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01-31-2007, 01:21 PM | #1 |
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01-31-2007, 04:44 PM | #3 |
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I don't know. When i was younger alli wanted was to live in England (i think it was actually a connection to my now boyfriend who is English) but i had a very romantic idea about it and it's obviously not the same as i thought it would be. Don't get me wrong, i like it... it just makes me think twice when i think about somewhere else i would like to live.
I think about living in Canada again (mainly because i will be) but i dont know how that will go. I feel like a foreigner in both countries. If i could i'd go back to the place i lived when i was a child as it was when i lived there (because now it's been bought up by tourists who only live there for a few weeks of the year). I think i might like scotland or ireland, the countryside right by the ocean. Reminds me of home without 'going back'. |
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02-01-2007, 04:44 AM | #5 |
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02-01-2007, 05:25 AM | #6 |
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02-01-2007, 05:26 AM | #7 |
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02-01-2007, 06:26 AM | #8 |
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02-04-2007, 09:43 AM | #10 |
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03-05-2007, 12:59 AM | #11 |
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I'd move to the southeast United States somewhere...maybe one of the Carolinas. I've always felt as though the U.S. was my true home. I even went to NC once a few years ago on a course and the sense I have of 'going home' was incredible. It wasn't so much the area I was in (Durham), but it was the southern accents of the people...wow, it felt so familiar to me. When I got on the plane to head back to Canada a week later I cried on the plane. It felt as though I'd gotten so close to my true home and was being torn away from it once again.
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08-02-2007, 10:25 AM | #12 |
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09-02-2007, 08:02 PM | #13 |
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