in other places. thank you for this video ❤

    • @kgal1298
      @kgal1298 Год назад

      I live in LA now and I didn't like NYC, though I love Broadway and will probably go back for that, it's not for me. Though LA's not small...with that said I love the UK more I don't know why it was just always so much more fun to walk around, but I was in Swansea, Wales not London. I miss it and want to go back at some point Covid really kept me to visiting just visiting tropical places for like 3 years.

    • @jakehowie442
      @jakehowie442 2 месяца назад

      It’s better but London still too overpopulated

  • @missmatti
    @missmatti Год назад +15

    As a former Londoner, you so perfectly explained my own thoughts and feelings about living in London and also leaving. It's been many years since I left now, and while I love the city with my whole heart I learnt that there are many great places to live outside of London. I was so caught up in the whole London-or-nothing mindset.
    I have always, since I left London, debated if I am a big city girl or if I would prefer the countryside. I am now in Montreal and this city gives me the same stuff I loved with London, but on a less insane budget (although the city is way more expensive now after the pandemic). Being here I realize I am a city girl, but I wouldn't mind living in a smaller place as long as the access to a bigger vibrant city isn't too bad. I could see myself living in some English small towns even as long as I had access to London, Bristol or similar.

    • @olivialuvzpurplecows
      @olivialuvzpurplecows Год назад +3

      i just moved from Montreal to London! I had to leave because of my lack of french but Montreal will always be one of my fav cities, it’s the best mix of big city and slow life style. No one drinks wine in a park like montrealers do

    • @missmatti
      @missmatti Год назад

      @@olivialuvzpurplecows I have heard! 😍🍷I moved just recently so I haven’t yet experienced any park hang outs- but I am very excited to do it once the weather allows! London & Montreal are definitely two of my favorite cities and you are very right about the pace being slower here which I truly appreciate.

    • @olivialuvzpurplecows
      @olivialuvzpurplecows Год назад +1

      @@missmatti If you are alrady loving the city then you will fall head over heels once the summer comes around. Enjoy!!

  • @thebookbelle
    @thebookbelle Год назад

    ahhh I’ve literally been nodding along the whole way to this! Another excellent video, Leena. I’m contemplating leaving London in the next 1-2 years and so this video came at the perfect time! ❤

  • @AveryMorstan
    @AveryMorstan Год назад +2

    This was an uplifting video that I needed to see today! I've been really depressed about being priced out of the area I'm currently in and I really needed to hear a lot of these things from someone else. Made me feel a lot better about the hard decisions I've been making.

  • @jenny
    @jenny Год назад +3

    Love this video! It truly resonates with me. I left London in 2019 due to lack of funds and feeling the urge to try living alone for the first time. But I was terrified I would lose my friends and wouldn't be considered for jobs/castings and people would think lesser of me as a professional for not living there and so many silly things. For a while, if someone asked where I lived I would respond "just south of London" with no further detail unless they asked for specifics, and even then I would make sure to relate it to how close I still am to the city. But since then (and after surviving the pandemic living alone) I've been able to build savings, I adopted the best cat in the world, I fell in love (with someone who could never live in London haha), I've built a community of friends in the area, and even though it's meant losing or sacrificing certain things, I think it's been for the better. I still love London but it's not for everyone!

  • @racheljones5013
    @racheljones5013 Год назад +1

    As a Brit living abroad, I was also raised with that kind of 'Legend of London'; then moved to Japan and ended up in the Tokyo or bust mythology. I lived in Tokyo during the pancetta...trapped in a single room, in a sharehouse, where I paid an obscene amount of rent just for the privilege of existing in the Tokyo dream.
    As soon as things started to settle down I looked for somewhere outside of Tokyo. I wasn't looking to buy, but I found that for less than what I paid for living in a shoebox I could rent a small, adorable house close to the ocean with quirky cafes, forests, mountains, temples... Packed my bags and didn't look back. I love sitting with my book, drinking a coffee, listening to the waves and then riding the cute little train back into the town to get sushi on the way home. Life is good!

  • @gracevanhoven5838
    @gracevanhoven5838 Год назад

    Leeeeeena!!! This is so good. So very thoughtful. As someone pursuing a career in performance, I've always thought that I have to eventually "make it" to a big city to reach my big, lofty dreams. But as I've settled back into my hometown, I've been given so many opportunities that have made me feel so fulfilled. It's made me wonder if I HAVE to move somewhere bigger or if I could find a beautiful, fulfilling life right here. Thank you for this refreshing video that hit every note that I've been thinking about.

