Depends on where you are talking about in both Texas and Indiana.
Yes, there can be a lot of snow in the northwest part of Indiana near Chicago and just south or east of Lake Michigan. It's called lake effect snow for a reason.
You get down in the southwest corner of the state near Evansville, and you'll be lucky to ever need a snow shovel. I live near there and went 3 of the last 4 years without touching mine.
But you can still have fun in the snow even here. There's a nice little ski hill in the middle of Indiana cornfields called
Paoli Peaks (Paoil, IN). When I first moved to the area I was used to much bigger terrain and at first hated it. But, when it's all you got, you learn to love it and I do so much I'm now an instructor there. So, if you want to learn to ski, come join us. I've yet to have a student who was willing to stick it out and not quit that didn't learn to ski their first day -- not expert, but good enough to have fun on the slopes and work at getting better.
Indiana is small towns, even the cities would be small compared to what you have in Texas. People tend to be conservative and Republican. Most see themselves as religious, but that takes all forms. The KKK was stronger in some parts of Indiana than it was in Mississippi in the 1960s. Thankfully, you won't find that attitude much today. The one thing nearly all Hoosiers worship in common is the god basketball. This takes on a devotion that equals or excedes that of football in Texas.