Comments
2 johns0201 answered
Forget about mentioning some other "minuses" besides finances. "If the power goes out, it may be days before they turn it on again." - If the pipe bursts in the winter - well, a lot of naughty, but you will have to wait for the summer. - The road from the village to the highway may be the LAST more important when there are disasters and accidents. If you haven't waited 5 days for the road to be cleared without any help from anywhere, you don't know what it's about. - Lack of hospitals. Now - I'm not saying an ambulance is very busy in the cities, but if it takes them 25-30 minutes to take you 3-4 kilometers to the local hospital, imagine it, if you are 30-40 of it? We are talking about a time of 2-3 hours. - The recent robberies. Now, let him tell you: The police refuse to take fingerprints, even when we talk about robbery, beatings and threats to life, if you call for help !!! But if someone hits, while he is robbing you, he starts suing you ... - You talk well about the children (without the constant control ...), but the truth is that I don't have so many people in the villages that there is anyone to see everything. And most schools are closed en masse. - It is not certain that the air will be clean - to have a thermal power plant nearby or someone to open a huge cow farm - maliiiii! Otherwise - all this, as he described it, you can have it in a villa area, but not in the villages. And to the "eco food" - well, find someone and pay him to bring you such. Some grandfather will gladly sell you tomatoes, where he has been selecting them for decades, for 5-6 leva per kilo. And most schools are closed en masse. - It is not certain that the air will be clean - to have a thermal power plant nearby or someone to open a huge cow farm - maliiiii! Otherwise - all this, as he described it, you can have it in a villa area, but not in the villages. And to the "eco food" - well, find someone and pay him to bring you such. Some grandfather will gladly sell you tomatoes, where he has been selecting them for decades, for 5-6 leva per kilo. And most schools are closed en masse. - It is not certain that the air will be clean - to have a thermal power plant nearby or someone to open a huge cow farm - maliiiii! Otherwise - all this, as he described it, you can have it in a villa area, but not in the villages. And to the "eco food" - well, find someone and pay him to bring you such. Some grandfather will gladly sell you tomatoes, where he has been selecting them for decades, for 5-6 leva per kilo.
3 tbizzle720 answered
Yes, that's right, but big cities also have advantages, such as universities. For the rest you are absolutely right.
4 creamypinay answered
Hey that's what I'm trying to say in sum and people. Especially if they work in the IT field or something they can do from home. A country house is wonderful - cheaper, nice air, if you plant some flowers or vegetables - hey you move. You don't have to produce for the whole city - two cars of tomatoes, some cucumbers, parsley and a few fruit trees, and here's an activity for an hour a day that will move you from sitting in front of a computer. On top of everything - a yard. If you are in a village near a city - you can work in the city and travel to the countryside. I have the feeling that living in a village only in Bulgaria is considered an insult. That is why our villages are depopulated.
5 iamarnyross answered
Theoretically, you are right. But will they be able to give you a place to work and it is suitable for you, a suitable environment for your children, security, healthcare, infrastructure? You are absolutely right if, for example, you were talking about a pretty neat village in Tyrol, Austria. But I guess you're talking about Bulgaria, right?
6 swiftor answered
Hi, sounds very good, but in practice this is not true, not a single point is true. 1-clean air, not clean. People are heated by burning garbage, coal and even wood, soot goes into the air. If you don't believe me, check one of the air quality sites. 2- Silence until the neighbor decides to inflate the chalga in the yard. And that's every Friday and Saturday. So one evening I returned to Sofia to fall asleep from the supposed silence of the village. In fact, in every village chalga is inflated on weekends in the yards. 3-Nature yes, but not in its purest form. People throw their garbage in the ravines en masse, it's scary in the Iskar gorge. Many illegal dumps are set on fire from time to time and pollute the air. There, people even throw their carcasses into the river. Pure nature is a myth, where there are Bulgarians there is no nature. 4- yes, but you know what happened when the swine flu came, last year the goats and the sheep. And how many modern people would slaughter an animal? 5- I have never met as many evil people as I have met in the villages in my whole life in Sofia. In the countryside in every family there is a case of abandonment either by both parents or by the mother. Mothers who give birth to different men and abandon their previous children. Intrigues that ruin the lives of the victims. I even witnessed a mother with a baby and her mother evict another child, a half-orphan raised only by her father, her mother abandoned her to live with another man, and this mother with a baby chased the girl because she had once asked for ice cream to be served. and advised us to expel her as well. Ice cream in the village costs 50 cents. Animals are killed if you don't need them, kittens are born, you put them in an envelope and in the bucket. Dogs are thrown off the cliff because they don't work for you. Not to mention that 30-year-old men get drunk. 90% are alcoholics and do not live to 70. And for robberies, beatings there are no statistics. 6- you are playing on the street, a truck passes by and crushes you, I still wonder what happened to the missing 1-year-old child from a village, they reported him twice on the news and never found him. My nephew was cruelly bitten by a dog from a game in the village on the street, they operated on him. People are irresponsible to animals. And most of the streets in the village are not paved, in the summer dust is raised, which the children breathe. There are psychics, pedophiles, drunks. Just a few days ago, a girl was raped and killed in a village by a villager. Not to mention the education that children may or may not receive in the countryside. For boredom, for lack of money, for gypsyism, the hospitals are bad, if your child has to, you will have to drive him to Sofia and let me tell you, the children always have a high temperature at night. Everything you describe is too idealized. It exists somewhere, but not in Bulgaria. In the big cities it is also bad, it is bad everywhere, but in the villages it is scary.
