After 2.5 years on my project with
Ingram Micro, it finally wrapped up this month. The bulk of my professional experience with
BackOffice and the majority of my international travel opportunities happened while I was on this project.
I lived in Santiago, Chile, for a few months and got to go to
Argentina while I was there. I then skipped over to
Belgium and made
multiple trips up to
Holland to
visit friends. Then came my amazing
10 months in Australia plus
a short trip to Fiji before I 'temporarily'
moved to California a year ago.
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Choices, choices... |
Since the client would no longer pay for my rent in California and I still had a Georgia license, I had to make a choice: move back to Atlanta (I just rented out my house there so I would have to find a new place), stay in California or go back overseas. The early leaders were returning to Australia or staying in California, but it all depended on where my next project would be located.
I did some initial investigation on my options in Australia and Singapore, but I was told that I would need to give a 2 year commitment for visa purposes if I were to go back. I loved my time there, but putting that long of a time frame without making it permanent made me anxious. I mean, if I decided that I was going to live in Australia forever then I would be willing to make the move. As great as it was, I don't know if I could do that. I started exclusively focusing on west coast US projects and planned to 'settle' in California for now.
As I was making these plans, my company highlighted two projects where they wanted me to be staffed. The first was a short term gig in New Jersey where I would be the lead. The cross-country travel would be unfortunate but bearable. The next project was long term (3 years) and was located in Connecticut. It provided me with a lot of opportunities professionally, but crossing the country every week? I must be crazy.
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Wave 2 by Jessica Harms |
I could always just live in Atlanta, NYC or somewhere else on the east coast to ease the travel. There is something about living on the beach that draws me in. It goes without saying that surfing is the #1 passion in my life, but it's not just that. I bought one of
Jessica's paintings back in 2008 - a couple of years before I ever got hooked on the sport. I have always been drawn to water - maybe we all are. Think about all of the big cities that are in harbors or bodies of water. Yes, part of that is because they were transportation hubs. But there is something else... the balance between awesome power and serenity is amazing.
After living by the ocean for the past few years, I don't think I can leave it. I've had this conversation multiple times with different people that feel the same way - it's something that is hard to explain unless you've experienced it yourself. Plus there's this girl out here...
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