I’m moving from a smaller beach town in California to London in a month as an American. Any tips?

30, no kids and a wife. Felt like life was short, so we found jobs and bought a plane ticket.

You'll love it. It will change your life in an amazing way.

Tips? Nothing concrete. Be open. Everything will change; let it. What you thought is true and indisputable will be called into question; let it. Find new truths. Bruce Lee said, "Be water." Be water. Allow it to change you and it will, permanently, in the best way possible.

When I was 26, I moved from California to Europe and never looked back. Easily one of the best decisions of my life. Have fun. You won't regret it.

Oh and when they ask you, "Who do you support?" (and they will!) it means which football (soccer) team do you back, and the answer is Liverpool.

P.S. If you have any concrete questions, my email is in my profile.

Interesting that you moved from California but do not comment about the London sun at all, though to be fair, you said you yourself moved to Europe and not the UK.

A friend from SoCal who moved to London for a few years couldn't really handle sky getting dark around 3-4 in the afternoon in the winter, and she would say it was almost impossible for her not to get depressed during those times. So just something to be prepared for.

On the bright side though, London, as with many German cities, has short cheap direct flights to many sun bleached cities and beach destinations in Europe so I would suggest making ample use of them if you can. Being in the US afterwards, one realizes there is no location in the mainland US that can compete with the Mediterranean with respect to actually being an inviting body of water to swim in (non mainland Hawaii is obviously an exception).

And May and June in London itself I often find especially beautiful as well.

> it means which football (soccer) team do you back, and the answer is Liverpool.

This is the way.

I never understood and would like to know more on why people from London or other areas that are not Liverpool and have no connections to Liverpool whatsoever cheer for Liverpool team. I'm kind of local patriot and always cheer for my local club.

Because with Liverpool you will never walk alone ;)

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Take a day-long walking tour with Fabian. He’s a German expat who is a city plannner in london. Besides being a super-nice guy, his tour offers a view of some of london’s most interesting neighborhoods. Not a tourist’s view. Buy him a beer and tell him Cal sent you. https://www.airbnb.com/slink/IH7SGUyq

The best things to see in the area are outside London: Cambridge/Oxford, the Chilterns...

Places to live if you have a comfortable budget : Clapham is popular with young professionals. Hackney is popular with hipsters. Hampstead if you want to live somewhere nice.

Good luck!

If you like walking try and walk around the centre as much as possible (without using phone mapping ideally), you'll realise it's quite small really and get to know the place. Take some time to experience the history, art galleries, theatre etc I wish I'd done more of that now I live in the provinces.

Take time to see different parts of the UK, although I loved living in London for 2 years and visit a lot I way prefer other parts of the UK and now a lot of people live remotely it's practical to live in the midlands for example and go there for work once a week maybe.

Take regular trips to Europe by plane, train or car. It's cheap and doable for a weekend. There is a lot of variety between countries/cities which I think you'd really appreciate.

'you'll realise it's quite small really and get to know the place.'

I've been here for ~10 years and feel like I'm familiar with a fairly narrow slice of it (mostly north/north east a little bit). A good mental model imo is to see it as a collection of smaller towns, each with distinct urban centres, that have grown into each other. This makes it endlessly interesting to me and I feel like I'm unlocking new parts of it all the time.

Whereabouts in London? I am at the south-western edge.

Make use of the huge amounts of green space that London has.

Make use of the nightlife in London.

Make use of the huge number of in-person events in London.

I am contactable via my profile if you'd like a more detailed discussion, and/or to meet for beer, coffee, etc.

Cambridge is worth a visit it's fairly close by train.

Can anyone tell me what London is like (from someone who lives/lived there)? Just overview of the life there, people, job market, etc.

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Any reason why you want to swap sunshine of California for the grey skies of London? :)

Jokes aside, but just curious what is bad about California that makes you want to go to London?