Sunday, May 23, 2010

Life After Manhattan

For so many New York City is the end-all-be-all of the professional American dream. They say that if you can make it in New York, you can make it anywhere, and I find that to be all too true. Big city life, public transportation, constant socializing, happy hours, young people everywhere, and the international prestige is incredibly alluring. I wish I could say I was exempt from this phenomenon, but I am not. When I graduated in 2004 I couldn't run any faster to that big, beautiful city and once I got there it was everything I had dreamed it was, and more.

For a 21 year old college grad, it is exactly what you're hoping for. There's an endless amount of fun, culture, excitement, and life. Work is generally fulfilling because you probably have a great job with a very well known company in your field. You probably work on national accounts, work with notable people, or international goods. Museums are free or inexpensive, concerts happen every day of the week on every level, and you can find any kind of cuisine for any price in any corner of the city. Everything really is right there. You're not tied down to car payments & insurance, either. You can pick up at a moment's notice and go.

But - is it really as cracked up as it is made out to be? I spent 3 years in that city working for the world's largest talent agency for the world's biggest stars, and I loved 90% of it. I was 24 and starting to feel restless: my paycheck was not cutting it, I was working a ton of hours, I was having an endless amount of fun but became increasingly more stressed. In an experimental thought, I made the decision to leave Manhattan and go abroad. I resolved that after 1 year if I missed the hustle and bustle of NYC and working in entertainment then I would return and never question my decisions. I stayed away for what turned out to be 2.5 years. Getting perspective on NYC is exactly what I needed.

Compared to Asian cities, NYC is a crowded, unorganized, dark dirthole. Comparing NYC to Seoul, Busan, Tokyo, Fukuoka, Hong Kong, Manila, Beijing, Shanghai, Chengdu, and Kunming my overall impression is that NYC is pretty much living in the dark ages. Asia is home to the #1 and #2 airports in the world. They have positioned themselves as the design capitals of the world architecturally. They are financial hubs. They create a lot of our technology (LG, Sony, Samsung, Fuji). These cities across the globe have figured out how to have state of the art technology, architecture, and transportation down to an art. Normal everyday people use the public options and buses are easy to navigate and timely. The subways are clean, modern, air conditioned, and on a perfect schedule. Sure, a lot of these systems are no where near as old as NYC's subway, but a lot of the differences are cosmetic. NYC subways smell of urine, trash, and stagnant air and need fresh coats of paint. Working elevators and escalators would be nice too.

My experiment worked. I realized I did not love what I was doing because the world offered more. When I returned back to the States, I thought going back to NYC just made sense, but it didn't. I realized it is a struggle. If you are a 20-something riddled with college debt, that city is a miserable place to be. You must be making nothing less than $50,000 in order to have a $30,000 lifestyle pretty much anywhere else (without college debt). You also will have less to show for it in the sense that you will not own a car, you will live in a closet, and be working like a dog to afford all of it.

After turning down a job offer in NYC in favor of another in Syracuse, NY - I find myself missing the culture, the late nights, the food, and my friends. But what I miss I make up for in cheap rent for a house with a friend, a car that gives me freedom to drive to any city I want at any time, a great job with good hours, flexibility, and professional development. Money to travel the world AND pay my student loans is also a gigantic plus.

The point of this is not to tell you to go or not to go to NYC, but to think about your options. Why NYC? Why not Denver? Austin? Seattle? Raleigh? Tampa? Every big city offers uniqueness & opportunity with its own fair share of struggles. Go somewhere with a community. NYC is devoid of community. I was lucky that I had an army of Syracuse University Alumni to rely on, and I will always love New York for that. Don't let me fool you either... I spend at least one weekend a month playing in that city. But overall life exists elsewhere.

If New York City is your dream - do it - you won't regret it. . But make sure to think it through.

Do you live in a city that's a great alternative to NYC? Did you defect from NYC elsewhere? What are some of your reasons? Would love to share war stories!

8 comments:

  1. Just out of curiosity, what rankings did you base the top 2 airports on? B/c Atlanta is much bigger (20%) in flights and passengers than Beijing.

    But I enjoyed the article. As a cuse alum living in Atlanta for primarily the same reasons you are now in Syracuse, I still find myself with mixed feelings about my decision. This was reassuring.

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  2. Thanks for your comment! I struggle with it too most days, but at the end am usually happy that I didn't go back. And for your Airports question, this is 2010's ranking, but as of 2009 the #1 and #2 were Seoul and Hong Kong ranked internationally: http://www.worldairportawards.com/Awards_2010/Airport2010.htm

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  3. Great article, Jenn! As someone who's known you for most of your post-college life and who had basically done the same thing as you right after college, I can attest to the allure and staying power of NYC. Now, I can't attest to the advantages of living anywhere else since I haven't, but overall, NYC has been very good to me in my 6 years here. I do think that you are a little off on the lack of community--NYC is challenging in that you won't necessarily fall into a community right away. You have to find it, cultivate it. But your community can grow. I have friend groups from my first job, second job, friends of friends from both jobs, touch football team, friends of friends of friends who have become friends, neighbors, etc. NYC, like life, is definitely what you are willing to put into it.

    BTW, miss you! Come down soon. :)

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  4. Hi Jenn! What a funny surprise to go onto the BrazenCareerist homepage and see someone I know! Great article. I hope you are enjoying the Cuse!

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  5. Interesting post. For me, NYC is still the end-all, be-all. But I also understand that in my field (broadcast journalism), it will take a while before I get there. I'll be living and working in CNY for the next two years at least, and my friends tease me for not moving to NYC. They don't understand my industry or the fact that I can lead a life that's just as fun in a small town. I also don't think they're looking at living in the city from a reasonable financial standpoint.

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  6. Lindsey! You're right. I think I was a bit quick to say that there's no community - and you're 100% right.. you do have to seek it out and cultivate it. just takes more time than most places I'd think. And I will come visit soon, I promise!

    Marisa - Thank you for posting a comment!! We should connect on brazen! Life in cuse is really good - are you still remote teaching??

    Lara - I completely understand - and syracuse is a great place to start for BJ and close enough to get to any city in the NE easily. You'll get there if you want to, and because you were up here for so long probably have a better footing once you do.

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  7. I was born and raised in NYC (well actually in Hollis - home of Run DMC). I happily left for a few years to attend college never intending to come back (with the exception of Christmas and holidays). I hated NYC then. I needed to get out.

    As fate would have it, I ended up coming back broke and moving back into my parents' house. It took a couple of years to get back on my feet again BUT during those years and in the years after I have fallen in love with NYC again - more fiercely than when I first left.

    Non-NYC'ers try to mock the dirty subways and tiny apartments but with over 10 million people - a population larger than that of Japan on an island that is smaller - of course the subways and public transportation would be well used. And as for space - how much space do you need to eat, sleep, and use the bathroom? Because if I am not doing one of those things I am out reveling in the diversity of food, language, and culture.

    They'll have to drag me out of here kicking and screaming... :-)

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  8. haha Vincent, I can definitely respect your opinion. Although I've always said that if my parents lived in NYC it'd be one hell of a different story.

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