So I've wondered before how many people have looked up my posts here on UrbanSTL and found the posts I made when living in southern Illinois, dreaming of moving to the city some day.
You can attribute it to just having no urban experience at all, but some of my first posts was my wanting to move "downtown." Now, I will give myself this; while many, many, many suburban St Louisans still have no idea that "downtown" is a neighborhood and not anything within city limits, I really meant "downtown" when asking. I was in college and planning on coming up and getting a high paying job and living in a penthouse.
I was applying for jobs in the area and had a good lead at Enterprise Rent-A-Car, but then my wife got pregnant and dropped a bombshell; she no longer wanted to move away from family. Completely understandable. So I abandoned my lead at Enterprise and took a job in southern Illinois. I asked on the forum how anyone could expect ANYONE to want to move downtown when there is no Wal Mart nearby. I was serious. I didn't realize that little retail stores and other grocers existed, or at least WHY the existed when Wal Mart is already out there. Back to my job in southern Illinois; it was the worst job I've ever had...worse than my "ground maintenance" job I had at Ace Hardware for 3 months when I was 16. Worse than McDonald's, worse than Target. So after 3 months, I got a job in Creve Coeur, and moved to Fairview Heights.
So then began my suburban life. I bragged to friends that still lived in southern Illinois by saying things like "Here it's not 'do you want to go to Applebee's, but which Applebee's do you want to go to?" And I was dead. freakin. serious. I ate at Applebee's, fast food joints, and TGI Fridays. I occasionally got a wild hair and wanted to try something in the city, but rarely did.
I then posted on the forum, after Xing told me not to "rule out moving to the city" when I posted "Diggin' the metro east," "Why should I move to the city? Every time I ask, people say 'but watch where you go' and things like that." I just didn't get why anyone would recommend moving to the city when there is obviously no safe areas.
With a 38 mile commute to work after the 64 closure, I decided it was time for a move...to the city. I moved to the city and immediately got "it." I have now been in the city for a year and a half, never eat at anything but locally owned establishments (save for my fast food runs, of course), and Applebee's and other crap chains are no longer even a thought or consideration when asking "where should we eat?"
So my transition went like this;
1. Rural person wanting to move downtown - still may have happened, but had a kid and didn't have the funds for it, especially since wife wouldn't be working now
2. Suburbanite not understanding why I should move to the city when its obviously unsafe (lived in Fairview Heights for 8 months)
3. Dogtown resident who loves the city and hated the suburbs and suburbanites
4. Dogtown resident who loves the city and respects where people choose to live, but still try to direct them to the city when I can
Assuming we last in Dogtown long enough, I hope to get my son in to the Roe @ Wilkinson magnet 2 blocks up the street. Then, when we buy, we can definitely consider the city.
You can attribute it to just having no urban experience at all, but some of my first posts was my wanting to move "downtown." Now, I will give myself this; while many, many, many suburban St Louisans still have no idea that "downtown" is a neighborhood and not anything within city limits, I really meant "downtown" when asking. I was in college and planning on coming up and getting a high paying job and living in a penthouse.
I was applying for jobs in the area and had a good lead at Enterprise Rent-A-Car, but then my wife got pregnant and dropped a bombshell; she no longer wanted to move away from family. Completely understandable. So I abandoned my lead at Enterprise and took a job in southern Illinois. I asked on the forum how anyone could expect ANYONE to want to move downtown when there is no Wal Mart nearby. I was serious. I didn't realize that little retail stores and other grocers existed, or at least WHY the existed when Wal Mart is already out there. Back to my job in southern Illinois; it was the worst job I've ever had...worse than my "ground maintenance" job I had at Ace Hardware for 3 months when I was 16. Worse than McDonald's, worse than Target. So after 3 months, I got a job in Creve Coeur, and moved to Fairview Heights.
So then began my suburban life. I bragged to friends that still lived in southern Illinois by saying things like "Here it's not 'do you want to go to Applebee's, but which Applebee's do you want to go to?" And I was dead. freakin. serious. I ate at Applebee's, fast food joints, and TGI Fridays. I occasionally got a wild hair and wanted to try something in the city, but rarely did.
I then posted on the forum, after Xing told me not to "rule out moving to the city" when I posted "Diggin' the metro east," "Why should I move to the city? Every time I ask, people say 'but watch where you go' and things like that." I just didn't get why anyone would recommend moving to the city when there is obviously no safe areas.
With a 38 mile commute to work after the 64 closure, I decided it was time for a move...to the city. I moved to the city and immediately got "it." I have now been in the city for a year and a half, never eat at anything but locally owned establishments (save for my fast food runs, of course), and Applebee's and other crap chains are no longer even a thought or consideration when asking "where should we eat?"
So my transition went like this;
1. Rural person wanting to move downtown - still may have happened, but had a kid and didn't have the funds for it, especially since wife wouldn't be working now
2. Suburbanite not understanding why I should move to the city when its obviously unsafe (lived in Fairview Heights for 8 months)
3. Dogtown resident who loves the city and hated the suburbs and suburbanites
4. Dogtown resident who loves the city and respects where people choose to live, but still try to direct them to the city when I can
Assuming we last in Dogtown long enough, I hope to get my son in to the Roe @ Wilkinson magnet 2 blocks up the street. Then, when we buy, we can definitely consider the city.








