Jump to content

Recommended Posts

I moved to the bright shining lights of London 3 years ago and haven?t looked back since, from the moment I arrived in this country and I knew I would never live in my homeland of Australia again (well at least not long term i.e. I had to go back for a short while last year due to Father's ill health)..


Obviously over time I have established good and solid friendships with peeps who I love dearly.. Almost all of those people are either moving out of London or planning to in the future i.e. in the next 5 or 10 years. I have noticed many Londoners do this - is this migration out of London inevitable? Do you have a plan to do that?


I have said to Mrs Strawbs that if we moved out of London that the country may lose its appeal to me.. Thankfully she is Bermondsey born and bred so quite happy to be a city girl for the foreseeable future but I can see the glint of wide open spaces in her eye..

Link to comment
https://www.eastdulwichforum.co.uk/topic/3817-is-the-london-exodus-inevitable/
Share on other sites

Well, I moved to England 21 years ago "just for 1 or two years - see how it goes" - and I'm still here.


If you move out of London, move well out - don't go for one of the home counties within easy commuting distance. Those places are purgatory and I can't help you if you go there


But there is so much of this country that is so vastly different to the South East - so many areas with different flavours. Don't rule out ever going there. I spent long spells in Yorkshire and Derbyshire near the Peak District, and 6 years in Devon. I could do it again easily if I wanted to move out of London. Which I don't

Most young professional types aren't really from London, so when they hit their 30s and start sprogging they tend to return to their roots in search of a support network and good schools.


I grew up in the purgatory Sean describes (it's actually heavenly until you hit about 16 and become VERY VERY BORED), and I for one would rather die in a coastal bungalow, alone and half eaten by cats by the time I'm found, than ever return to Letchworth.

I must also add that I guess I am a little worried that we would be the only gays in the village aswell.. I have images of sleepy little villages where everyone knows everyone and it would take us possibly years to be accepted.. We once went to Westbury (near Stonehenge somewhere) as friends own a farm down there and we went to a house party there and ended up leaving as the 'locals' didnt want to speak with us even upon introduction so our friends and I left.. Anyhoo its just another reason I keep pumping in to Mrs Strawbs to keep us very firmly here!


We did have the discussion though as to whether when we were 60 - 70 if we would feel too intimidated to live in London from a safety perspective.. Her Nan is currently still scooting around Bermondsey at the ripe old age of 73 so I figure we can do it too!

*Bob* Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Think of it this way:

>

> You're on the train out of London. By the time

> it's at Watford, all the good looking girls have

> got off, it's started raining and the carriage

> smells faintly of sick.

>

> I rest my case.


I always thought that was after you got to East Dulwich! >:D<

Brendan Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> SeanMacGabhann Wrote:

> --------------------------------------------------

> -----

> > "just for 1 or two years - see how it goes" -

> and I'm still

> > here.

>

> Ditto


Bloody immigrants, you give 'em an inch and they take a mile!



I'd like to echo MPs comments. The home-counties suburbs are truely awful places and I'd never go back despite (or maybe because of) having lots of family there. Wilderness does have appeal though. I know my better half loathes the idea but part of me is excited by truely wild bits of Britain with very few people. I don't think I could offer you advice on the whole "only gay in the village" thing - not without baseless stereotyping vast swathes of rural England.


Although, of course, I'd probably last about five minutes before realising the nearest shop is 20 miles away and it doesn't stick my clinique moisturiser before scuttling back to the great metropolis.

Being from London, I couldn't wait to spread my wings at 18. I went up to Liverpool for uni, and ended up staying on there for a couple of years after. I came down to Surrey in 2001 to train for my job, and genuinely planned to go back up to the pool when I finished. I ended up doing my final placement in London, and just fell back in love with the place.


Thing is, because I stayed in Liverpool, and rarely even came home in the holidays, I fell out of touch with most of my old school crowd (most of whom all still hang out together), so it really was like starting again in Dulwich, but thanks to the CPT, I have made a whole new circle of friends over the years! :)-D

mockney piers Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> What a coincidence keef, I made a whole group of

> friends there, you'd have thought we'd have bumped

> into each other at some point?!



Strange indeed, maybe we glanced at each other across a busy bar once upon a time.

I think a lot of it depends on why you moved to London in the first place, what your loves are and whether London can supply them. I've been in London for over 20 years and came up for clubs, gigs, partying and having a better time than I had in Devon. Then I stayed because I wanted a good job, fantastic choice of theatres, galleries, restaurants and bars. Now I am thinking of moving because I want peace and quiet, to be within spitting distance of the sea and the countryside and to be able to see the stars at night (in other words I am getting older). It is not inevitable for everyone, but I think it is inevitable for me.

SeanMacGabhann Wrote:

-------------------------------------------------------

> Totnes is Devon is lesbian couple central

> (and not in a "so I've heard" kind of way - just

> have a mooch around and you'll see)

>

>

> New Age trinket central as well but you can't have

> everything


It's also on a Ley Line and has its own currency!


Used to be fun to potter up to Totnes in a launch from Dartmouth - at one time a shop there sold illegal, under the counter, BLue Vinney - Devon's answer to Stilton and very good it was too.

There is a part of me that craves space and long, dry endless openness. I think one day it will win over the part of me that craves entertainment, socialising and diversity. When that day comes it will probably mean going back to Africa. If indeed there is still a place for me there.


But for now I?m happy where my home is which is East Dulwich. This office in Westminster is a different story though.

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
  • Latest Discussions

    • Andy is an absolute star. Have used him for years and he’s become a hugely trusted and valued friend as well as handyman. Always willing to go the extra mile and doesn’t cut corners, but great on pricing. Can’t recommend enough.
    • Surely you are still covered under these circumstances even if you don't have the physical licence? I can't believe you would be prevented from driving? That would be a ridiculous system. I don't recall any delays   when mine was renewed. Why would their medical department be involved if you have no medical issues? Could someone have made some admin mistake somewhere along the line?
    • Does anyone have the same problem.  I am 79 and have sent my licence renewal form to the DVLA on the 21st October 20 which they have received. I have just received a letter from them them dated 22 December 2025 today saying my licence is with their Drivers Medal Department and will be processed as soon as possible. This follows my telephone call to them after three weeks  from the October date as I had not received my licence back as per their time frame. I also followed this up mid December after finally getting through but did not get any confirmation as to what the situation was. Is this normal practice? On the 7 January 2026 I will be unable to drive as my licence has not been sent back. I have no medical issues and meet all the requirements with no problem as per previous renewals in fact nothing has changed health wise.Their the letter states if they need any more details from me, they will contact me directly. Why has it taken 2 and a half months get get this far? Is this some sort of ploy to get older drivers to finally give up their driving by making life difficult as possible.  Has anyone else experienced this. Read Medical not Medal.
    • You're being a little disingenuous here. It is simply not true that "the area should remain suburban 2/3 storeys maximum" because: -> the area the development is in isn't 2/3 storeys maximum today - as evidenced by the school on the lot adjoining the development to the south, as well as the similarly-sized buildings to the north and east.  -> the SPG doesn't preclude this type of development anyway. This "genie in a bottle" stuff is desperate barrel-scraping. Now you're raising the spectre of a 9 storey building on the Gibbs & Dandy site (the chance would be a fine thing) but also arguing Southwark is too slow to approve things and opposed to development more than 2-3 storeys!
Home
Events
Sign In

Sign In



Or sign in with one of these services

Search
×
    Search In
×
×
  • Create New...