7 AllisonJameX answered
There are no such idiots as in Sofia. Especially in bus 120 the biggest ones ride, someone will push you away, hiss and pick at something.
8 jasleenmatharu answered
You wrote it wonderfully, but only if you are abroad.
9 69nastolatka answered
I have lived in a village and in a big city. I generally agree, although it depends on the village. But the village also has serious shortcomings. For example, gossip was hellishly disgusting to me. There you can't just leave the house and go somewhere. The neighbor immediately meets you and starts "where are you going, how are you going, when are you going and why are you going". If you don't, God, you say it starts, but why do you do that, I did what you did. Understand what I'm doing, that's right. The streets are somewhere between a dirt road and broken asphalt. He is not there at all. There are no kindergartens like people, no schools like people, the entertainment is limited to 2 village bars. The houses are cheap, but if you want to make it look good, it is an expensive pleasure. The house is not maintained at all like the apartment, where you have to paint and putty several walls and change the windows. If you want to live in a decent house, you need 15 vouchers only for a roof and gutters. If you decide to build your yard properly, you have cement paths, a fence, a wall, sheds, a garden, a gate, etc. You also need to invest in a number of appliances such as mowers, sprayers and all kinds. You do not have sewerage and this often creates problems such as flooded manholes, clogged pipes, etc. The house is difficult to heat because you only have external walls, there is no one to warm you. One insulation of the whole house is still a serious expense. Separately, if you heat with solid fuel, it is a hamalogy - transport, store, order, split, carry, clean ashes, ventilate with smoke, clean kyuntsi, get up at night to throw wood, because the fire is extinguished. If you make a boiler, it is still a serious investment. You also have exterior painting. And as time and effort, the house is a serious commitment - there is something to do in it. You can never sit there to rest - her yard will have to be swept, dug, weeded (the grass grows literally for a week and you are left without a cross until you pluck it), watered. If you have animals, this is a serious time - these animals are grazed in the summer, hay is collected for the winter, dried, stored, baled, shit and piss are cleaned non-stop, you constantly stink of dead squirrels. One knee is even a job and you need at least two or three and it requires skill. If you need urgent help, you will die until an ambulance arrives. There is no garbage either. Either you take care of yourself or you wait for the truck to come once a month. And there is no work. There is no lighting in the evening. If they reach into your ass, you won't see who it is.
10 detikfood answered
"I have the feeling that living in a village only in Bulgaria is considered an insult." Also in the US. Have you heard the term "coastal elite"? It is similar in "liberal" countries, such as Denmark and Sweden, and for Norway, not to tell you. In Oslo, those in the north consider themselves half-human. Don't worry! We are not alone in this :)
11 hard_julian answered
Torbalan, is that you? Only you are talking about Norway and Sweden.
12 tinalondon1 answered
Gone are the days when village life was good, calm and fulfilling. There is no life there anymore, don't you watch the news? Ivan Kostov destroyed the village, liquidated agriculture, liquidated the economy (in each village there were workshops to a nearby factory), so the young people moved to the cities and the village died, there is no more life there. Even for pensioners, it is no longer possible because they are regularly robbed, raped and killed by gypsy looters. Don't you see what happened in Galiche? They stole the hardworking peasants and the tools, they have nothing to cultivate their gardens with. The village will live only when the state lives, today there is no state, there are landlords for whom the village does not exist. For one gay parade they find 1000 policemen to guard it, and for the villages there are no policemen, dogs eat them there, is this a quiet life?
13 vickysdonuts answered
I am from Sofia, but I really like living in a village, in a certain village, where I spent my summers as a child. Every day I wonder how to make it possible because I'm not a driver and my job is not from home. I liked this city in the 90's when it was more empty. Now it's kind of crazy - dirt, terrible stress, I'm nervous about the number of people. I agree with everything you say. My best memories are from the village.
