11/4/2011 11:04:03 AM
Yes I've always lived in a decent sized city with a family of 4. You're right I have no frame of reference because I've never lived in a rural area. My point would be work there if you want to live there. If you want to spend 5-10% of your life sitting in a car then fine. That's years of your life in a car.
11/4/2011 11:13:00 AM
11/4/2011 11:14:01 AM
Good point. It's amazing the high percentage of people I meet in Charlotte/Triangle who are from the NY area. They all come down here because the standard of living is so much higher for the price. It's almost strange when I tell people I'm a native.
11/4/2011 11:17:59 AM
I live five minutes from work. People tell me I'm lucky, but I go out of my way to correct them and tell them that its not because I'm lucky, but because I'm smart.
11/4/2011 11:19:12 AM
I actually take the bus to work every now and then. It bumps my commute from 5-10 minutes to 14-16 minutes but it gives me 15 minutes to catch up on emails before I get into work. Plus I'm on a bus line that runs every 5-10 minutes in the morning. I can walk outside and hop on a bus within minutes and the transit center is right next to the building I work in.
11/4/2011 11:24:15 AM
^^It's because you don't have other facets of your life to prioritize over your commute to work.---
11/4/2011 11:30:01 AM
Sounds like a thinly veiled insult. I'll take it as such and retort by saying that I could just as easily ask why you work in a shit area that you're uncomfortable living in. But instead, I'll just say that maintaining a healthy work/life balance is always going to be difficult, and, having experienced the lack of such first hand,it makes little sense to belittle those who have achieved at least a semblance of it.
11/4/2011 11:37:26 AM
15 min bike to Duke, 25 min bike to NCCU, 12 min bike to DUMC for clinicals. If I walk to work it's 40 minutes.That's 2.5, 5, 2 miles respectively. Chose my school based on the ability to get there by bike (well, and theyhave an affordable BSN program). I used to live in Raleigh after school and commuted to Duke every day, and wasted 2 hours of my life each day doing that. I moved to Durham because I was sick of giving up my life to Diane Ream every morning, and I really like how energized the city has become since I moved here in 2007.
11/4/2011 11:41:51 AM
^^^You have valid points and I don't disagree with anything you've said. I really have no room to talk seeing as I don't have a family to support nor do I have many expenses.
11/4/2011 11:54:54 AM
11/4/2011 11:58:16 AM
Oh, between Hillsborough and Wade Ave., so the drive was 30 min, but because I had crappy H lot parking, I dropped my bike off my car and rode that in to my building. Never wanted to wait for the shuttle. So 30 min drive + 5 min getting bike and crap ready + 15 min bike = 50 min, give or take 5. I rounded up
11/4/2011 12:05:59 PM
11/4/2011 12:15:06 PM
11/4/2011 12:22:45 PM
11/4/2011 12:30:52 PM
^I lived in Concord which 'is a suburb of Charlotte' but when you visit it, it's not really a 'suburb community'. If I'm talking in person to someone from NC, I don't say I'm from Charlotte and don't really consider myself a part of that community, but the economic effects of Charlotte on my hometown are pretty obvious.If you want to see a suburb, come up here near DC and I'll show you some places that look just like these retarded sitcoms about families in the suburbs.
11/4/2011 12:43:44 PM
True there's rural areas and then there's suburban rural areas. There is a difference. Concord isn't bad.
11/4/2011 1:01:25 PM
3.9 miles and 8.5 minutes door to door.
11/4/2011 1:34:36 PM
I'm 18 miles from work - takes about 20-25 minutes because thankfully I live right off 40 and my work is right off 40. I also work from 7-3 so I miss a lot of traffic. And as much as I hate the commute, moving closer isn't much of an option for us considering we both own property in Raleigh. When I lived at my place, it was the same distance, just coming from downtown. Plus my fiancé's job is a 3 mile commute. I was working from home 2 days a week but I took a new job with my company and am back in the office full time. I'm hoping that eventually I can go back to working from home half the week or they'll decentralize me
11/4/2011 8:52:07 PM
11/4/2011 9:33:09 PM
11/4/2011 10:04:52 PM
^ yeah wtf is up with that? The afternoon commute always takes longer for some goddamn reason. Half the time I just end up getting off Aviation and cutting over to Evans to get home. Even with the traffic lights it will take less time than going up to US-1.
11/4/2011 10:19:46 PM
Good article:http://www.nytimes.com/2011/11/26/opinion/the-death-of-the-fringe-suburb.html
11/26/2011 5:44:45 PM
When I started my current position this time last year, I was living in Raleigh, and my territory is the Western half of NC. Our house stayed on the market from November until August, 9 months. My territory starts in Clemmons, and goes to Murphy, so just to get into my territory was close to 2 hours. Most of my work is in Charlotte and Asheville though, so most days I was driving between 6-8 hours round trip. At first i just stayed in hotels all the time because my employer pays for everything, but I got tired of being away from my family, so I started waking up at the ass crack of dawn to get on the road, and start heading home around 4-5 each day to sleep in my own bed. It got old real quick, and once we got an offer on our Raleigh house, I didn't even blink at taking a loss on the house. I needed it for my sanity, and because of the market, i felt like we made it up in the savings of building our new house in Charlotte. Now I hardly ever stay overnight for work, unless I'm west of Asheville. It's pretty nice, and I don't regret anything I did, but it was definitely tough on me.
11/26/2011 7:59:34 PM
I keep my eyes on the road, my hands upon the wheel
11/26/2011 10:02:57 PM
I drive 4.2 miles to work, and attempt it likes an F1 road track each way. Sector times split into 3 parts and all
11/27/2011 9:29:20 AM