I've been to places like Toledo, Ohio and Kansas City, Missouri, and I just plain do not like the setting. I don't like crowds or large groups of people in general (though I've been able to tolerate it in the past for places like Cedar Point and Niagara Falls). On the flip side, I couldn't stand living in a rural area. Being able to see the stars at night is nice, but being miles from anywhere at all without ever learning how to drive... that, and I don't mind if there's at least a few people around. I think I'd go stir-crazy if I was truly alone, and moving to semi-rural Kansas was enough of a culture shock. Basically, I've always been a suburban type of guy. I grew up in Dearborn Heights, Michigan, in a neighborhood that was basically miles of houses surrounded by four major roads that had the necessary businesses on them. That, at least to me, was ideal, and I spent the first two decades of my life thinking my lifestyle was the norm. Man, was I ever wrong.
I personally like the convience of the cities, but I really liked where how I used to live, the houses were suburban, but everything you could need was within a mile, making just walking or biking to where you need to go super easy.
Yeah, it's kind of like that where I live now too, in a way. The town's small enough that I can reasonably go anywhere except for the local Wal-Mart (for my medicine) just by walking, and even then I could probably walk clear up there as well if my energy and the weather permit.
Memes get out of control and are often not funny anymore. It's often pretty rare a meme can give me a good chuckle. Like seriously think of some of the memes in the past year and think about how dumb they are "Oh a gorilla was shot at a zoo, that's a meme now" "These fidget spinner things are getting a lot of attention MEME" like just what...
I'm guessing he started to type "coverage," got distracted by President stuff, and accidentally hit 'post' instead of 'cancel.'