14 kealiamae answered
From the author. The discussion took place. I also hear some well-founded criticisms of my thesis and I accept them, but in defense I would say that there are wonderful small towns in the country. They are located far from factories, have at least 2 banks, 3 pharmacies, an emergency center or clinic, several restaurants, hotels and even car repair shops and large stores. So it is not necessary to describe the most miserable village and compare it with our capital. It is normal that no city can and cannot compete with Sofia in anything. Sofia offers the best that Bulgaria has to offer. But there are also small towns with basic amenities and low crime.
15 Sammy_Brooks answered
1 see Broadway Rhythm movie. There they turned the barn into a theater and a cabaret where they started performing music. There is a place for culture there as well.
16 Ivy_Skies answered
To number 10: I don't know what village you lived in, but I can tell you about mine - it's close to two dams and a river; there is a community center and a primary school; there is sewerage, the streets are asphalted; there are shops; in which there is almost everything, there is intercity transport in about 2 hours, there is a monastery and a church. In general, the village is large and has many amenities. I guess; that you are giving an example of some remote and remote village or villa area. And yes - the repair of the house is much more expensive, but the house is not 30 square meters, like the mass apartments in Sofia; which are sold for 70-80000 euros. It is one thing to live in a house - 150 square meters with its own garage and yard; it's another to live in a two-room apartment. Heating also depends a lot on the location and size of the house - already many houses are heated with gas, and others through air conditioners and electric underfloor heating. In Sofia, there are also many people who heat with solid fuel - starting from the suburbs - Nadezhda; Friendship; Redoubt; Orlandovtsi, and we reach Dragalevtsi, Boyana, Knyazhevo and the villages next to Sofia - Buhovo, Kremikovtsi, Podgumer; Bozhurishte, etc .; not to mention Krasna Polyana and the Faculty. For me, it's all a matter of choice - I would choose to live in a house, although at the moment I have to live in an apartment. It is one thing to open your window and let fresh air in and the birds sing; it's different to hear the horns, the buses and come in, eat the dust outside. It is one thing to live in a house with 4-5 bedrooms, it is another to have to sleep, for example in the living room on the couch, because there is no room - 4-5 people live in the apartments (parents with children, sometimes with addition grandparents; and some other relatives). It's different to go out in the yard and fill your pool in the summer; and not to go to a pool used by 150 people today, who came in sweaty, dropped out and I don't know what else. It's one thing to go to the park, which is crowded over the weekend - children, mothers with strollers, retirees, cyclists, etc., it's another to go for a walk in the woods. For me, the only inconvenience is the work - there are not enough good jobs and you have to travel, which costs a lot of time and money. For the rest, you can always "jump" to the big city for a show, movie or event. it's different to go for a walk in the woods. For me, the only inconvenience is the work - there are not enough good jobs and you have to travel, which costs a lot of time and money. For the rest, you can always "jump" to the big city for a show, movie or event. it's different to go for a walk in the woods. For me, the only inconvenience is the work - there are not enough good jobs and you have to travel, which costs a lot of time and money. For the rest, you can always "jump" to the big city for a show, movie or event.
17 anysi answered
Village or small town - depends on which. I liked the villages and towns in the Netherlands - cows, idyll, riding a bike in the middle of the field ... but the climate. In our country, unfortunately, most villages have poor infrastructure. I like Zhelyava, Passarel, the town of Septemvri, Sadovo.
18 chubby_lollypop answered
"To number 10: I don't know what village you lived in, but I can tell you about mine - it is close to two dams and a river; there is a community center and a primary school; there is a sewerage system" Only 3.2% of Bulgarian villages have sewerage. True, the article is from 6 years ago, but hardly for 6 years. the percentage has risen dramatically. Obviously, your village is among the richest Bulgarian villages. Even in 60% of cities, there are still septic tanks, incl. and in big cities like Ruse for example. There, whole neighborhoods like Sredna Kula have no sewerage and people have pits and a truck comes periodically, which loads the shit and transports them. And if there are schools, they are not elite and your child will not learn who knows what in them to be adequately prepared for elite high schools without additional private education.
