Live In London -
I’ve been a Londoner for [X years] now, and people still ask me: “Do you actually like living there?” Not just visiting — living . The kind where you carry an umbrella that breaks after three uses, wait for a delayed Night Tube, and pay £6.20 for a flat white you’ll clutch like a lifeline.
Let me break it down — the romance, the reality, and the reason I stay. You think you know patience until you’re sandwiched between a stranger’s backpack and a pole on the Northern Line at 8:47 AM. The tube is sweaty, loud, and unpredictable. But then — sometimes — you emerge from the station, look up, and see St Paul’s glowing in the golden hour light. And for a second, you forget you’ve just paid £4 to stand in someone’s armpit. live in london
But here’s the trade-off: you’re ten minutes from world-class galleries, parks that feel like countryside, and pubs older than your entire home country. You’re not just paying for square footage. You’re paying for proximity to possibility . London can be intensely lonely. Seven million people rushing past you, and you can go days without a real conversation. Sunday afternoons in winter hit different — in a quiet, grey, “what am I doing here” kind of way. I’ve been a Londoner for [X years] now,
Buy a good coat. Layers are everything. And never trust a clear morning forecast. Because every day feels like a film. Because I’ve had conversations on night buses that I still think about years later. Because I can see a world-class exhibition, eat food from three continents, and hear live jazz — all before 9 PM on a Tuesday. You think you know patience until you’re sandwiched
So yes. I like living here. I love it, even. Just don’t ask me about my rent.