I have to pick a school in a few days and I am conflicted. One school is near where I currently live and have lived all my life. My family and friends can be a bit of a drag but I do like the place and people. I’d be more comfortable there most likely. Another school is in a much nicer and more expensive area where I don’t really know anybody. I’m conflicted on whether I should stay near my family especially after we had a huge tragedy not too long ago, or go off to the big fancy city and maybe get rich quicker.
Depends on what you want to study, but if it doesn't matter, I'd say just stay close to home and be content with what you have.Coming from someone who lives in a city, sure you may get jobs that pay fine, but everything is too expensive.Also, city schools are too liberal, their universities are too expensive, have horrible DEI "teachers" that misinform future generations (I live in the US) and you honestly won't learn much. Unsure where you live, but yeah, city life is sad and draining (emotionally and financially)
>>34424830The city I’m looking at moving to is a very nice city, warm year round, extremely wealthy. The one I am coming from is decent and has opportunities and used to be nice but overall has a reputation for being an impoverished and violent shithole (even if this is somewhat distorted).
>>34424765Go!
Go if you want to grow as a person
>>34424830If you can afford it and don't mind the distance and change, then go for it.Personally, I'd prefer safety in familiarity and what I know than to risk going somewhere new and unknown
>>34429491>>34429517I want the comfort, but also want to grow as a person I do think that the new setting would be conducive to that
>>34424765You should go. I stayed local for both 2 years of community college and university and now I still live at home at 23. I have a well paying job at least but am basically retarded, socially speaking. Meanwhile all my friends who went to actual universities have girlfriends and lots of friends now.
>>34424765I suppose the question of which will give you a better education is totally irrelevant?
>>34430396It’s about the same in general.