19 anka_kamil3236 answered
I live near Sofia, 12 km from the Ring Road to Stara Planina. A plot of 1 decare costs at least 25,000 E. A house almost a pigsty costs 60000 E. We bought a plot of 2.5 decares 10 years ago for 24000 E. The construction of a modern house 2 floors total 340 sq.m with heating, pellet boiler, storage rooms, well, garage, afforestation with fruit and ornamental trees, furniture 120,000 E. We have not bought household appliances, bedroom, living room and household furniture. 5 years well, then the masters become regular visitors, the yard wants maintenance. Medical service NO, cultural, sports entertainment NO, the two together, the Horemag type, Mramor store or Novi Iskar. Sofia is an hour away from my husband's job, I am retired. Transport wants you to have a car, always! The company? If friends of yours come to sleep with you to lie down, young people almost no or uneducated drunks and smelly gossip. There is clean air, there are no eco-products, if you produce, you only have to do that and sell. You buy a Toyota Tundra with an extra cab, snorkel, boom, snowplow and you don't care about the roads. Cadillac Escalade or Ford 150 s too. Germany, Luxembourg? The villages are clean, roads, all amenities. Feel the air? No, you have to pay tax on home production. And the bourgeoisie is up to the neck. Nowhere do you ever become your own, even if you are married to a local. all amenities. Feel the air? No, you have to pay tax on home production. And the bourgeoisie is up to the neck. Nowhere do you ever become your own, even if you are married to a local. all amenities. Feel the air? No, you have to pay tax on home production. And the bourgeoisie is up to the neck. Nowhere do you ever become your own, even if you are married to a local.
20 arabeunido answered
From village to village there is a difference, there are many large and prosperous villages. To Ardino, if you see what kind of houses they have - they are not houses, but palaces, in some places. They go to work abroad, collect enough to renew and return here.
21 cinergy1st answered
People who do not live in the countryside are bored and cannot be held responsible. They are looking for an excuse for everything that was difficult. They also want to be surrounded by luxury, which in the countryside you have to work for yourself, however. A septic tank is dug in 2 days. 500 sq.m. potatoes are planted for 3 hours. The roof is changed once in a lifetime. People, you are unreal! And most of you don't even know where the Sofia Opera is. Stara Zagora is 40 minutes away from me, by car. If I live in Druzhba and I want to go to the center of Sofia for a theater, will it take me that long? As for the child killed by a truck. Don't take precedent for granted. Or maybe in Sofia the chance of having your child hit is less? All my life I have never heard of a collided person, not only in the village, even in the municipality. Look, I've seen a lot of things in Sofia. I had an incredibly happy childhood! Yes, I didn't sign up for sports (although there were a lot of footballers from my sets), but we played outside until 10 pm, on meadows and in woods, running and running free. As my child grows up, I would never push him into the city, where from sitting, he will even get musculoskeletal disorders. And you are talking about absolute nonsense about the air. Do you really compare CO2 from 60 stoves with the whole Mendelian table of Sofia? You all say "work", and? What if you work? What is your salary for? Buy two Kaufland salamis made from bones and three jars of lutenitsa from starch? Then pour a hundred cubic meters of money to improve your health, if at all possible. You are still blind, unrestrained. You shout in black and white, but he will teach you life. I remember the '90s when the whole of Bulgaria was miserable and we lined up for oil and sugar, how our citizens envied us for eating steaks and they were starving. I hope this time does not come again ....
22 christina_jacobs answered
22, and I lived in a village in the 90s, but I did not eat steaks. Don't take it personally if you swear - both have advantages and disadvantages.
23 SlaveAllison answered
"And most of you don't even know where the Sofia Opera is." Are you saying this in order to discredit the commenters here by showing them in the light of ignorant and uneducated people who cannot truly appreciate the valuable arts, or are you just making random assumptions?
24 JolieBrigide answered
I have been living in a village for 10 years, it is a rural town. Until then, I lived in the neighboring medium-sized city in a block. I have always preferred the village. Calmer in terms of traffic and number of people, but in terms of silence, author, I would not say. Summer is especially a horror, you have opened everywhere and the ground-motorcycles, saws, mowers. There are not many neighbors around us. The village is maintained, there are several hotels, 3 playgrounds, but no pharmacy and ATM. Garbage is collected from each house once a month. Winter is a big fan here and if it is combined with snow you can sometimes leave my house. Only the main street is being cleaned because of the bus. However, I prefer there, you have a yard, there is a place to go out and the child can play in peace all day and you, by the way, do something. In the evening you can hear only the crickets and the whisper of the leaves. There are drawbacks, but everyone has different criteria. We travel to the city for work and kindergarten, but it is close. You always have a parking space, but for us the most important idea is greater peace and freedom. Believe it or not, we don't even lock the front door in the evening, only the front door. I was shocked to find out when I moved there.
25 gravityfolz answered
I am number 20 22 Is the roof repaired once in a lifetime? Seriously? My roof is tiled, not bitumen or stone, we didn't have enough money for it. It is maintained annually, hail falls, birds shrink nests, wasps, wild bees. Were we lazy? Why produce, I want to buy, I still work from home, I am a translator and I earn enough for everything around 3 to 5000 E per month. I do not want to take care of animals, I have no qualifications and desire. I want my yard to smell of flowers, not a pigsty and chickens. I fenced the plot with a thick hedge of Japanese quinces, acacias, climbing roses, rose hips and hawthorn. 2.5 meters thick green wall. There is peace, but no friends. Therefore, in the spring I will sell the house and move to Novi Han to build a gated complex with the amenities of the city and the benefits of fresh air. Everyone decides for himself.
