I like cooking. It calms me, even though I'm not very good at it.
I prefer eating home food much more than my mother would have believed about me. I also don't like sandwiches and pasta as much as I had thought I did. Give me good old roti sabzi any day.
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Nearly two decades ago, the father got transferred from Chandigarh, where we had lived for most of my childhood, to Delhi. Apart from the culture shock and the discovery that the distance between Sector 34 and Sector 17 was really nothing compared to the distance between any two places in Delhi, I was convinced that I'm not a big city person. This belief lasted with me right up the moment I landed in the US.
Because I like to pretend that I'm still an anonymous blogger, we're going to leave out where I live and study. Suffice to say, it's a small town, where you can't get anywhere without a car. Despite which you barely see any cars on the road. And it's quiet; God, it's quiet.
I spent two days last week in Atlanta, and wow did it feel good to be surrounded by tall buildings and actually hear cars on the road. My friend was freaking out about being stuck in a traffic jam on our way to an appointment; a teeny weeny part of me was actually thrilled about it. I sat in a restaurant for dinner, gazing out of the windows, just watching the cars go by, listening to them honk away. I used the train to get from the hotel to the airport, and it was nice.
No question about it, I'm definitely a big city person.
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I'm much more of an introvert than I had previously imagined. Not only is it really hard for me to strike up and maintain conversations with people, but I really can survive quite happily without meeting or hanging out with people. A bit worrisome, how little I need the company of others. Also worrisome, my inability to "network", given how much importance it has in the whole job search process here.
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The things you learn. There was something else I wanted to include in this list, but I forgot. Oh well.
2 comments:
hey me too, I'm a city person. But melbz doesn't feel like a city at all. It's like a village. Hardly any people. It scares me a little the everybody-knows-everybody thing. No privacy. I mean imagine, the entire population of Australia is the population of Delhi, so I think we became city people without realising it.
My big-city-ness depends on my mood - Sometimes I enjoy the peace and quiet, and at other times the white noise actually soothes me!
Home food liking - check. I think everyone who comes to US undergoes this.
Introvert - check. Especially if you are a PhD student!
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