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by greaterscope 6244 days ago
We, my long-time girlfriend and I, are moving to Portland, Oregon, from Lakeland, Florida, in 1 month. A friend sent me that article a few days ago and all I could think was, "informative article, but it doesn't matter." We're moving anyway. And we've never been. Like wallflower, everything we've read and heard points to Portland as a place we need to be, or at least live in for a while.

The company I work for has no problem with me working remotely. I pointed my boss to RandsInRepose's excellent article (The Pond) about remote workers, so we've started the discussion about things we'll have to work through. Needless to say, I'm incredibly thankful and lucky to HAVE a job, especially one that's willing to keep me around as I move.

My girlfriend is a painter (website; http://daubery.com etsy store: http://hollypaints.etsy.com), and has had little luck finding work in Lakeland. So if she doesn't find work out there it won't be much different.

Paul Graham's "Cities and Ambition" article really hit home when I read it a year ago. It made me think about how deeply where I live affects my quality of life, my future, my happiness, my creativity, my productivity, my resources. Lakeland is a "settle down, raise a family, go to church" type of place. It's not for us. I want to run a software company of my own, hire great people, and be involved in a community of artists, musicians, programmers, designers, and makers. My girlfriend needs to be around artists that don't bullshit, have creativity from within, and aren't in constant competition with each other.

Moving to a new place is going to be invigorating. We're hoping the people we find in Portland will continue to inspire us once the newness of a new city wears off. Wish us luck.

If you have advice, or live in Portland, don't hold back.

1 comments

Congratulations!! On the impending mutual move with your S.O. to your current dream location and your ability to begin working remote (maybe start an Ask YC on experiences with working remotely?).

I don't think you'll regret moving there - but you would regret not moving later in life. In my brief time there, I found Portland to be a community of communities.

Fat Tire beer on tap..

Calagator: Portland's Tech Calendar: http://calagator.org/

PDXTech: http://www.pdxtech.org/

Last Thursday's in Alberta: http://www.artonalberta.org/

upcoming.org (Founder Andy Baio lives there!): http://upcoming.yahoo.com/place/RlEYPWubBZtlFXkb

The 3rd best Farmer's Market in the U.S: http://www.portlandfarmersmarket.org/

(Usually free) live music every night of the week: http://www.mcmenamins.com/index.php?type=music

Amazing large Zen garden http://www.japanesegarden.com/

"Fugitives and Refugees: A Walk in Portland, Oregon" by C.P.

http://www.powells.com/biblio?isbn=1400047838

"Everyone in Portland is living a minimum of three lives," says Katherine Dunn, the author of Geek Love. She says, "Everyone has at least three identities"..."They're a grocery store checker, an archeologist, and a biker guy," she says. "Or they're poet, a drag queen, and a bookstore clerk."

Read "Portland's Special Challenges" and "Portland's Special Strengths" (pp17-19). "The Young and the Restless: How Portland Competes for Talent"

http://www.restlessyoung.com/public/pdf/Portland.pdf

Just a note, fat tire is made by new belgium brewing out of colorado, and indeed it is on tap in many many places. However, it is a fair to middling beer compared with the hundreds of beers brewed in portland and oregon (IMO). Come for the fat tire on tap, stay for the really good oregon beers. Also as a tech interested individual, one should make it a point to go to Powell's Technical bookstore, it is 3 blocks from the original big Powells, but chock full of Math, Science, Engineering and computer books, my fave bookstore on the planet.