Thanks. As for moving to London... I've seriously considered other options, but my problem is international transportation (ie airplanes). With my partner and family still in Texas, I want to be one direct flight from the US.
Remember though that the UK is tiny compared to the US and travelling between cities is pretty fast - England can fit into Texas 5 times over and the UK can fit into Texas 3 times over. You could still fly direct from London, but live in a different UK city.
I don't live anywhere near London, but I only ever travel to the US from either London Heathrow or London Gatwick, because it's usually much cheaper to get a train or a bus to London than to fly from a different city (but I still can't get direct flights because my US relatives live in Arkansas so I usually have to connect in Dallas, Houston or Chicago). And even though I live halfway up the country from London, it's only actually 120 miles away. I can get to Central London by train in 2 hours 8 minutes or to the Heathrow airport terminals by train in 3 hours 15 minutes (2 hours 8 minutes to Central London then 1 hour on the London Underground out to the airport).
You can also get from several other UK cities to Central London by train in less than 2.5 hours.
For example:
- Manchester to London in 2 hours 10 minutes;
- Birmingham to London in 1 hour 59 minutes;
- Bristol to London in 1 hour 38 minutes;
- Oxford to London in 58 minutes;
- Cambridge to London in 53 minutes
- Liverpool to London in 2 hours 12 minutes;
- Cardiff to London in 2 hours 7 minutes.
- Sheffield to London in 2 hours 1 minute
It does take longer to get up to Scotland though - Glasgow or Edinburgh to Central London takes about 4 hours 45 minutes by train.
It's actually the travelling through London out to Heathrow Airport by Underground that actually takes a fair chunk of time on top of that - sometimes it can take a couple of hours just to get from one side of London to the other on the tube, so even if you lived in Greater London, you could still be looking at a journey of an hour or two just to get to the airport.
What is your suggestion? Like I said before, I have visited quite a bit, but that's not the same as deciding on an area to call home. I have moved blindly before, but I would rather have experienced input if at all possible!
I guess my suggestion would be rather than decide you only want to live in London, look into where you can get jobs, do a bit of research into the cities and towns they are in, how much the cost of living is, whether the cities/towns have the shops and amenities you would like, what their transport links to London are like etc.
Personally, I don't think I could live in London myself - the city's a bit too busy and stressful for me and I could never afford the lifestyle I have here (in a fairly small city in Eastern England where rent is cheap) if I lived in London. I earn a little bit more than a teacher's starting salary in Inner London. Where I live now, I can rent a whole 2-bedroom house with a garden for about one quarter of my monthly salary. In London, I wouldn't even be able to rent a bedroom in a shared apartment for that.