Everyone who lives in a big city will tell you there’s no other way to live.
Those people say they’re addicted to the pace of it, the hustle, the bustle, the noise, and the endless possibilities. They resort to evangelical-like ranting and raving in an effort to convert anyone who dares to offer a different opinion. There is an assumption that if you don’t live in the epicentre of 2 million-plus people, you must be a private hermit-type, in a farmhouse 500km from the nearest grocery store.
But there is another life. And it’s equally as good, if not better.
I lived a non-city life for a long time and loved it. I grew up in Canberra (and before you judge) in what I considered ‘suburban bliss’. Most of my friends lived just down the road (in Canberra everything is 15 minutes away max) and there was so much green space. As children, friends and I were always meeting up and going on some sort of adventure, as if we were in an Enid Blyton novel – or so we liked to pretend.
We played a lot of sport and the idyllic fairytale tree climbing and dirt cake baking was actually how our days played out. As we grew up, our adventures changed but life didn’t really get all that harder. The sport became more competitive, the games more grown up and the bike riding obsession was rapidly taken over by boys.
When we got to an age where we were going to bars and pubs, we didn’t split up or become disparate like big city friendship groups. Possibilities of where to go are minimal in Canberra and so arriving solo never fussed me – chances are you’d find someone you knew, fast.