Yes, granny23 I feel my home town is Edinburgh.
I came to Scotland (unwillingly) with my parents in my teens. At school I was surrounded by Scots, it was total immersion. I made good friends and I was never ever got at for being English (my little brother at primary school, however, a quiet studious boy, was repeatedly targeted by a particularly vicious little thug, but that lad was only half-Scottish, his father was a German who had settled here after the war and his mother was said to be violent at home and foulmouthed in public)
My own opinion is that it would be better for Scotland to remain as part of the United Kingdom, and that is how I voted in the referendum. There has been so much crossing of the border, in one direction or the other, so much intermarriage, so many children with mixed genes from all over the British Isles and beyond, that it is impossible to divide Scots from any other heritage. We speak the same language, more or less. The nearest natural markets for Scottish produce and manufacturing are England and Wales, just as the Scots are part of the home market for goods from south of the border, and having a barrier to instant trading doesn't make sense. No more does having to show a passport at Berwick or at a bleak layby up in the border hills.