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Replying to Avatar jack

I’m a Toyota maxi

Penn station is suddenly a little less horrible

Replying to Avatar Lyn Alden

I go to NYC several times per year for one reason or another. For work, for friends, etc.

Part of me likes it, but part of me gets fucking frustrated multiple times per day every time I am here. (Sorry, this is a Nostr Lyn post).

There are plenty of neat things in NYC that I can’t do at the same scale/quality elsewhere in the world due to the network effects around the city (broadway shows, financial district, etc), and yet after a day or two all I want to do is leave. It feels claustrophobic on multiple fronts.

People all have different vibes but for me, major cities are fun to visit but smaller secondary cities or suburbs around cities are so much smoother to live in. I can’t imagine living all the time in a major city.

The same applies to Cairo, to which I have been in far more total days than NYC. I like Cairo’s satellite cities but not Cairo itself other than going briefly.

Every time I am in a major city I am immediately reminded of the luxury of space, nature, quiet, parking spaces, and chillness of not being in a city. Everything I take for granted normally is now a luxury to fight for in a city.

Even politics are largely correlated to urbanization. If you live in rural or suburban areas, you likely drive around in your own car, you might have some land, etc. Your interaction with the local government exists in a moderate sense. The potential weakness is that you are more likely to always be around those who are similar to you, which minimizes your worldliness.

In contrast to all that, in major cities, everything is so tightly packed, and people rely on public transportation, and even a momentary lapse of government services (eg trash collection) becomes an acute catastrophe. But on the beneficial side, people are around those who are different than them more often, which breeds worldliness.

That’s why I tend to like the zone between rural and major cities. I like secondary cities or suburbs of major cities, because I get a bit of both worlds. The density and interconnectedness of major cities briefly, and the space and self-autonomy outside of them most of the time.

And yet I was born and raised in that sort of inbetween state, and so maybe it is just my upbringing.

What about you? Can anyone sell me the idea of NYC or other major cities that I am missing, especially in the remote work era? I see glimpses of how it could be attractive if you are used to it and know every detail of your neighborhood, but it really does feel limiting to me.

Same boat. People are starting to realize that you can live in rural NJ and be an hour from the city. You go in for the day and come home to 1-2 acres of green, peace and quiet. Remote/hybrid outside a big city is the ideal mix, esp if you have a family/young kids.

His trolling is really solid.

https://youtu.be/gYG_4vJ4qNA?si=xdy_5dLMRYTePDXJ

And if you long to never die

Baby plug in, upload your mind

Come on you’re not even alive

If you’re not backed up on a drive

What will it take to make you capitulate?

Boomers are going to sell their houses to buy bitcoin.

Millennials are going to sell bitcoin to buy houses.

In Egypt’s case it’s actually much worse than it looks. The “official” rate is 30 EGP to one USD, which is what Google shows, but the market rate is 65.

Impossible to get dollars for 30.

reading can make you dumber

Went in for my annual physical. Asked my doc about where I should expect VO2Max, and she had no idea what that was 😅

Also told me to avoid dairy and find alternatives like margarine 💀

“Better real darkness than false light.”