  • @idancealways4ever440
    @idancealways4ever440 Год назад +5

    Having grown up in a very tiny town in the middle of nowhere, United States, I love the city. It’s worth it to me to spend a little more to have the excitement that literally does not exist in my hometown. I go home once a year-ish and I am reminded the moment I get there why I left and I do live a middle of the road life Mile Road house middle of road career In the city but it’s better than for me where I came from. I even want to live in a bigger city, but I’m not sure I can afford that.

  • @queeries9154
    @queeries9154 Год назад +3

    a thing that I have started to realise, is that because of this whole demonisation of poor people, of the working class, this idealisation of "making it", we loose a sense of comradery and love for our communities that (at least some) people used to have, even just 50 years ago, which makes us less empowered to fight for our rights as people and as a community. All that to say, unionise !!! We need to accept that working a "normal" job is okay, as long as it is pays fairly and at a livable wage, and as long as it brings something good to the world and to you. For that to be a reality for more people, we need to be a community, not individuals fighting for that one new job opportunity that will make all our dreams come true. We could make more peoples dreams come true if we didn't spend so much time fighting in our midst

  • @EMSpdx
    @EMSpdx Год назад +1

    Let's talk about people who grew up in big cities! I grew up in. Brooklyn and have relatives in Brixton. I went to college in the midwest, then moved to the West Coast(LA and PDX) and settled there. My relatives in Brixton....STILL LIVE IN BRIXTON- with an exception of a couple of cousins in Bristol. Just when a house opened up for sale, the family would scrape together spare pennies and send over for the deposit. The cousins =who live in Bristol are seen as 'crazy'. But I think because we come from Caribbean , there is a very real comfort factor in staying in Brixton amongst an energy you know, and the types of people who you will come to know. and many people have middle of the road lives in big cities! In this way, for those of us who grew up in big cities, we know how to navigate our through the alleys and byways and create interesting lives that do not necessarily mean making a lot of money!

    • @jakehowie442
      @jakehowie442 2 месяца назад

      The richest people don’t live in cities, only mostly working class poor people do stuck in the rat race. Most of rich move out to suburbs or country mansions

  • @sallys.2707
    @sallys.2707 Год назад +16

    As someone born and raised in a big city (Paris), who never experienced the Move in a Big City, I love your thoughts on it.

    • @leenanorms
      @leenanorms  Год назад +6

      Yes that's something I didn't touch on! Being born in a capital and leaving/staying. Would love to see someone with that experience make a similar video.

    • @elabanana1715
      @elabanana1715 Год назад +1

      ​@@leenanorms As someone who was also born and raise in (or close enough) the big city (also paris) I feel like it might be harder in some way to leave. It's not about "making it" but about not knowing anything else. If your whole family, friends, job and support system is there it's harder to imagine where else you could live. You might have romanticize another capital city (for me it was London) but you probably didn't romanticize the rest of the country so unless you (or your partner if you have one) has family ties elsewhere, leaving might feel like a bigger step than for those who already know what leaving outside the big city feel like. You might need an opportunity: a job offer, a chance to study in another city or a want to live off the grid in preparation for societal collapse😅

    • @throughcolouredglasses9300
      @throughcolouredglasses9300 Год назад +3

      I have so many thoughts and feelings on this, being born and raised in Berlin but having moved to the smaller neighbouring city Potsdam. I love the fact that the nice city center is small enough to be completely walkeable, i love the freedom of being able to go everywhere by bike if i wanted to (altho most the time I choose public transportation+walking). I love how all the student bars and clubs and places know each other, how if you know someone involved in one of them you know about all events and get greeted like a friend everywhere. Finding an apartment as a single student is possible, even if still difficult - as opposed to Berlin. I love how i have made a home in this comfortable, cute town in the last 5 years (altho everyone from an actually small town or rural area will get mad if I call Potsdam small lol).
      Yet i miss Berlin and feel so much sadness for potentially never living there. Yes, parties and hip restaurants/bars and every obscure store/activety/location is there, but I more so am saddened over the commute to see family being too long to hop over spontaneously for an afternoon or even a day without also having a place to sleep there. I miss the area i grew up in, that still had a very village-y character, which seems to change bit by bit now every time i come by. I miss feeling connected to my family history, being in the locations that my parents and grandparents told me stories from their lives about. The house and street of mums first apartment that she lived in when she met my dad, the house my dad always points out as his first job and the one across the street where he and his friends had lunch breaks. The street my godmum and my mum walked home all the time after missing the last train, in the cold, for 45 minutes, and how upset they were about being sober again by the end of the walk. The lake where my great grandparents met while paddling and spent their summers for decades, where my grandma got a boating license and my mum learned to swim.
      They all were simply the area my family lived for generations. And I'm deeply saddened from knowing these places are getting lost bit by bit. And I will probably never be able to live there and feel close to them.

