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Old 02-12-2008, 09:50 AM
 
125 posts, read 351,646 times
Reputation: 48

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Hi y'all,

Lived in OKC for 30 years, moved out 12 years ago (to the Chicago area) - got tired of small-mindedness and not enough culture. Moved from the Chicago area to the Seattle area and have to move again due to a number of factors (biggest of which is lack of affordable housing near/in Seattle). Affordable housing is our highest priority now (along with IT jobs so we can afford those affordable houses ). Austin seems to have both (along with a few other cities in the Mid/Southwest), but I'm kinda worried that I'm going to be moving back into what I moved away from in OKC. Someone said that Austin is kind of in its own little bubble in TX, but once you get out of Austin, you're smack in the middle of TX (with all that implies, good and bad - mostly bad for me since I'm from OK ). Just wondering if it's going to drive us crazy dealing w/the same kinds of folks/attitude we didn't like in OK or if it'll be moderated by the fact that it's a "college town"? Thanks for any hints, info, etc....
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Old 02-12-2008, 09:56 AM
 
Location: Austin, TX
15,269 posts, read 35,637,527 times
Reputation: 8617
You will have to visit to see, but having worked (not lived, though) in OKC, Austin and OKC are worlds apart. Culturally, Seattle and Chicago have some advantages over Austin, but it is still much more...don't know what to call it, maybe progressive?...in Austin compared to OKC.
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Old 02-12-2008, 12:26 PM
 
Location: Austin 'burbs
3,225 posts, read 14,063,220 times
Reputation: 783
We're from Seattle, and we are glad to have left it behind. We have been LOVING Austin, and the laid back & friendly lifestyle here. I don't know anything about OK, but having made the transition from Seattle to Austin, I think you will find, while similar in some respects, mainly Austin is a BIG quality of life upgrade.

We have made small trips outside of the Austin area (Dallas, Brenham, Fredricksburg, Corpus Christie, Port Aransas) and don't find that we have had any problems ANYWHERE - but we are also pretty easy going, and not looking for problems. We have noted differences and thought to ourselves "wow! We sure are in TX!!" but we have not been chased out of town by Billy Bob on a tractor for being a liberal democrat - or whatever other TX stereotype you are imagining
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Old 02-12-2008, 01:50 PM
 
406 posts, read 1,496,723 times
Reputation: 235
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jenbar View Post
we have not been chased out of town by Billy Bob on a tractor for being a liberal democrat - or whatever other TX stereotype you are imagining
That just made me spit water on my keyboard. HAHAHAHA.
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Old 02-12-2008, 08:19 PM
 
Location: Austin TX
1,590 posts, read 4,575,557 times
Reputation: 458
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jenbar View Post

We have made small trips outside of the Austin area (Dallas, Brenham, Fredricksburg, Corpus Christie, Port Aransas) and don't find that we have had any problems ANYWHERE - but we are also pretty easy going, and not looking for problems. We have noted differences and thought to ourselves "wow! We sure are in TX!!" but we have not been chased out of town by Billy Bob on a tractor for being a liberal democrat - or whatever other TX stereotype you are imagining
I second all that!
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Old 02-12-2008, 08:20 PM
 
Location: Austin TX
1,590 posts, read 4,575,557 times
Reputation: 458
Quote:
Originally Posted by redpanda View Post
That just made me spit water on my keyboard. HAHAHAHA.
I second that TOO
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Old 02-12-2008, 08:25 PM
 
125 posts, read 351,646 times
Reputation: 48
Quote:
Originally Posted by Jenbar View Post
We're from Seattle, and we are glad to have left it behind. We have been LOVING Austin, and the laid back & friendly lifestyle here. I don't know anything about OK, but having made the transition from Seattle to Austin, I think you will find, while similar in some respects, mainly Austin is a BIG quality of life upgrade.

We have made small trips outside of the Austin area (Dallas, Brenham, Fredricksburg, Corpus Christie, Port Aransas) and don't find that we have had any problems ANYWHERE - but we are also pretty easy going, and not looking for problems. We have noted differences and thought to ourselves "wow! We sure are in TX!!" but we have not been chased out of town by Billy Bob on a tractor for being a liberal democrat - or whatever other TX stereotype you are imagining
Yeah, leaving our apt around 6 AM and getting back home around 6 PM (and only working for 8 hours, plus 15 min of lunchtime) is getting old - did it for years in Chicago (train from burb to downtown), then found jobs in the burbs because it just wears you out. Things are just harder here in the Puget Sound area than they should be (in lots of ways), which is one of the reasons why I'd like to get back to an easier way of life. Trust me, though, there are Billy Bobs on tractors in TX, as well as OK - as I said, I lived in OK for 30 years and made numerous trips to lots of places in TX, I saw them! Thanks to redpanda, too - I'm thinking Austin is definitely less provincial (another good word) than OKC due to a lot of factors. From what else I've read here and other places, it's a possibility (with some caveats I still need to figure out and see if they're workable) but I don't know if my family'll (still in OK) shoot me for living in TX.
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Old 02-13-2008, 12:51 PM
 
25,157 posts, read 53,947,295 times
Reputation: 7058
You should try Dallas or San Antonio. Those places are awesome.
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Old 02-13-2008, 08:05 PM
 
125 posts, read 351,646 times
Reputation: 48
Quote:
Originally Posted by artsyguy View Post
You should try Dallas or San Antonio. Those places are awesome.

Dallas is too big and too generic for us, haven't really thought about San Antonio, though I guess it's a possibility... Thanks.
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Old 02-14-2008, 05:18 AM
 
233 posts, read 1,046,164 times
Reputation: 79
San Antonio is growing like crazy esp. in IT - it is definitely worth a look if you are down this way and a lot less pricey than Austin.
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