26 paulina_andrade answered
From the author. Up to 22. I like your description. If we look at the general picture, city life gives a lot, but also takes a lot more. The city gives you an education if you take advantage, social contacts and a better paid job are not in dispute. But the city takes away the things you described very well. You work, you work, and you end up breathing dirty air, and your immobility is guaranteed unless you go to the gym. I know a lot of old people. Believe me, the grandmothers in the village are a hundred times happier and freer than the grandmothers imprisoned in the panel complexes. However, it is natural for young people to flock to the city. After all, there is an active life and this cannot be disputed. In general, in conclusion, a person must very clearly define his priorities in life. I can only say
27 octaviotx answered
24, man, there is no need to enter into a dialogue with various pretentious people, because you will only make them happy to keep washing. I guarantee that most of the regular visitors of the Sofia Opera would certainly not be inclined .. to slaughter pigs;) Thanks to my parents I had the opportunity to spend my childhood in a typical urban environment and in the countryside. It is true that in the village the children had great freedom in the 90s. I and the other city kids who came for the holidays didn't even have it! night hour. My only bad memory from the village is related to a pig's knees. A friend of mine was once caught by her grandfather and several other elderly men slaughtering a pig in our presence ... just try to imagine how traumatic this is for 2 girls-children.
28 seamen78 answered
"People who don't live in the countryside are lazy and can't take responsibility. They're looking for an excuse for everything that was difficult. They also want to be surrounded by luxury that you have to work for yourself in the countryside, however." I can't ... the screaming villager thinks that if we don't play with the magnifying glass, we are lazy and we don't get up ...
29 bones answered
The village is not good for small children. Can you fool this child by running on grass and woods? Will he want a puppet theater, a zoo, a cinema? Isn't he going to want a pastry shop, a fair? Will he want to play with other children? Wouldn't he want to celebrate his birthday somewhere and invite his children? Where does the cake come from? You can't fool children with air and grass. Separately, that education is not up to standard and will blunt. What if he gets sick? Complexity is spreading in the small towns. Many people kill complexes by living in a small town. Almost all the people I know from small towns are special. They consider it normal that everyone knows each other and knows everything about their neighbors. People are more special.
30 baileylayne answered
A huge disadvantage is also that there are no jobs. You need a constant trip outside the village for life. And when it snows, the roads to small towns and villages are always the dirtiest.
31 katikajim answered
I recently read a story about a boy who doesn't like his hometown for some reason, and now I'm getting involved with his arguments. The Bulgarian village is far light years from the German or Austrian one, for example. Poverty, ordinary people are everywhere else - not only in the countryside or in the city, lack of good education and health care (the latter is also missing everywhere). Well, I can't doom my child to travel every day on flights, etc. or to endure a long journey to ride it, to be isolated from social environment and activities, clubs just because in the countryside I think it is better and more environmentally friendly. You will be surprised, but the children want the city. My personal choice is not to want to watch animals, because firstly my work takes a lot of time, I'm not lazy otherwise, secondly my fiancé and I are vegetarians and I don't see the point. As for the famous eco products, being in the countryside does not mean having a garden and animals. I just don't want to. I prefer to train sports, relax, do not burden me extra or play a computer game. I say it without weighing it on me. In the small rural town, on the other hand, the chalga roams, everyone knows each other. I prefer more people and more choices for friends than anyone knowing my family up to the 9th generation. I'm from Vratsa by the way, so I can judge, but it's not that small. The capital also has its disadvantages, but here it happened that I settled down and I am happy. Why do you all think we live miserably here? How do you know that I have not made a career in which I am my own boss and I can afford a lot without showing off? I do not live in a box, nor do I miserable. I wonder why you did not say anything about cities like Plovdiv and Varna, they are not the capital, but they are big and settled. For me personally, Plovdiv is a dream city and if I could, I would settle there. Jen
32 Crush_on_Me answered
Until 23 It's a troll. All the stupid "unreal", and he, the strong powerful peasant, who digs special pits, plants potatoes and watches pigs, was a big deal. He even keeps track of who worked what and what his health was. Not that half of the villages are not fat drunks, who fall 50 years old from so much frying onions and drinking 2 liters of brandy a day, but anyway. He achieved a great achievement, and he says that it was easy.
