←back to thread

189 points orkohunter | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.39s | source
Show context
dijit ◴[] No.42192155[source]
it’s amazing how much of the story mirrors my own.

Autodidacticism and tech were also my combination of escaping generational poverty, and I had to be the first person in 2 generations to leave the country at all in order to do it. It hopefully strikes at a hint of irony that I am british.

However, unlike the author, I did not have a strong familial connection.

I miss my homeland but I have no wish to return, the living conditions for the lower classes or even the middle classes is so low that I see no way of living a comfortable life. I do still get bouts of homesickness- even after 10 years of living abroad.

It takes a lot of strength to really identify what is important to you, I’m quite sure that the author is content to understand that he is a success to all those around him and in the wider world- and that confidence will be something that he carries for the rest of his life. Fair play to him.

replies(3): >>42192167 #>>42192263 #>>42192270 #
1. ninalanyon ◴[] No.42192263[source]
> bouts of homesickness- even after 10 years of living abroad.

After nearly forty years in Norway I have no wish at all to return to the UK to live. Every time I listen to BBC R4 I hear some horror story about poverty or poor health. 6 million people (almost 10% of the population) on hospital waiting lists, pre-school children having such bad teeth that they have to have them all removed; that's just a sample from the last two days.

I do enjoy long holidays there as a tourist though because there is so much visible history. And it's warmer than Norway in the summer!