Quote:
Originally Posted by jimjamuser
(Post 2193650)
Getting old is difficult no matter where you live.
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It is, as I believe most of us are finding out.
However growing old is harder in some places than others. When we moved to TV, we left snow, icy sidewalks, large house that needed (as all homes do) routine maintenance, stairs just about everywhere, winter temps that could dive to and often below -40 f., ruinously high taxes (we pay less than 1/2 the property taxes here than we paid up there, on a property here that is valued at approximately 140% of that of our home in Minnesota), a state income tax that is ranked somewhere in the top five of all the states (haven't checked recently so can't say for sure), steadily growing crime, etc. etc. All that and more made our situation up there a far harder place to grow old, than here.
A lot of people don't realize it but much of TV is designed with we older folks in mind. We read articles about Community Watch finding and helping people who, because of declining mental capacities, may have wandered off. We have "Silver Alerts" (like an Amber Alert but for old folks). Most of us have pets; the local radio station has a service called "Pet Patrol" that tries to match up pets that have wandered off with their owners. Homes, if not expressly designed for people with ambulation handicaps, still have extra-wide doorways, open floor plans, grab bars in showers and tubs, walk-in closets, etc. Clubs for varied interests abound. Most everything is a short golf cart ride away: we've actually considered selling the Rav4 because most of the time it just sits in the garage taking up space. Food is cheaper here, and most places deliver. Taxes are less, by a significant amount. Even the businesses and the areas in which they are found are designed with we older folks in mind. Very few steps; the lakewalk at Lake Sumter Landing being the only significant exception to that. Giving the devil his due, a couple of disadvantages here as compared to where we came from is that the quality of medical care here is significantly lower (though we did our doctoring at Mayo Clinic in Minnesota and anything, anywhere, is probably going to suffer in comparison), and the drivers, though equally crazy in Minnesota, are far fewer in number than the crazies down here.
Oh--and I don't have to continually be aware of my surroundings. In Minnesota, I carried a pistol most of the time. Not here, yet. Not even once.
MUCH rather grow old here.