33 keshav answered
I have relatives in the village, but there is a big difference from village to village. My relatives live in a village 5 km. from the city, which is quite nice. They made a good road for them, even a bicycle road to the city. In the village itself, fat businessmen have opened taverns and hotels, so it is not empty and there is no crime. But it's one thing to hit guests, it's another to work for the house itself and the land you have. I visit them once a year. I eat natural vegetables, drink homemade brandy, enjoy the silence in no time, but I am a guest-cook. But if I have to take care of all this, I can hardly do it. Gardening, digging, fertilizing, caring for animals, constant care for the home - it is clear that having a house is constantly busy. In general, the person in the village gets up at 5 in the morning and takes care of what he has every day. I admit I'm an urban man, grew up in a block and never cared about these things. If they let me in the village, I won't even know how to plant a tomato. Everyone who sees a nice house with a yard and a rich garden wants such a thing, but does not see the other side of the coin - the mole's work.
34 amazongoddess answered
23 I swear no one. And, yes, in the village we watched pigs and they always hung at least 4 legs on the terrace. 24. Metaphor. I say that because of all those who speak about the culture in the city, they actually lead a monotonous life, from work at home. In 20 years of living in Sofia I have gone to the cinema 15 times, to the theater 4 times, and never to the opera. For museum day, I've always been busy. With what? Well with work, with what else. Like most newcomers from the countryside ... The reason for urbanization is not cultural life, but social status. Admit it at last. Say: "It's different to sit on Vitoshka in the cafes and watch the passers-by. I'm a peasant, just like I watch them from the square in the village." Sofia already looks like a big village anyway. The people fled, the city was deserted. It's better in the countryside. From but. 22
35 vill_belly answered
Up to 37 Hypocrisy at max. Great praise to the village, then you lived in Sofia for 29 years ... Decide what is the last thing! And your views on "culture," are too strange.
36 bcolson_35 answered
32, I spent 6 months in the village every year - there were children, there is also a place to buy a cake, and you don't fool the child with grass, etc. In the countryside it is best to play. I can't understand your logic.
37 toy_booy answered
Fog, black ice on the road, ice in the yard. The bakery works, I can't go buy bread. There is a vent in the boiler room, where the owl, which lives next to the cumin, came together. I let her in. We do not miss a new film, theatrical performance, exhibition, we are regularly at concerts. Not at the opera, we don't like it, neither does the chalga. Why should I have 4 legs on the terrace and not in the freezer a few packs of neso? Aren't they spoiling? Rural grandmothers my age are massively fat and semi-mobile or withered and hunched over, ulcers, with osteoporosis, high blood pressure, joint degeneration and a whole host of diseases. Unclean, toothless, mouthless. They do not drive, several hedgehogs stand in front of their houses, there is no way to reach the neighboring village to the store. There is no work on site, the suburban bus is 40 to 80 minutes away. If I travel somewhere in the morning, I pick up young people, not the unemployed. The living environment is disgusting, everyone creates the conditions himself, but you take on the everyday life for everything financially and organizationally. The maintenance masters enter the home and the yard and when they see the English yard the price jumps 100%.
38 jeenroose29 answered
37 to 38. I'm not a hypocrite at all. I just give an objective opinion about the capital and the village, because I have lived in both places for decades. I would be a hypocrite if I said good things about the village, and I liked the capital. Well no, I don't like it and everyone who grew up in the countryside is in my opinion. Often, however, because of this empty work, they continue to crowd the cities. For a long time now I have been able to afford to be in the countryside, so that I have a good income, but don't think of me. I am sincerely sorry for the citizens of Sofia who were born there and have no real basis for comparison.
39 santyflorez answered
I'm from Varna! There are also villages with a railway connection - while I was studying, I traveled every day with the passenger train VARNA-SHUMEN! There are many suburban villages - Topoli, Ezerovo, Strashimirovo, Razdelna, Trastikovo and others! Why didn't anyone mention the railway connection with the villages - the ticket to the city costs pennies, but with a discount card or a pension decision, there are also subscription cards that are issued for travel only in a certain area and the trip is much cheaper for the month! This is very convenient for students and workers! For everyone else working in the BDZ system, they travel only with their business cards! As for crime, not all villages have it, because in some areas gypsies practically do not live and people are calm! The biggest crime is in the Northwest, we do not have it in the Northeast! And for the neighbors, a lot depends on what they are - whether they are good or bad!
