Commentary

You’re not from Chicago

POSTED AT 09:25 PM ON Sep. 20, 2009 | PRINT | Email | SHARE | COMMENTS (15)

There is an irritating phenomenon plaguing our school on par with fixed-gear bikes and “pimps and hoes” theme parties.

It is the practice of declaring residence in Chicago, when perhaps you’re really from a distant suburb such as Lake Forest – a mere moon relative to Chicago’s orbit.
I experience this regularly.

The routine introduction forces itself upon us with predictable consistency, and if both participants can tolerate each other for more than 30 seconds, the verbal two-step leads to the familiar question: “Where are you from?”

I was born, raised and still live in “Little Italy,” a neighborhood of Chicago roughly two miles from the city’s downtown. But I had no particular pride in my home’s location until I arrived at IU.

Here I realized that being from the actual city of Chicago is a rarity, even though a plethora of individuals mistakenly thought themselves as part of that rarity.
Here is a typical example of a Chicago claimer:

Student: “So where are you from?”
Me: “I’m from Chicago.”
Student: “Oh nice, so am I.”
Me: “Cool, what part?”
Student: “Uhh, Wheaton. You?”
Me: “I’m from Little Italy.”
Student: “Oh, so you’re actually from Chicago, Chicago.”

For those unfamiliar with the Chicagoland area, the town of Wheaton is about 18 miles from Chicago’s city limits.

Now, you may not think this is as blatantly misleading as I do, but in my tenure at IU, I have heard far worse.

Once a Chicago-claimer admitted that he was really from Rockford, a city about 85 miles from downtown Chicago. 

That’s like putting an ad in the personals describing yourself as a 6-foot-1 architect with a slim build and a passion for leather upholstery, when you’re really 5-foot-5, manage a Wendy’s and occasionally knit your own socks.

It’s just false advertising.

Apparently being a Chicago resident is so unheard of that nine times out of 10, the person I am introducing myself to will register audible surprise when hearing I am actually from the city.

This makes me feel like a wondrous anomaly. I am snow to a native of Nicaragua; the gay Jew to a church group in rural Alabama. 

But is my feeling of regional superiority at all conceited? You bet your strip-mall-loving ass it is. 

Yet I truly believe that if you’re from the city, tell people you are. If you’re not, have the decency to own up to it.

Be proud of where you come from, even if it’s a suburb.

After all, if everyone from Glenview says they’re from Chicago, soon no one will remember the glorious name of Glenview.

However, I’ll buckle on a few circumstances. If you happen to be watching a dune buggy race in Nevada and someone asks you where you’re from, saying Chicago or the Chicagoland area might be acceptable.

And if you’re out of the country, no one will know if Bolingbrook is in Illinois or Tanzania.

But in Bloomington, there are no excuses, and you run the risk of getting called out. So please, don’t embarrass yourself.

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Posted by George Wilcox at 12:57 AM on Nov 13, 2009 | Report this comment

Relax, Josh. When I'm in Chicagoland, I'm from Darien. When I'm outside Chicagoland, I'm from Chicago. No one in Bloomington, Ind., Bloomington, Ill. or Bloomington, Minn. cares that I'm from Darien. The suburbs don't survive without Chicago and the city needs bedroom commuters from the burbs. We're all Chicagoland, Sox fans, Cubs fans, Bears fans. City dwellers are allowed to see concerts at Allstate and suburbanites are welcome to see the circus at the UC. When you're outside Chicagoland, you're from Chicago. When you're in Chicagoland, you're from Little Italy. Your drinking buddies from Indy wouldn't know Little Italy from Greektown or Chinatown.

Posted by SMC student at 11:22 AM on Sep 25, 2009 | Report this comment

get over your damn selves you Chicago Haters!!!

Posted by Nik at 8:42 AM on Sep 22, 2009 | Report this comment

Oh, what sad days these are when people lose all perspective and bash the most lighthearted satire...get a grip, folks :-p

Posted by Patrick at 11:2 PM on Sep 21, 2009 | Report this comment

Just say you're from the "Chicago area." Problem solved. I'm not sure what problem the author has with such a phrasing. It's a perfect way to point to the general location. But yes, saying you are from Chicago when you truly are not is dishonest.

Posted by Adam at 3:20 PM on Sep 21, 2009 | Report this comment

I currently go to college in Arizona. Grew up in Elgin, but spent ages 17-21 in Chicago. Just because my family can not afford to live in the city makes me less of a chicagian person. I have the accent, I go to sporting events have my favorite pub, Im not going to represent the sleepy suburb of Elgin. If you've ever been to New York City, you would relize burroughs were like our burbs (Rockford is Jersey). So my birthplace is Elgin but I AM CHICAGO. deal with it.

Posted by concerned reader at 12:34 PM on Sep 21, 2009 | Report this comment

Where is the author's byline for this engaging, poetic opinion column?! Congrats to the author for writing a column filled with original similes and metaphors. Boo to the IDS who've fumbled the ownership of the article!

Posted by Hilary at 12:17 PM on Sep 21, 2009 | Report this comment

I agree 110% with this article. If you are in Bloomington, there is a major chance that who ever you are talking to knows what town near Chicago you are from. People not from the city of Chicago should stop wishing to be something that they are not.

Posted by John at 12:13 PM on Sep 21, 2009 | Report this comment

The author is right. Saying you are from Chicago when you are really from a suburb 5 minutes away is not only highly unethical but extremely misleading! It should never be done

Posted by unknown hoosier at 11:2 AM on Sep 21, 2009 | Report this comment

Was this published in the actual paper? what makes this newsworthy? Hello, we are at INDIANA UNIVERSITY.. chicago is in ILLINOIS! Who thought this passed for journalism... or even captivating reading? I know it's an a opinion section but c'mon does maybe 1% of the audience care about this?? No wonder the newspaper biz is in the toilet today.

Posted by unknown hoosier at 11:0 AM on Sep 21, 2009 | Report this comment

Was this published in the actual paper? what makes this newsworthy? Hello, we are at INDIANA UNIVERSITY.. chicago is in ILLINOIS! Who thought this passed for journalism... or even captivating reading? I know it's an a opinion section but c'mon does maybe 1% of the audience care about this?? No wonder the newspaper biz is in the toilet today.

Posted by tim at 2:3 AM on Sep 21, 2009 | Report this comment

cool story bro

Posted by Megan at 1:53 AM on Sep 21, 2009 | Report this comment

Wow. Seriously? That's probably the most nitpicky topic for an IDS article, ever. IT DOESNT MATTER. I'm from a 'suburb' of Chicago and claim I'm from Chicago not because, like you, I'm overly proud of my Chicago roots and see the name as a bragging right, but because it's just EASIER. Oh, Chicago area? It's a place people know, something easy to associate to. People don't really give a shit if you're from a town right outside of Chi-town or in Little Italy itself. Chicago area's all the same to them, and to be honest, when people ask that q in small talk, they probably don't really care about the answer. Except, apparently, you.

Posted by hoosier at 1:29 AM on Sep 21, 2009 | Report this comment

when do you know that you are a true senior? when you have read the same opinion article bitching about how people from the suberbs are *not* 'really' from chicago for the 4th year in a row....we get it... no one really cares where you are from anyways... damn typos.

Posted by Hoosier at 1:28 AM on Sep 21, 2009 | Report this comment

when do you know that you are a true senior? when you have read the same opinion article bitching about how people from the suberbs are 'really' from chicago for the 4th year in a row....we get it... no one really cares where you are from anyways...


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