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Wednesday, September 20, 2006

 

With Washington, DC Comes Great Responsibility


First, has anyone updated to the new, fancy Blogger? I'm trying to decide whether or not to take the plunge.

I was able to speak with my friend who is in Africa yesterday. She asked me what the boyfriend and I are doing next year and whether we plan on moving. I can easily answer these questions: no clue!

So many people we know just love it here in DC (of course, I'm willing to bet that's because DC is the land of the single, working professional. The bars are packed with them every night). But if there's at least one thing that I know about myself, it's that I'm not a city girl.

Scrambling around the metro, dodging homeless men sprawled and sleeping in the streets/some yelling strange phrases or cursing/or the occassional insane homeless person who you never know might choose today to get violent, smelling trash/sewer/the piercing burning rubber smell coming from the metro stations/exhaust/and too many kinds of women's perfume or men's cologne, beeping cars late for the office, women my age trying to hold on tight to their sorority days, the impersonal/brusque shuffle and haste of it all. DC and I are not a comfortable fit.

I love the museums. The Smithsonians are incredible and free, the Spy Museum, the National Zoo, the Eastern Market, the Cherry Blosson Festival, and of course the White House, Capitol, the Lincoln Memorial... those are all unique features of this city. I might even say no other city has a setup quite like this one. But all those things also bring a sense of fear. I can't get on the metro without my mind wandering towards the question that always lurks in your mind in DC, "Is it safe?" You never know.

I'm not ready to pull a Baby Boom where I give up my professional, working woman life to move out to the country, buy an apple tree farm, and raise my adopted kid. But I doubt that I will shed many tears when it comes time to leave this area. I'd love to come back for day trips or to bring my hypothetical children up to see some of the wonderful things listed about (not the list with the insane homeless men). But this isn't a place where I'd be comfortable starting a life. You can make fun of and curse the suburbs all you like, Internet, but I think there's something to be said for it.




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1 Comments:

Blogger v said...

I was born in DC and grew up in Fairfax (which is now practically a suburb). I don't see many blogs from that area and yours makes me reminisce about the time I spent there.

Aside from the museums, monuments, and such, DC is in such close proximity to other greats sights. A few hours can get you to the mountains, the beach, or New York city. Besides being rife with history, tidewater Virginia is rife with culture, of all kinds: from the single professional (that you write about) to the mountain dwelling bluegrass folks and everything in between. It is one of the few states where cultures of the north and cultures of the south co-exist and make an interesting mix. Of course, DC is a creature all it’s own. But just beyond the beltway is a microcosm of American life.

The cherry blossom festival was always my favorite event. Thanks for reminding me.

7:02 PM  

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