40 Abusement answered
What you say applies abroad. It is rare in Bulgaria. I live in Silistra (definitely a small town) and I can say that the pros are more about the short distances. Otherwise, there are beatings and rapes, clean air, the last thing is to be clean, nature is very polluted, the people he described as sincere and good are very difficult to meet (most are garbage and you have to meet them often because the city is small) , recently in the city there is a lot of traffic, and the streets are narrow and there are often accidents, the food is not fresh and clean (besides, in the last 2-3 years in Silistra everything has become incredibly expensive, I travel to other cities such a miracle I have seen). Otherwise, the other disadvantages are clear. There is no possibility for realization, education, the city is depopulated and only pensioners remain, young people find it difficult to find someone to communicate with, no cultural, sports events, it is difficult to find something to fill free time, very poor infrastructure, high unemployment, low income, lack of health care, good education and many other things, without which nowadays it is almost impossible. :)
41 tutimotooo answered
By 37, museums are open year-round and not just on Museum Night. If you have no money either in the village or in Sofia, you will be fine. A miserable apartment in the city or a miserable country house, no thanks. For me, a big disadvantage of a village is malice. Sofia is hated, Vratsa is hated by Montana, the neighbors are hated, the gypsies hate the Bulgarians, the Bulgarians hate the gypsies, they hate the peasants, they hate the citizens, some hate supporters of the coat of arms, others hate children, we hate the rich, we hate the poor, we hate tskar and others. Women hate each other, we hate our relatives, we hate our mother-in-law and mother-in-law, we hate our wife's / husband's family. We hate other people's opinions and we hate people who have different opinions. You have to hate, but first you have to argue and fight. A cultural theme becomes an occasion for insults. I do not see that village life has affected people positively. And in this discussion it becomes clear how nervous you are. Somehow calmness and fresh air have not made you calm personalities. These same personalities are on the panels. Misery makes people evil. Rudeness lifts your self-esteem. Not to mention that you ruined nature in the villages, where you are so proud to be from a village and hate the citizens. Why are your villages dirty and your yards miserable?
42 aussiestud1980 answered
Provincialists, 22 told you very accurately, but it does not take you to hear what the real reason is to come to Sofia, carrying the village with you, it will never come out of you! He is very right, a citizen of Sofia tells you that! And you come only and only to be "from Sofia" - you live like cattle, you give yourself half your salary for rents, you do whatever you can, just to be here, right?
43 itsparadise22 answered
31, you're screaming like a peasant! Look at your writing! In the countryside, people are naturally intelligent, if someone meets you on the road, they will definitely greet you. In the city you only meet temeruti, is this the big plus? There are people for every place, the English and other Westerners, why don't they come to live in the cities, but choose only pretty villages, and have they screamed? The best thing about the village is that you won't meet idiots there! But that was it, now the state has turned its back on the villages and the gypsies have invaded them like Moroccan locusts, they ruin everything, so people are fleeing the villages.
44 lana_lavender answered
№37 described it most accurately - "I admit that I am a city man, I grew up in a block and I never took care of these things. If they let me go to the village, I will not even know how to plant a tomato. Everyone when he sees a nice house with a yard and a rich garden, he wants such a thing, but he does not see the other side of the coin - the mole's work. "! There is nothing to add, either you become a village or you don't, that's what life shows. Anyone who has watched The Farm has seen what the people of the village are capable of, and those who have lived in the city and stick their noses out. A peasant crushed them, made those arrogant citizens laugh, even those who lived in the "West". Come on, stop stupid arguments, everyone has dignity and chooses how he wants to live!
45 johnboozman answered
Not in the village. It happens in a small town. I say it from personal experience.
46 madbides answered
Those who grew up in a village like villages and small towns. Anyone who grew up in a big city or Sofia cannot spend a week in a village. For the rest it is a matter of 2 things - finding a job / money and a woman / man. If there are both, the small town is not a big drama. If they are not there, it still seems to him that in Sofia is the big turbulent life he misses.
