Miserable in Rain-Soaked Seattle, and Waiting for the Chill to Thaw
- Share via
Thank you for the wonderfully written and well-documented story on Seattle (“The Decline and Fall of Seattle,” by Kim Murphy, Aug. 4). As a former Seattleite who had to move to find work, I agree with much of what was described. I have seen Seattle grow, kicking and screaming, into the world of large cities (while still wanting that small-town mentality) and have seen the general attitude go from friendly to downright sultry. Many times while walking down the street, I would nod at others with a smile and get nothing in return. People would look straight ahead, as if I didn’t exist. Seattle has become cold, frigid and, in the words of one friend, prudish on many levels.
Seattle is in a paradox. It wants to be the city it was in the 1960s, yet it also wants to be the city of today--two conflicting ideals that don’t necessarily mix. Its pollution and traffic are just two glaring negatives to deal with. It is a city of a lot of meetings and no action, and it has been so for as long as I can remember.
John Palmer
Culver City
*
My wife and I lived in Seattle for 2 1/2 years during the decline before moving to Los Angeles. Murphy’s cover story was quite accurate. Thank you for printing it and not flinching from the truth. It paints a true, if depressing, portrait of the city.
Harry Lin
Via the Internet
*
As a ‘90s resident of Seattle, I think Murphy built an interesting case for why it has become less desirable to migrate there. But she didn’t focus on the real problem: about 150 days of rain a year! I had to put my Orange County-native wife on suicide watch the first year we were married--the winter of ‘98-’99--when rain fell in the Puget Sound region for 90-plus consecutive days.
Lance Paine
Los Angeles
Sign up for The Wild
We’ll help you find the best places to hike, bike and run, as well as the perfect silent spots for meditation and yoga.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.