When I was about 14 years old, my family moved to a small city with a population of about 12,000 people. I thought we had moved to the end of the world.
I hated Jasper, Ala., for several years and I chafed at feeling stuck there. I had lived in bigger cities before that, places such as Birmingham, Atlanta, Washington, Pensacola and some smaller cities. Not huge places, but big enough that Jasper felt like a greasy spot on an old paper map.
I eventually came to appreciate some things about the city, but it was always a love/hate relationship. By the time I left college for the last time, I left Jasper behind fore good. I soon had no family there, so my only ties were memories of the early triumphs and pains of a teen-ager.
Other than a couple of years when I worked for a newspaper chain that transferred me to two small towns briefly, I’ve been back in Birmingham ever since. I swore I’d never live in a small city again, but I’m rethinking that lately.
In fact, I’d say that if you’re not already giving serious thought to leaving bigger metro areas behind, you’re not thinking very clearly.

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Hospital’s five-year fight to move shows health care isn’t free market
Our greatest apparent strengths frequently lead to our downfall
A sincere apology can bring color back when the world looks gray
FRIDAY FUNNIES
Was life planned before birth? What did you come here to learn?
The world becomes magical when the right person says, ‘I love you’