
I am no exception. I was seduced. For me the draws were the creative innovation in business in addition to fulfilling a long time dream, the weather, the arts and culture, and a relationship. I moved from a place where change happens real slow and I never seemed to be on the inside of the great new enterprises or the well funded organizations. I figured I could stay and continue to struggle to make it or go to the center of growth in America and try to make it.
I'm still trying to make it. Let's see, I landed here on March 11. That's three months + a week ago. I had five weeks of temp work at a good rate that kept me in the black. But now my funds and patience are wearing thin again. And then California tried to kick my ass.
Last weekend I was hosting a friend visiting from Arizona. We stayed at an Airbnb in Oakland. We both had attended a conference there and wanted to support the local economy and preserve some of our own cash by staying in Oakland rather than San Francisco. After a day and evening of fun and food in San Francisco, we heading back to Oakland where we were mugged. These two men approached us from behind and demanded our bags. It was violating and scary. Not to mention inconvenient. The hassle was amplified by AT&T's outrageous lack of problem-solving. They were unwilling to help my friend and I replace our phones without ID so we could handle all the other logistics related to the loss of our credit and debit cards, IDs, etc. It's one thing when something like this happens where you know people and places but when you are new to a place or on vacation, you have very limited resources.
I'm not going to lie, my first reaction was to collect all my things and head back to Arizona. At least in my home town I know where the dangers are. In big cities you aren't intimately familiar with the dangers are potentially anywhere and everywhere. I took that for granted. I brought my acceptance and trust instead of my caution and vigilance.
As the week wore on and I kept previously scheduled appointments and a job interview and as my life started to recover with replacement credit cards, ID and phone arriving I felt less like bailing. Additionally the wisdom coming to me right now seems to be saying, "Stay the course."
I'm reading Wild by Cheryl Strayed. It's Cheryl's account of her attempt to hike the Pacific Crest Trail by herself. She runs into a lot of obstacles. These often seem insurmountable. And yet, each time she comes up against one of these obstacles she realizes the only thing to do is put one foot in front of the other and continue toward her goal. Nothing goes as she planned and she is flexible, abandoning parts of the trail when the risks seem too great. Basically when her life is in peril she chooses to preserve it. Other than that she endures physical pain, danger, dehydration and more, never giving up.
This reminds me of another piece of wisdom from this week coming from Ashton Kutcher (bet you didn't expect that). In an award acceptance speech he says to an audience of teenagers, "Opportunity looks a lot like hard work." He explains how he got where he is by working hard at each job. That essentially we create our own opportunties through how we live and work.
So, here I am, a stranger in a strange place. I'm a few friends stronger. My professional network is growing and I'm continuing to work hard to create opportunities so I can succeed here. I want what so many others want: to be able to look back and know I tried my damnedest to get what I want from this life.