Imagineer2Be
Mouseketeer
- Joined
- Jul 25, 2010
- Messages
- 113
So it looks like I will be moving from NJ to Texas. Any thoughts on packing/ driving that far/ culture shock? How do TX people get to Disney (drive v.s. fly)?
Thanks!!
Thanks!!
Gumbo4x4 said:What part? It's a big placeI'll say this, it wouldn't be my first choice of places to live, BUT I find Texas folks second only to Tennessee in terms of friendliness, and tops anywhere in terms of driving courtesy.
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We moved from MI to TX 4 years ago. It was a pretty big culture shock for me. TX is very conservative and in my experience here, I have found very little religious tolerance and acceptance. Again, that's just my experience, so it may not reflect TX as a whole. But after living in very liberal Metro Detroit/Ann Arbor for over 10 years, I was not prepared for such conservative views.
Texans do love their state and have a lot of pride. It's hard for the people I've met who are born and bred Texans to believe that TX isn't the best place ever to live, that any state could even compare. Getting used to the weather was a challenge at first, but it's nice in the winter when everyone up north is freezing and we have 60 degrees down here.
We live in the Houston area and drive to Disney. The drive is shorter than the one we had in MI.
All in all, I don't mind living here, but it is very, very different from living up north. Although it has been entertaining to learn how TX sees the rest of the nation, particularly the "yankees" from up north where it's always cold and hardly ever warm. LOL

Just be prepared to floor it in Dallas!I live in a small town south of Houston, for the last 6 yrs, and the only thing I would disagree with is courteous drivers. I can count on one hand how many times someone has returned my friendly wave to merge into traffic ahead of me. Others are loathe to make room for me to merge. And, I regularly see a car cross 4 lanes in 5 seconds in order to exit! If you aren't going at least 70 mph, you are a hazard.
I wasn't comfortable driving in Houston for a long time!Just be prepared to floor it in Dallas!
The biggest negative I have is the lack of really good pizza. I can work around the conservative leanings. Also, the people I've come to know are very kind and generous.
We moved from MI to TX 4 years ago. It was a pretty big culture shock for me. TX is very conservative and in my experience here, I have found very little religious tolerance and acceptance. Again, that's just my experience, so it may not reflect TX as a whole. But after living in very liberal Metro Detroit/Ann Arbor for over 10 years, I was not prepared for such conservative views.
Texans do love their state and have a lot of pride. It's hard for the people I've met who are born and bred Texans to believe that TX isn't the best place ever to live, that any state could even compare. Getting used to the weather was a challenge at first, but it's nice in the winter when everyone up north is freezing and we have 60 degrees down here.
We live in the Houston area and drive to Disney. The drive is shorter than the one we had in MI.
All in all, I don't mind living here, but it is very, very different from living up north. Although it has been entertaining to learn how TX sees the rest of the nation, particularly the "yankees" from up north where it's always cold and hardly ever warm. LOL
As a sixth generation Texan and a member of the Sons of the Republic of Texas, Welcome!
It's hot, it's conservative, it's no really all that bad, I promise. We are raised to open doors for Ladies and the elderly, we say please, thank you, yes mame and no mame. We mean no disrespect by it, it's how we were raised. We are fiercely proud of our state but also welcome all who come to it. A bumper sticker seen often here is I wasn't born in Texas, but I got here as fast as I could.
We also say Howdy a lot, usually an influence of one of our larger Universities, Texas A&M. A&M used to mean Agriculter and Mechanics but our State Legislators in their infinite wisdom officially change it to just plain A&M. Everyone there says Howdy. It is arguably the most conservative college in the nation. They have a pretty good football team there to. Sorry if you don't like football, but most here do. The State Championship games are played in Cowboy Stadium and draw around 50,000 plus fans. For $12 it's a great way to see Jerryworld on the cheap. Games are usually the week before Christmas.
We are much more welcoming than most think and while conservative we do have some more liberal areas, Austin being the most notible. There is a lot of History to be found here so enjoy it. Weekend trips to San Antonio, Austin, Houston from Fort Worth are a great way to do it.
Houston to Orlando is right around 16 hours by car with Pensicola being about the midway point and a lot of people usually fly (we do) but have driven it several times. From Houston where I live driving to California when I reach El Paso I am more than halfway there. It's a big state.
I am a Texan through and through and can't really fully explain the way I feel about it. I don't want to ever leave and own property that has been in my family since 1836. We have a family cemetary that dates to 1838 and my parents are buried there and it is where I will be buried.
So once again Welcome and I hope your time spent here is enjoyable and profitable.

