Geographical location does truly effect how people of different races interact with one another. One of the brightest examples is between the South and the North of the United States of America. A young white woman from the North of the country and a young Afro-American from the South will have a lot of difficulties getting along together, due to the hostility of the South towards white people in general as a race. For instance if two young people come out from the same geographical location which is a multi-cultural area they are less likely to have any kind of problems dating each other. People identify themselves with their environment and two people coming from the same geographical location who are dating each other will have at least the same concept of a relationship, which is set in their area. If an interracial couple has a different geographical location it raises the possibility that each of them lives in a one-race community making it even harder for them to communicate within their communities: they potentially have different interests and feel uneasy coming to visit each other. For example one race community sees a woman as a housekeeper and a mother, while the other views a woman being equal to a man. In one community is normal to greet the neighbors while the other is more isolated. It also creates the difficulty to raise a biracial child in all-white, all-black, all-Asian or all-Hispanic environment. While living in one geographical location makes people closer to each other because their unity is acceptable in the first place as it is a multi-racial community.