<p>Are you planning on staying after you graduate and settle down with new family/house?</p>
<p>This is one of the things I"m a bit nervous about. Your leaving your family and home and there's the chance you'll never come back (Well theres the visits) because you love it there so much. Maybe its a good thing</p>
<p>Not sure if I can handle the homesickness. I"m a weak person :(</p>
<p>I didnt move E <—> W but moved S <—> N (FL to NY) … over 1,000 miles from my family and boyfriend. Big change! I plan on moving back home to FL after I graduate (I am in my last year of grad school now). I have loved my time in NY, but I miss having a car and going to big stores! I think everyone is different about where they live after graduation and honestly, in todays market… you go wherever you get a job first. Once your in your 20’s you dont have the tie to your parents anymore, so its not like your going to go live with them again (or you hope).</p>
<p>I went from the West Coast to the East Coast, and unless I find a job that is significantly higher paying on the East Coast, I have every intention of returning home. I hate the East Coast, and honestly don’t understand why so many people tolerate it.</p>
<p>um, amciw, the east coast is actually not that bad. You just need to have an open mind. </p>
<p>I went from East Coast to West Coast, and while I love L.A. and California, there’s no way I’m staying here after I graduate. No way I’m gonna try and live in a broke state with a g*dforsaken economy. Its only good living in California now since I don’t have to pay for anything or hold a job.</p>
<p>I’m from California, attending school in Pennsylvania. I’d like to move back to California-- to the north, like San Francisco-- but I severely doubt I’ll be able to afford it. I’m going to be a poor writer and web developer for most of my life, probably. </p>
<p>I’ll likely end up in Vancouver or Seattle. It’s like a mix of the west and east coast. Sounds more fun to me.</p>
<p>I am an East Coast college student after spending the majority of my time in America located in various locations west of the Mississippi (including the West Coast, specifically). I haven’t developed much of a perspective to adequately evaluate the extent to which the East Coast is congenial to my personal tastes, as I don’t distance myself from campus all that frequently and the student population is so diverse that it doesn’t adequately represent the greater population.</p>