I agree that you should visit for a month or so to really get a feel for what you're getting into.
Many of us have come here thinking that we would find the place that we all think of when think of Canada - a place of vast beauty, nice people, and free of a lot of the social problems that plague the U.S. That image is shattered when we are faced with the realities of an out-of-control cost of living, low wages, unfriendly/unhelpful people, rampant incompetence, etc. The worst part about it is that Canadians themselves deny all these things; even the counselors and shrinks are blind to it and try to make it seem like it's all you.
Let me illustrate my point further about living here. I lived in Mississauga for a while. While living there my wife and I thought that our baby boy had accidentally ingested an adult-sized Tylenol capsule. As we raced to the hospital with our emergency lights on, honking for people to get out of the way, an astonishingly high number of vehicles refused to let us pass. As we neared the turning lane for the hospital, a car that was in the turning lane saw us and slowed to a crawl, refusing to move over. As we finally got through, my wife looked at the driver, who was laughing at us..
People need to think HARD before moving here. As with anything, there is perception and then there is reality. Don't buy into perception, buy into reality, and take it from someone who has spent many, many years in the US: the REALITY of living in the US (vs. the perception) is vastly superior to the REALITY of living in Canada.
Many of us have come here thinking that we would find the place that we all think of when think of Canada - a place of vast beauty, nice people, and free of a lot of the social problems that plague the U.S. That image is shattered when we are faced with the realities of an out-of-control cost of living, low wages, unfriendly/unhelpful people, rampant incompetence, etc. The worst part about it is that Canadians themselves deny all these things; even the counselors and shrinks are blind to it and try to make it seem like it's all you.
Let me illustrate my point further about living here. I lived in Mississauga for a while. While living there my wife and I thought that our baby boy had accidentally ingested an adult-sized Tylenol capsule. As we raced to the hospital with our emergency lights on, honking for people to get out of the way, an astonishingly high number of vehicles refused to let us pass. As we neared the turning lane for the hospital, a car that was in the turning lane saw us and slowed to a crawl, refusing to move over. As we finally got through, my wife looked at the driver, who was laughing at us..
People need to think HARD before moving here. As with anything, there is perception and then there is reality. Don't buy into perception, buy into reality, and take it from someone who has spent many, many years in the US: the REALITY of living in the US (vs. the perception) is vastly superior to the REALITY of living in Canada.