Maybe you need to move to a place where traditional values and family rank high. Somewhere church suppers and picnics still occur. Cities are less homogenous. Everyone does their own thing.
My friend's suggested the UP. It's just so rural there, he says when people see other people, it's rare so it's exciting. He also claims the women-to-men ratio is very favorable.
The churches I attend still have those values so that's good. It's why I attend even tho it's useless in regards to dating.
The city is a good city. It's your standard Midwest city, your Middle America. People work during the day & are at home in the evenings, running errands, or exercising. Parents rush children to extra-cirruculars. There's a few bars downtown, but there's nothing too touristy about it. Suburbia is too sprawling.
But I was talking for everything about tech destroying everything. Like work, for example. What used to be a 'work family' is now gone. Now you got co-workers moving to other states, still employed, but working from home. I understand there's other ways to socialize other than work, but it's just sad. I don't like change. Streaming replacing traditional TV. Everyone gets their own device. Etc.
It wasn't always like that. They originally marketed computers so 'each family gets one they can all share & use.' Now everyone has a palm-sized computer. Computers were also originally marketed 'to aid, not replace' traditional work items.
Even home video game systems were simple 'to pass the time for an hour' & not '50+ hours just to complete the basic story.'
My co-worker bought her new house in MS just touring it off Skype. Has never stepped foot in the neighborhood. Going down next month to close. (I guess something like this isn't new, buying property having never seen it. But it does seem so strange to me)
Do people still make craftbooks?
I didn't get a smartphone till 2013. That was very late for my generation. Sometimes I'm at the store & see flipphones & get the urge to change back.
I still go to the library to rent movies, books, & now CDs.