Once I read a joke: Beijing 4, 5 ring house sold, back home 4, 5, 6, 7 line city fast life. I know. I am envious. Repeatedly many times from the first-tier cities to non-first-tier city countries, first-tier city migration: Guangzhou to non-first-tier city migration: Shanwei, Jiangmen, Zhaoqing. The hukou is in Guangzhou, the work goes everywhere, and each trip takes at least two or three years of living in the area. If the kids want to study, they have to go back to Guangzhou. I hope this is my last migration.
First, let's talk about first-tier cities: I'm in the mountains of Guangzhou, about half an hour by car from Taiping, Zengcheng, Licheng, Baiyunzhonglu, Litan, Tianhe, Gangding (highway walking), 40 minutes by car, and above all by car. Also lived in the Tianhe district of the city village for two years. I don't like the hustle and bustle of a big city, and I find it inefficient, whether I'm driving or taking the bus, whether I'm in traffic or stuck in traffic. One of the benefits of a first-tier city for me is healthcare. General practitioners in hospitals in Tier 1 cities are far superior to those in non-Tier 1 cities, not to mention the medical equipment, and some tests have to be done in Tier 1 cities.
Talking about non-Tier 1 cities: Cities that are too remote, or more remote areas that I haven't traveled to, such as Deqing County in Zhaoqing and Taishan in Jiangmen, Guangdong. Zhaoqing is Duanzhou District, Jiangmen is Pengjiang District, and Shanwei is my hometown Hai Feng County. It is the core development area of these non-Tier 1 cities. Aside from serious treatment, general shopping, eating and playing are basically in line with Guangzhou, and like the roads are short. A motorcycle can solve the problem in 10 minutes. My favorite thing is to ride my bike on the green roads in the Duanzhou district, eat dirt for months in the parking lot of the Pengjiang district, and enjoy electricity on the side of the road ****. Let me summarize, tier 1 cities are better, public **** sanitation, public **** buses, metro, etc. but it seems very busy and there is always not enough time; non tier 1 cities are state of leisure.
And something else unpleasant to say: people in tier 1 cities are always motivated because if you don't move up, you're out of business, whereas people in non-tier 1 cities are really lazy. This is just a private matter. Maybe my circle is too small. After reading this you might feel like going to live in a non-tier 1 city, I suggest you don't, at least not if you don't have a certain level of income, because non-tier 1 cities have very low wages.