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I'm from Pennsylvania in the United States, and the furthest I've ever traveled from there was one trip to Disney World.
I haven't been to very many cities. I've been to Harrisburg, the beach towns in New Jersey, NYC, and Pittsburgh. Of all of those I think I liked Pittsburgh the best. It was clean, interesting, and safe as long as you didn't wear Philly sports team apparel. (and as I'm not a sports fan that wasn't a problem). I cleverly disguised my Philly accent by pronouncing water as 'wah-tur' and not the Philly way of 'wooder', and all was well.
Although I like Philly too, in its own way. It was the place where little innocent suburban me first learned about trains, subways, and taxis. There are wonderful centers of the arts. And as long as you know where to go, you're fine. Also, the gayborhood has excellent food.
Oh, that was me using commas incorrectly. No beach in Pittsburgh that I know of. I just sorta consider myself east coast because I live right next to the New Jersey border and NJ's such a small state that I can reach the beach in an hour.
Oh, that was me using commas incorrectly. No beach in Pittsburgh that I know of. I just sorta consider myself east coast because I live right next to the New Jersey border and NJ's such a small state that I can reach the beach in an hour.
I've never been to NJ the only state I've been to is Florida. I was however obsessed with Tony Hawk's UnderGround - is NJ as beautiful as that game makes it look?
...not Baltimore, that's for sure. Too dirty, too dull, too dreary, too annoying (accents and racism especially)...
I really like New York. I love Central Park...it's so beautiful! I've been there twice, but loved it both times. Sure, it's dirty, smelly, and crime-infested...but it's still a really cool place. If I could learn to find my way around and get over my fear of public transportation, I would live there.
I still love San Jose, California. One of the nicest places to raise kids in California. But its police are getting a little brutal...so that's the only downside. They beat up innocents they suspect of crime.
LazyTown is the obvious choice. Latibær is cool too, but I would have to brush up on my Icelandic first.
I want to live all over the world at least once, but not in really poor and awful places (but I would visit). I plan to live in a lot of different countries before I kick the bucket, and I may or may not come back to the States before I go...depends on how I feel. My counselor wants me to look into joining the Peace Corps after college. Not only is it free to travel and stay, but I get to learn a different language and teach other people basic life skills. I've always wanted to help people. And my history teacher did that in Haiti for a while before he came here (long before the earthquake), and he loved it. My counselor did it in West Africa, teaching simple math and life lessons to old and young alike. It would be very difficult, but I would still like to try. I would have to do it for two years or so and then I could go home and do whatever I wanted. It's definitely something to try. And it would look great on a resume, so getting a job in this tough economy would be a lot easier and it could make it easier to get a job in all these different places I plan to live in.
Some other cities I would like are London, Paris, Rome...you know, all the places everyone wants to see.
I'm from Pennsylvania in the United States, and the furthest I've ever traveled from there was one trip to Disney World.
I haven't been to very many cities. I've been to Harrisburg, the beach towns in New Jersey, NYC, and Pittsburgh. Of all of those I think I liked Pittsburgh the best. It was clean, interesting, and safe as long as you didn't wear Philly sports team apparel. (and as I'm not a sports fan that wasn't a problem). I cleverly disguised my Philly accent by pronouncing water as 'wah-tur' and not the Philly way of 'wooder', and all was well.
Although I like Philly too, in its own way. It was the place where little innocent suburban me first learned about trains, subways, and taxis. There are wonderful centers of the arts. And as long as you know where to go, you're fine. Also, the gayborhood has excellent food.
*1UP* Bwahaha. I came here to Maryland by giant moving truck. And as you know, I'm originally from California. So that's roughly 3000 miles. I went to Disneyland there a few times because it was in my state (CA) at the time.
Hehe, which part of PA? I bet it's a hop, skip, and a jump from here.
I don't really have an accent, so it's not a problem for me if I travel elsewhere. When I say I live in Baltimore, people say I don't sound like I'm from here. People here pronounce "wash" as "worsh" and "awning" as "orning" and "Baltimore" as "Balmer," "Baltamore," or even "Baltamer." And yeah, they also pronounce "water" similar to how you said it. It's quite amusing, but it can get annoying really fast if you have to live around it forever.
I've been to Philly. I liked the ferry boats. But the shaved/italian/whatever ice stand near the Maritime Museum is awful. And I do believe I was in the gayborhood (maybe). I had a wrap thing and it was alright. Huge, though--couldn't finish it. The main reason we came to Philly was so that my mom could eat an authentic Philly cheese steak sub. We also took a horse-and-carriage tour of Philly and saw the Liberty Bell up close. It was pretty neat.
Oh, that was me using commas incorrectly. No beach in Pittsburgh that I know of. I just sorta consider myself east coast because I live right next to the New Jersey border and NJ's such a small state that I can reach the beach in an hour.
I've never been to NJ the only state I've been to is Florida. I was however obsessed with Tony Hawk's UnderGround - is NJ as beautiful as that game makes it look?
Do you know why New Yorkers are never excited about the light at the end of the tunnel?
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