We have completely moved areas when we had a child (from one end of London to anther), and I am not feeling dissimilar to you. But I always put it down to being uprooted. I am almost British (well, I am, technically), in that I have lived here for 20 years, studied here, have an English husband, have high school and uni friends who live here, etc. But in the new (mummy) life I don't have that many friends. So I have friends for evenings and weekends, but no one for daytime with the kids. I put it down to this area which I feel is full of different 'types'. I wonder if I am stereotyping here. Both my husband and I are in creative industries, while here seems to be much more financial sector. I often wonder if I stayed in the old neighbourhood if the new mothers I met would feel a lot more 'me' and therefore closer to me? I don't know. The fact is that the people here just seem a little bit different and with different concerns / background stories / cultural references, regardless of nationality! I am just saying that it may not be a nationality issue. In my non-mummy group of friends there are all sorts. But I never felt that the Brits were distant. They are part of it too - as many as you can find in London! (Come to think of it, we married all we could find, so they can't be that bad
![Very Happy :-D](./images/smilies/icon_e_biggrin.gif)
I still think that moving here was the right decision for our child. I hope I am right.