  • @TheChickiboots
    @TheChickiboots Год назад +3

    I grew up hearing my born and bred Londoner father's anecdotes about growing up there and for a Lancashire Lass, it sounded like the polar opposite of the extremely rural and quiet life I lived. Moved to Reading for uni and have stayed here for over 10 years now because I discovered that London is 30 minutes away by a relatively cheap train, and what I wanted from my dads stories was what I found in Reading. Probably moving away some time this year for my health - too many houses with stairs for a new wheelchair user, and I'm on so much medication for my asthma because the pollution here is bonkers. I couldn't live in London because it would probably kill me!

  • @tobywollin8978
    @tobywollin8978 Год назад +2

    For a time in the mid-1970s after school, I lived in Brooklyn and worked in Manhattan. It was a LONG time ago - my one bedroom apartment was $150 a month, which was what I was making per week. I highly doubt that anyone within the Five Boroughs has a rent that equals 25% of their pay. And it was very exciting to live there; every commute was a debate over which subway car was the safest and so on. And I ate a lot of Chinese food and had some rather hair-raising adventures. But at that time, the City was in danger of going bankrupt (thanks, Abe Beam) and I wanted a graduate degree and it really did look like things were going to become chaotic, so I left and went back upstate (and for anyone from the UK, that literally means 'anyplace north of the NYC suburbs where they have farms.), went to grad school. And I've never gone back. I have friends who still live in NYC and we chat all the time. But I wouldn't trade our 6 acres of property, the gardens, trees, our nursery business, etc. etc. Concerts? Got them here. Stage? ditto. Access to first class art and other museums? Yep. But part of this is that I looked at my coworkers in NYC and what I saw was this horrific desperation (and that was in the 1970s! When people could actually afford to live in NYC) and manic treadmill. I've read recently that yes, a lot of people left NYC during the pandemic lockdown, but that now, a lot of families have decided that between the cost of rentals/mortgages, cost of schools and pay not keeping up, they can't afford to stay in NYC and people are leaving and moving to New Jersey.

  • @Elsieoneal
    @Elsieoneal Год назад +2

    I really enjoyed this video. I left with my family in 2021 too after 11 years in the capital. We are still financially recovering from it and the fact you’ve managed to buy has given me a bit of hope that one day it’ll happen for us too. I still miss london but I’m happy with this slower pace of life. I didn’t realise how anxious I was!

  • @grumio101
    @grumio101 Год назад +5

    I absolutely adore London... for three days. After that, I find it is all a bit much and I just want to see some countryside. I grew up in the North of England, and was always dead set on moving to London after I finished uni. I did it and I lasted eight months - I literally couldn't wait to leave towards the end. It meant taking a big hit in my still early career (apparently, no theatre can be made outside the M25), but I don't regret it at all. I also don't regret having tried it. I learnt that, for me, I need to live somewhere walkable, where my friends don't all live an hour away and where, actually, there is a little less going on - the constant overwhelm of having to choose what to do was exhausting. I also don't have misty eyes for it anymore.
    I do find the huge disparity between public funding for pretty much everything in London versus everywhere else pretty frustrating and disheartening though. Arts organisations, infrastructure, general public sector stuff - the spending per resident is (or at least has been) always much higher in the capital city than elsewhere. Money is only worth spending on big national transport projects if it gets people to London quicker. It often feels like a drain on talent, public finances and private ones - and I am not really sure who benefits!

    • @oskistudio3271
      @oskistudio3271 Год назад +2

      I also did it for 8 months and felt the same, and really resonate with the feeling of needing to be doing something ALL the time/having too much going on. Life is much more fulfilling when it’s slower and able to be appreciated ❤

    • @jakehowie442
      @jakehowie442 2 месяца назад

      Yes London sucks all the public finances and resources in the UK. But the government actively do this, so it only shows they are against the British people or just really dumb

  • @bernsky
    @bernsky Год назад +9

    Lena you are the first person ive seen, actually name liking your parents and being able to live with them as part of your privelege. New York was never possible for me as, i had no back up plan and no one to help with that first, last, and deposit. I partnered up on the socio-economic scale tbh and its given me the ability to dream. Hope your house and career does that for you.

    • @bernsky
      @bernsky Год назад +4

      also, i know you probably dont read all of these - but your point about realizing that a "middle of the road" existence might be awesome, and accepting your not a matilda (lol love that reference) is exactly what I have been grappling with. We want so much for ourselves, to realize we arent exceptional - just "middle of the road" and thats really quite good enough. that my body is my body and i like it because its mine. wow. yes. we dont get to have different bodies or lives than the one weve got, being thankful is the way to happiness.

