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Date: 2006-03-07 04:38 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-03-07 04:49 pm (UTC)I'm just sort of weighing my options at this point. If I get more specifics, I'll e-mail you. Thanks.
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Date: 2006-03-07 04:50 pm (UTC)On the plus side, I live an hour and a half from the Virginia line. *g*
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Date: 2006-03-07 05:01 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2006-03-07 05:12 pm (UTC)The climate would be very, very different. Parts of the state do get snow. And summers will be very hot and very humid. Very humid. Very, very humid.
On the other hand, most parts of the state will probably feel very lush and green, all year round, as compared with the desert we live in. It's one of the most striking things for me about flying back east. You look out of the plane and there are all these lakes and trees, which I never even noticed when I lived out there. After time in the desert, I notice.
My most recent memories of Virginia are trips to DC and then into Virginia, and I was wowed by how very southern the place felt--in the way people were just more polite when they spoke to you.
The current governor is a moderate Democrat, and there's been a lot of buzz within the Democratic base that he might make a run for President soon. But it's also a state that has had to work very hard to get a moderate Democrat elected.
::shrugs::
I'm not trying to put you off Virginia. It's a perfectly lovely state with a lot of fabulous resources. I'm just trying to put in a little capsule what I think that you, as a native southern California, would find most different from here. Virginia is far more cosmopolitan than the parts of the south I lived in, but whenever I get down that way when I'm back east, I'm always taken aback by how southern it feels to me in this fundamental way as people relate to each other when I'm there. I have no idea whether you'd like it or not, but I do think that you'd probably find it a pretty significant culture shock, just as I found so Cal a pretty major one when I arrived here.
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Date: 2006-03-07 11:24 pm (UTC)Okay, it is.
I was born and raised in southern California.
I lived for 5 years in the Portland, Oregon area.
I lived for 5 years in the San Antonio, Texas
and I have been living in Virginia for the past 2 years.
Definately in the Bible Belt. People tend to be very friendly, we even wave to each other as we drive by. Not as metropolitan as most city folk prefer, but very beautiful none the less. Within driving distance (for a weekend trip) to many historical places including Washington DC. Plus Florida is not really that far away.
I think you should check it out, the state could use more good teachers and the housing market is at least 50-70% cheaper than California... not to mention the general cost of living.
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Date: 2006-03-08 03:54 am (UTC)So, if you teach near DC in the suburbs, I think you'll find the schools there are heavily funded. They have wide-ranging programs, AP classes up the wazoo, everything. Your kids will definitely be coming from the wealthier parts of VA. YOu'll also find that almost all of them have at least one parent who works for either the CIA, the FBI, in the Pentagon or the White House or on a military base (j/k, bad VA joke).
I've never lived in northern VA, but I will tell you that those are more metropolitan, populated, and Democratic portions of VA. On the subject of politics, VA's governor Tim Kaine is Democratic. You just missed our Super Popular, One of Time's Top 5 Best Governors in the Country, 2008 Presidential Hopeful Democratic Governor Mark Warner, whose term ended in January (yeah, we love ol' Mark).
That's if you live in Northen VA. In Southern VA, we're a whole lotta different. Okay, not really. But we are a little more "southern" and conservative than up north. How conservative? Weellllllll. In my hometown this New Year, the newspaper did a front page story on the first baby born this year. The next day, someone wrote a letter to the editor complaining about the article glorfying out-of-wedlock mothers (which she was). And then there was that letter one Thanksgiving about how Confederate soldiers (my hometown is the last capital of the Confederacy) defended the South against Lincoln's murderers, torturers, and rapists. But then, when the Phelps (the family who makes up the "God Hates Fags" church that's protesting at the soldiers funerals) came and protested the formation of a Gay-Straight Alliance* at the local Baptist university, we all came out and protested right back. So, what I mean is, we have some crazy folk around here, but for the most part, we're a loving bunch. Gossip like crazy, Jesus. I don't really consider us to have any sort of "traditional rules", but on the other hand, there are things Southerners just call "polite." If you're not used to having some random person conversing with you in the supermarket line, then I guess we're kinda weird. And if you don't like sweet tea, I guess you'll just have to drink water at the restaurants (we don't really believe in coffee). And oh, food! We make great, totally not healthy food (that's why it's great)!
As for the educational system in the South, we're at a want for funds, definitely. And great, qualified teachers. So, you're practically guaranteed a job. Probably won't get paid as much as in Northern VA or where you live now, but the cost of living isn't as high either. Also, VA has this big thing called SOL (Standards of Learning) tests that are given in 3rd grade, 5th grade, and 8th grade. Afterwards (in the highschool level), they're given for individual subjects. Here, you have to pass them to graduate. So, they're really important for a lot of teachers here and have changed a lot of how classes are taught (and what is taught), so you may be wary about that.
So, yeah, sorry I typed so much. If there's anything else you really want to ask, go ahead.
*This is actually pretty funny given that that are no gay people in the South. It's another example of Southern politeness I guess, no one ever says you're gay. You're just "precious". Yeah, yeah, bad joke, but it's true!
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Date: 2006-03-08 05:20 am (UTC)My two cents
Date: 2006-03-09 04:47 am (UTC)-Lady J
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Date: 2006-03-13 09:32 am (UTC)I came from Northern Virginia (approx 30 E/NE of DC). It's very bible belt, people are not tolerant of gay people. They do tend to wave when you're going down the street though, or driving by. The schools in my area (Loudoun County) were fast approaching the max and by the year I graduated (98) two schools were already over max with one twice max.
On the other hand, it's a BEAUTIFUL state. Very green but also very humid, with somewhat mild winters. (It'll snow, but unless it's in the middle of a cold snap, you're likely to have the roads clear in a day or two.)