But some things are the same. My mother still owns the house I grew up in, on what would now be called a cul de sac, but which the sign on the corner called a dead end street.
Sentiment: NEGATIVE
We moved around so much when I was a kid, the place I call home is New Orleans because at least I can remember the names of some of the streets there.
I live on a one-way street that's also a dead end. I'm not sure how I got there.
A dead end street is a good place to turn around.
My mom lives in New York still in the home that I grew up in.
I still live in the same town where I grew up.
I still call Texas home. It is where I spent most of my life growing up.
When you finally go back to your old home, you find it wasn't the old home you missed but your childhood.
I found that through my life, living in the city of Toronto, I look above the Pizza Pizza sign, and I look above the other signs and window dressing, and I see evidence of a city that no longer exists in the keystones and the decorations that line the tops of buildings. That presence of the old city has always moved me.
I considered that the homes that people live in exactly describe their lives.
A sign to me is a one-liner, a symbol is very complex and my house is a series of symbols.
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