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evanescencefan91
Guest
lonelybeauty Wrote:
I never believed in lonliness until I had to face reality. I grow up in Rio de Janeiro (Brazil) and always had so much happening all around me...
Friends and a big family...One day I moved to the USA and discover that you can be so incredible lonely even when you have the world making you beleive that you have everything...
My parents and sister emigrated from Italy to the U.S. before I was born. My sister said it was a shock for her because she was always surrounded by people, both family and everyone in the small town she was born in. When my family came to America the only person who had a great and large support system was my father. I think that's the reason they did not go back to Italy. His "group" came to the U.S. so staying wasn't a problem for him.
my family has been in the US for a fari amount of generations. And I've grown up in a fairly big city it's not considered a big city but it's got about .25 mil and is growning.
But i think it's really interesting, about the experiance one might have coming here.
I think it can be normal to feel a sense of lonelyness, if you move from a real small town to a big city, even though there are more people. They are all strangers and there is less of a sense of a community. I guess here we all get caught up in out own busy lives, which probably isn't a good thing. Neighborhoods don't really try to meet eachother, or have outdoor barbaques like they use to. I guess here familys are smaller, usally only 2 or 3 kids and generations sometimes live states away.
I'm not trying to say this is where you came from, I'm just trying to make a hypothosis on why this is. sometimes, immigrants can feel alienated or worry about looking differnt, or homesick, or sometimes have trouble adapting to new cultures. I'm just trying to look at it from your point of veiw I never mean any offense, but i ubderstand that it's sometimes a touchy subject for some people.