47 thatsmzpeacock2u answered
How you jumped on him! He touched you on the sick topic: "I want to be from Sofia too", didn't I? ;) Numbers 22 and 37 told you very accurately, this person is welcome in Sofia and always will be. Why? Because, unlike you, pro-socialists, he is not impudent and does not bend his soul, he does not draw water from 9 wells with insane arguments why he came to Sofia. He seems to be a pure man. And you come to Sofia because you have ruined your native places, without realizing that the villagers there are you and you carry it with you. And at the age of 22, jump now, catch exactly how old he was, whether he was 29, what movie he went to - furious that you recognized yourself very accurately
48 sweet_dreams18 answered
I read it again: everything he wrote is the truth itself. To the last word. You are like that, you have been like that and you will stay like that! And you know what? This man will never be a peasant if he dies in that village, he has nothing to do with your thinking. And you will never, ever be a citizen of Sofia, if you want to get 5 ID cards and lie that you are from here, without realizing that we recognize you from 100 meters, in the back, and your speech shows even after 30 years . You are so pathetic that you don't even write where you are on Facebook, but you must write that you are in Sofia, where you are in Sofia, photos in Sofia ... Sofia Sofia Sofia :) You live like rats, if only you were here, and this one doesn't suffer from complexes and looks after his life, that's the difference between you
49 ameliameli1777 answered
And I'm still 22, 37. Since I have a lot of free time (between changing the roof and digging the pit) I get involved in the topic again :) Look, real life in the village is not complicated at all. For example, my father taught me to sow corn and water potatoes at the age of seven. My first job was at 13, where I was making cabbage for a local farmer. I still remember going to the kingfu to dig the corn. I'm used to it and that's how I was brought up. I understand that some of you are dentists or crane operators in the city. There is no way to go to the village. There is no way for those who have left the village to RETURN there as well, because they still ran away from the hoe - maybe their parents forced them to stay in the village to dig. But! At the moment I am responsible in our yard (my parents are old) and after 20 meaningless years in Sofia, it is already an incredible pleasure for me to eat the lettuce I have sown. Find the tale of the cabbage of the Roman emperor Diocletian, find out what I mean. When you enjoy your work and do it responsibly, you even like the hoe. When someone rapes you, it doesn't happen. By the same logic, I could never become a programmer, I pushed myself all my life and in the end programming resisted me. ----- 45, I've toured the museums. I was just talking metaphor again. Because it's very easy to go to a museum on Museum Night and yet people don't (and I haven't visited them tonight, but separately) Otherwise you're right about the hatred. She has it. But that doesn't mean she's not in town. You just "live" there locked in your apartments, running away from her. Just like westerners are hypocrites and they smile at you, but they do not allow anyone near them Yes, in the countryside it is difficult, because there is no way to escape from people, but it is better to live with people with whom you have sincere feelings (if you will and hate) than to whine alone in hypocrisy. I'm telling you that we actually love each other, it's just that you run away from each other in the city and you don't understand it. You are afraid to bond in a relationship. Which is why you stay childless and get married (because you should) at 35. Love and hate come from the same place. You can't do just one. That's why you break up at the first quarrel. ----- * Someone here said that he preferred the meat in the freezer to the thigh on the terrace. You serious??? Hahaha ** Another said that the child wanted a puppet theater, a cinema, a pastry shop, etc. When I was little I went to the community center and picked up books from the library. T. is the little child wants this, which you teach him to want. I read Vinetu, Maine Reed and Victor Hugo. We then played Indians in the woods, and it never crossed my mind about the Disney launderers. Besides, as I already said, the Puppet Theater and the cinema in Stara Zagora are 40 minutes away. Our whole country is one can of gasoline. I don't think that's a serious factor. You are only right about one thing. There are no other children, yes, I agree here. Not that there aren't, they just aren't as many as they used to be. This is sad indeed. they just aren't as many as they used to be. This is sad indeed. they just aren't as many as they used to be. This is sad indeed.
50 _imyour_joy answered
There are no children in the village because there are no young people. The population is mainly of aging people. Have you passed a Bulgarian village to see what they look like, how depressing everything is, how gray? And you want your children to grow up there, just because there was a place to run, although in many villages I have not seen playgrounds and any entertainment. You can't catch the attention of today's children with grass, air and running. Many children from an early age have talents, go to ballet, karate, train something. Bulgarian villages are not as well developed as those abroad, where they have shops, banks - you can not understand that it is a village. Someone pointed out above that it was very nice to know each other. Well, it's not. There's no point in the whole town or village knowing where I am, who I'm going with. No sense in telling you now - I don't wanna ruin the suprise. In a medium-sized city, you can't know everyone, that even if you know the details of their lives. Just live gossip. I knew girls from small towns who were there like celebrities, the most beautiful almost. They copied their clothes, etc. But these same girls, when female students came to my city, which is big enough, realized that there are a million better girls and no one will copy and envy them. It was very funny to me then what pretensions they had come up with. It's just that the small town seems to complex people and when they find themselves in a big city, they try to stand out. that there are a million better girls and no one will copy and envy them. It was very funny to me then what pretensions they had come up with. It's just that the small town seems to complex people and when they find themselves in a big city, they try to stand out. that there are a million better girls and no one will copy and envy them. It was very funny to me then what pretensions they had come up with. It's just that the small town seems to complex people and when they find themselves in a big city, they try to stand out.
1 breizh35bb answered
Not only do they not give you a job. They give you nothing but these seven things, some of which are of dubious value. Did you slaughter an animal? Eco place, huh? Did you run over an animal, did you scratch it? It does not enter the plate from the barn. The children will grow up, they don't have a language course, either sports or music, dancing, whatever draws them there. No cultural events, do not know what a circus, theater, art. And there is no guarantee that people are sincere and good. They are often hypocrites. Because they meet 100 times a day, they have to make nice eyes. However, poverty embitters them and leads them into domestic alcoholism. You want it to be only about finances, but it's not. The truth is that everyone feels good somewhere and there is no universal recipe for happiness.