Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
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#32
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There are legitimate problems that have been discussed on TOTV about things in the Villages. Traffic, overcrowding, gators being fed, the buffalo and interactions with kids going over the fence, the gates and access from surrounding communities via golf cart, Sex on the Square and legal history, Leisureville by Andrew Belchman Andrew D. Blechman - author of LEISUREVILLE and PIGEONS, sexually transmitted diseases and their rates in the Villages, local doctors, the Villages Regional Hospital and waits at the Emergency Room when walking in, changes in restaurants, me and Harlow at Doggie Doo Run Run, etc. I have talked to a nurse who used to work at the Villages Regional Hospital-- nice woman-- who spoke a lot about inadequate care on some of the floors and arrogant doctors. Not sure exactly where she worked here in the Villages but my guess is that some doctors and nurses are much better than other ones in the treatment they give to patients in their care. I still think anyone considering moving to the Villages should read Andrew Blechman's book before doing so. He does sex it up to sell copies but it is well researched and thought out for a book that came out in 2005 or 2006. Last edited by Taltarzac725; 05-13-2016 at 03:55 PM. |
#33
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#34
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#35
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I volunteered for a year of Saturday afternoons at the Veterans' Hospital in Reno, Nevada back around 1977-1978. Many of these vets were admirable. This was on the intensive care ward with the vets ranging from one from the Spanish American War to the Vietnam War. (There is a drawing I did of the Vietnam vet as well as a document from the Reno VFW Hospital in my Taltarzac725 Photobucket array. Google Taltarzac725). Race does enter things. My sister-in-law of my late brother is Jamaiican-American and my late brother Chuck was white. They got flak for their mixed marriage from both races. One of Grace's kids felt the racism even though he was six or so when he pointed at his skin and told me "This is only skin deep" or something like that. Having a rather large group of Jamaiican-American relatives though makes me more conscious of race in the US in 2016 than I ever was. My sister-in-law Grace was a supplier for the SEALS and I have always respected her for her work in the military. I had a neighbor in Reno-- Ron Bath-- who became an Air Force General for long range planning. I admired his being a pilot in the Nevada National Guard and would sometimes see him or at least his cohorts taking off out my front window facing Rattlesnake Mountain in Reno, Nevada. Ron Bath was also a law professor and a local attorney. I cut his and his wife's lawn for a few years before inadvertently walking into their back yard while she was sunbathing. I should have called out before entering the backyard but must have been pre-occupied with something. Mr. Bath was very nice about it. I think Mrs. Bath probably thought I did it deliberately but that was not the case. I can be absent-minded at times. I did enjoy what I saw but am a straight healthy male and was I was maybe 19 or 20 at that time. I have great respect for our men and women in uniform. I never said that the six or so year troll I had a Findlaw was a military person. As far as I could tell he was a Sixth Grade drop-out from school who was self-taught on a great deal but rose to become some kind of business big-wig in Chesterfield County, VA. He then became embrolied in white collar crime as well as sexual harassment matters. I never knew his race as it seems irrelevant. I never got the impression that he served in the military at all. He never seemed like a team player though which I expect is needed in the military. I had a roommate at the University of Minnesota for all my Third Year Law School at Middlebrook Hall who had been a Captain or something like that in the South Korean army. He was a MD who had to serve in the military as I believe service in the military is mandatory in South Korea. Dong Goo Kim was one of the nicest people I have ever met. He is listed in the same 1995 volume of Marquis Who's Who in the World as I am. He was working on his second Ph.D when I knew him in Minneapolis. It was a white guy in the red convertible that almost hit me a few months ago near the intersection of Old Mill Run and Canal Street. That's a description of what he looks like not any kind of statement on race. If he had been orange I would have written that as well. Last edited by Taltarzac725; 05-14-2016 at 12:24 PM. |
#36
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#37
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It looks like my former roommate at Middlebrook Hall in still teaching in South Korea. I do think of him at times especially since he gave me a parting gift of a "Forever Love Korea" key chain. I still carry that everywhere just because it reminds me of some of the friends I did have at the University of Minnesota. He might have even taught some of the Korean-Americans working in Pharmacies here in the Villages. The few Korean phrases he taught me never really stuck. Last edited by Taltarzac725; 05-14-2016 at 12:25 PM. |
#38
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None of these couples have seemed to complain all that much about life in the Villages. If you look at my 224 613 Project I did try to get materials that would help gays/lesbians who had been victims/survivors of crimes into libraries of all kinds as these needs would probably be somewhat different than straight people especially given the laws that were still enforce when I was doing this in the 1990s and 2000s. And still into the 2010s in some states. Google Taltarzac725. |
#39
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At least some of us relocated to TV from states where there was a state income tax levy (like VA). The winter weather here is better than New York, if you are not a real winter sports enthusiast. After 30 years in NY, I enjoy the year round summer like weather here, the availability of many activities (including recreation), yet we have not lost assets, like top-level entertainment, including our symphony. If you like a snow shovel, so be it.
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#40
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In the Minneapolis area down town is bustling with active and welcomed even in winter months because of their creative sky walk system. Winter Carnival lasts 30 days with a parade every night. Or visit the Mall of America. It takes a few days to browse through all the stores located there. The rotunda offers entertainment and celebrities daily As to weather what you lose in winter you gain in summer in most states. Most of us adapt to our surroundings because adaptation is a survival instinct. People also have a tendency to remember the best of what they left. There is always something we liked about the state we left, the house or car we sold and regret about the people we came to love, are now leaving but promise to stay in touch I moved to Florida primarily because of its tax policies. Its all good ![]() |
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