Little question
people - like me - who were born or spent their childhood in one place
but now live somewhere else
which do you think of as home??
I have lived in Cardiff since 1987, much longer than I lived anywhere else. So it is very much "home".
Little question
people - like me - who were born or spent their childhood in one place
but now live somewhere else
which do you think of as home??
which do you think of as home??
Google says that is £500k in 2026!
Little question
people - like me - who were born or spent their childhood in one place
but now live somewhere else
which do you think of as home??
Little question
people - like me - who were born or spent their childhood in one place
but now live somewhere else
which do you think of as home??
I class my home as south derbyshire as thats where I based my own roots / family ect rather than my parents roots. Given my old man was from Durham then Leicester and mum was south derbyshire. Also I've been in this area since 198?, so a long time.
I love those kind of questions. Ones that, to answer honestly, you really have to think deeply about yourself; what's important to you and how you identify. As I mentioned, I was UK born but 'grew up' in New Zealand. For much of my time in NZ I considered myself English, because it was my roots. And it was something that I was often reminded of (by others) because of my accent. Being called a "pom" did kinda reinforce it!
It wasn't until I travelled back to the UK in my early 20s that I realised how much NZ had actually shaped me. I realised I wasn't at all English - whatever that might be. I spent all of a month in my 'home time' of Leicester before heading to London. I hadn't travelled half way around the world to base myself in a place like that (with no disrespects to the city or its inhabitants). Music was important to. As an avid reader of NME, I'd come to the UK to see all those bands I'd only ever read about. It was London or nowhere, that much was a no brainer.
London was excellent, just what I wanted and needed at that time. As a hugely cosmopolitan city, it didn't matter where I was from. Nobody called me a pom! I was an anonymous individual in a city full of the same. The question of where I was was from never arose in my own head even, there was just a freedom. It was only when I went back to visit relatives in Leicester that the walls closed in. I had many flats in London but none was home as such (I simply lived in them) BUT I will always consider London (more generally) to be 'a home' - not that I can afford to live there now!
France, and rural France at that, is my new home and is obviously radically different from London - except for that single aspect of freedom. Whilst I no longer have access to bars and restaurants, theatres and cinemas, etc that London offered, I have retained that sense of uninhibited freedom. (I should add that I've long since retired hence no need to commute, and I have no children). Each day is my own to fill as I see fit. I now see that home for me is pretty much anywhere that fulfils my hedonistic needs at the given time.
To conclude, I'd say 'home' for me is defined for me by how the place I live makes me feel within myself. In short, it's happiness. I can't be happy anywhere, I do have a reliance on any given place offering me something, but I 'm not reliant on identity or family to call a place home. (I added the previously unmentioned 'family' because I know that is hugely important to some people in their definition of home - and I clearly acknowledge and respect that) 'Home is where the heart is' is a simple answer but you have to ask yourself about your own heart.
A young girl i know (her Dad was my best man) is from the Wirral and now lives in Yorkshire. Yesterday she sent me photographs of Thurstaston where she has gone for the day. It brought back such memories.
A young girl i know (her Dad was my best man) is from the Wirral and now lives in Yorkshire. Yesterday she sent me photographs of Thurstaston where she has gone for the day. It brought back such memories.
It's a lovely area, I lived in Heswall and attended Calday Grammar from end of my first year in '86 until end of A-levels in '92, after a few years in Dolgellau and moving a lot between Prestwich and Whitchurch areas. But then I moved to Southampton for uni in autumn '92, not too far from Brighton where I was born before a short time living in Mallorca. Nearly moved back to Wirral in '96, but changed my mind, because Southampton had far more accessible nightlife rather than having to get across to Bromborough in Wirral. Then met my better half in 2004, who has lived in Southampton all her life and been here ever since. Mum moved from Birkenhead to Prestatyn when she retired, so not been back to Wirral for ~8 years now, but where she lives now is a great area for cycling if you like rampy hills including Hillside that has 33% signs on the road summit.