  • @lemonshorts3079
    @lemonshorts3079 Год назад +2

    I really enjoyed this video, as someone who lives in the North East of England. I think one of the joys of living somewhere smaller is how exciting and how invested I get when new opportunities do open up. A new independent bookshop opened recently. with a book club and author events, and I sort of love having my one special bookshop. I love finding these little treasures that might be around every corner in a bigger city. It feels like a prize when I find them and it makes me try things I might not normally. I end up going to events just because I'm happy they exist, and it means I have such an eclectic experience. I'm not sure if I explained this right, but I just came home from the bookshop and watched this video and am feeling grateful 📚✨

  • @spag-boi
    @spag-boi Год назад +2

    This video was greatly timed for me. I just had to leave a big city in Australia to move back to the country with family after getting ill and no longer being able to pay rent. I'm so lucky that I have somewhere else to call home. I was lucky to experience life in the city for a year. I was lucky to make all the friends I made in that year. The reality is that that life really isn't that far away. I'm a 90 minute drive away now and thats okay. I was even looking forward to moving back to a more regional area because it meant I could live slowly and actually focus on myself and not have to say yes to every social outing like you said in your video. Your video has made me feel so much better about the move!

  • @pixelletickle
    @pixelletickle Год назад +4

    I think this is happening around the world. I have lived this experience leaving Toronto, Ontario after 7 years. TO is an excellent metropolitian city completely out of economic reach for the majority.

  • @jacquelinedunkley5600
    @jacquelinedunkley5600 Год назад +3

    I am from London. Born and bred. Devout. Nearly on a six figure salary and still renting at 37. But getting the house, the space , the garden and it being mine means - leaving my home.
    I don’t think there is enough coverage on Londoners and how they feel about being priced out of their home town.
    Also as a child, we weren’t educated virtually at all about the rest of the UK it was all very broad and general. So when it comes to being an adult Londoner faced with leaving , it’s hard to know where to go.
    Anxiety in crowds is covered a lot in the media but growing up in the city means I get anxiety in places without them.
    London or nothing definitely exists.
    So do hometown Londoners.
    There definitely needs to be more media about the benefits of living elsewhere - for everyone’s sakes x

    • @jakehowie442
      @jakehowie442 2 месяца назад

      Can always move to Milton Keynes or Luton and commute like the rest of them 😂

    • @jakehowie442
      @jakehowie442 2 месяца назад

      You can blame the UK government for pricing out local native Londoners though. Mass immigration definitely hasn’t worked and sold British people down the river

  • @ClaraSais
    @ClaraSais Год назад +1

    Same here - as a Graphic Designer it seemed I could only find work in London, but I couldn’t afford to relocate from the Isle of Wight!

  • @hesterdunlop3982
    @hesterdunlop3982 Год назад +2

    Great video. I'm retired, a Londoner pulled up by the roots when my family was forced to leave in my teenage and live in rural isolation. I only ever thought of going back but, best decision of my life, went North instead.Growing up in the sixties The North was a delicious, exciting idea ( Merseybeat, football, film, Lowry, canals, novels ) so I'm sure I romanticized it but I agree, place is a major love interest in an life story and it needs to treat you well, be stimulating, allow solitude , never be difficult and full of surprises.

  • @connieworthington8269
    @connieworthington8269 Год назад +5

    There are parts of London that are fantastic. The strange big city magic. But BECAUSE of the ridiculous high price to pay it will never be for me. It’s is so bothersome that all the interesting jobs are there and all the jobs in my industry are there. This country is vast, and sprawling with culture. I find it so unimaginative that it’s morphed in to one disproportionately large city!
    I live in Southampton and commute twice a week to London for work. The journey is long and expensive. But the journey and my current rent and bills STILL cheaper than London rent.
    Life in London is intense and hectic. And that bleeds in to the job I have. I’m actually planning to quit that industry and become a gardener. I’m 25 I ‘should’ be doing the hard graft. But it’s at the sake of my happiness-so no thank you ☺️

    • @jakehowie442
      @jakehowie442 2 месяца назад

      If you think London is hectic, go to New York or Tokyo. It’s quiet in comparison

  • @nicolaaa66
    @nicolaaa66 Год назад +3

    I don't really understand the appeal of London myself however I do understand the appeal of city living. I moved to Leeds from a small village in Scotland and I love it. I like that Leeds is multicultural, I can meet lots of different types of people here and I have everything on my doorstep like restaurants, bars entertainment etc. And if I fancy going to London it's a 2 hour train away - much easier than trying to get to anywhere in Scotland via public transport.
    Some of my friends moved from Leeds to London a while ago as that was always their plan and despite their living costs going up, they seem a lot happier. So I guess everyone is different!