Obviously with the heavy heart you are happy as hell while moving to a different city. At times you feel great about shifting to a new place but when you think about your hometown, you keep thinking about so much stuff you are missing on. Well, here are the 7 Things you realize after leaving your hometown:
1. You are always short of money:
Suddenly, you'll realize that you got to start maintaining a cashbook. You become a miserly person now and you definitely make sure that you are not "wasting" money.
2. You miss homemade food:
When you were in your hometown, your mom keeps yelling about how you don't eat food and when you leave your hometown you realize how much you miss it. Yes! You miss homemade food more than anything.
3. "Huh? Who the hell are you":
A question raised by many people when you move to a new place. People don't know who you are and the best part they don't even care about it. That's the point where you realize nobody knows you here and at that point you think who you were in your hometown.
4. For a change, you miss your family:
You have waited like years to begin with a new journey, but when you did, you actually started missing your family. And finally your new friends in the new city become your family!
5. You'll start communicating with your old friends:
This is definitely going to happen because you forget how to make new friends. You actually try to remember how you used to talk to people. You need old friends to share your stuff with and of course you need to know the gossip..!
6. You TRY to adjust in almost everything:
You'll try to deal! You'll try adjusting! You are not used to face the situations which you are facing in this new place, but luckily, you'll get accustomed to this new happenings and you'll think "Ohh! I am mature now!"
7. You have become more open-minded:
This is the best thing that can happen to you as you meet new people, you get new opinions, very different views and this environment of handling or facing the situations will make you feel that you weren't open-minded in this sense. You learn the art of "agreeing to disagree".