Thirty years ago today I started my San Francisco adventure.
It had been a long time coming. While one of my dearest friends in the world moved there in 1979 and regaled me with stories of wonder and debauchery that simultaneously enticed and repulsed me, a little voice in the back of my head kept telling me that city was off limits until further notice. I'm glad I heeded that voice for once; there's no telling if I would even be here today if I'd emigrated there any sooner than I did.
In May 1985, my partner at the time had some frequent flier miles that he needed to use or lose. He announced he was flying to San Francisco for the weekend. "Not without me you're not!" And thus the seed was planted.
The following Christmas, we returned for an extended visit. By the time June the following year rolled around, my friend Lee had already secured employment there and our entire tribe was making preparations to leave Tucson, none of knew exactly when this was going to happen.
At the beginning of August, my supervisor called me into his office and announced they were laying me off. I started laughing. "That's the oddest response I've ever gotten from anyone after being laid off," he said. "That's because the universe is telling me to move to San Francisco now."
On August 15th, I threw a couple of well-packed suitcases in the back of my car, and along with a rather attractive boy named Jim Girard whom I'd met a few weeks earlier (my partner and I had split up earlier that summer), began the journey west to begin an adventure that was to leave an indelible mark on my life.
We didn't take the quickest route to the City. Since we didn't know if we'd "ever come this way again," we eschewed I-5, overnighted in Santa Barbara, and took Route 1 up the coast.
We reached Monterey mid afternoon on August 16th. At the time, thinking that Monterey was only "a few minutes" south of San Francisco, I noted that the Aquarium was one place I definitely wanted to see after I got settled. Funny thing is, after all the years I lived there, I never did see it. It was always a case of "I'll drive down next weekend." Next weekend never came.
Late that afternoon, we finally arrived at our destination. Lee had been staying with friends of his in the Lower Haight. They were renting two units on a single floor of an old Victorian and had plenty of room for guests, opening their doors to yet another Arizona transplant.
Not realizing that August weather in The City was decidedly different from June, I had neglected to pack appropriate outerwear, and I found myself shivering in the damp fog that rolled in like clockwork every night. Thankfully when Jim's ex arrived a week later (talk of reconciliation was in the air) he brought my jacket and all was once again well in the world. Jim and Dave returned to Tucson about a week later, leaving Lee and I to wait for the arrival of the rest of our crew in the subsequent weeks while being told by Lee's friends nearly every night over dinner that "The City will chew you up and spit you out."
To be fair, the City was hard on us. Of the five of us who initially moved there, I was the only long-term survivor—and even then The City had the last word when I was forced to leave after the dot-com bust.
I had, and still have, relatives who live in and around Richmond, Alameda, and San Pablo. I spent several summer vacations there in the early 60's, 61,62, 63. When I lived in Los Angeles in the early 70's I would fly up to San Francisco often for a fun filled weekend. In the spring of '75 I decided to move up there and give it a try. In less than three months it had chewed me up and spit me out. The saying "you don't really know someone until you live with them" fits my experience perfectly. I loved San Francisco, but I really, really loved Los Angeles. I moved back to Los Angeles. I love San Francisco and still go for visits. It is the only city I have ever known that can truly seduce you. I am so glad I got to live there, especially in the mid 70's.