It is different when you live somewhere. But that doesn't mean you won't love it.
Ksand, our resident visa guru is British and has an interesting journey in wanting to live in the USA.
Yep, my journey was as follows:
- grew up loving America (through reading American YA books and watching US TV shows)
- Aug 1995: 4-week trip with my family to visit my aunt in the US (age 12)... loved it and decided I wanted to live in the US 'when I grew up'
- Aug 1998: 5-week family visit to my aunt in the US (age 15) - loved it
- Aug 2000: 4-week family visit to my aunt in the US (age 17) - loved it
- July 2001: 4-week visit on my own (age 18) - loved it
- Mar 2002: 5-week visit on my own (age 19) - loved it
- Aug 2003-Jun 2004: moved to the US on a study abroad year (age 20-21) - loved it- July 2006: 2-week family visit to my aunt (age 23) - loved it
- Jan 2008: moved to the US on a 4-year student visa to study for a PhD (age 24)... I was finally living my dream - HATED IT!
- Aug 2008: left the US and moved home (age 25). Decided I never wanted to live in the US again.- Jan 2010: 2-week visit to the US (age 27)
- Jul 2011: 2-week visit to the US (age 28)
- Nov 2011: 2-week visit to the US (age 28)
- Nov 2012: 2-week visit to the US (age 29)
- Sep 2014: 2-week visit to the US (age 31)
- Sep 2015: 2-week visit to the US (age 32)
- Sep 2016: 3-week visit to the US (age 33)
- Sep 2017: 2-week visit to the US (age 34)
Basically, I quickly realised that the things I love about the US are visit/tourist-related things:
- travelling around
- experiencing cool US traditions
- eating out
- sightseeing
- seeing my relatives
Whereas, the actual realities of living in the US were:
- lonely
- hated the PhD research I was doing
- no friends
- no immediate family within 1,000 miles (my aunt) or 5,000 miles (my parents)
- lack of history and culture
- the live-to-work mentality
- expensive healthcare
- the politics
- unfamiliar cooking ingredients and recipes
- lack of familiar foods (things taste different in the US...the milk, the bread, the cheese, the chocolate etc.)
- annoying, too-frequent TV commercials
- confusing banking
- the laborious task of filing taxes
- lack of ability to get around without a car
- expensive groceries
- expensive cable TV/broadband
- expensive mobile phone contracts
So, while I love to visit the US, I will never live there again. For me, the UK is my home, it's where I'm comfortable, and where I belong. It might be cold and grey and wet half the time, it might be 'boring' on occasion (compared to the 'glamour' of the US), but I wouldn't give it up for the world.
Doesn't mean I spend all my time in the UK, though - I'm lucky enough to have secured a job that allows me to travel A LOT. For the last 4 years, I've spent 3-5 months per year working overseas, sometimes in remote corners of the world that few people ever get the chance to travel to. Just in the last 12 months, I've lived on two continents (Europe and Antarctica) and travelled to 11 countries on 5 continents (US, Italy, Luxembourg, Germany, Spain, Chile, British Antarctic Territory, Japan, Hong Kong, Macau and Thailand). If I'd stayed in the US, like I'd dreamed of doing most of my life, I would never have had the opportunities I have now...I wouldn't have been able to travel so much and I'd probably be stuck working in academia right now (and hating it)!