It was ten years ago this month when I again found myself at a transitional moment in my life.
I had lived in San Francisco for a year. The previous August I had found work and living space at the Pacific Bay Inn on Jones at O'Farrell, and had begun film school at the Academy of Art College in September. I inundated myself with a heavy class load, with a concentration on screenwriting and film history. Two semesters were completed successfully (and I had shot my five-minute short,
Top Floor, for the final assignment of my Motion Picture Language class). The job at the PBI, though a fruitful learning experience among the forsaken detritus of society, was coming to an end. The hotel had been sold, and the present staff was being cleared out to make room for the new regime.
Luckily, my manager Dave had found new employment at the Travelodge at Fisherman's Wharf, and he recommended me. One interview with the front desk manager, and I was in. I began there as my time at the PBI dwindled.
Meanwhile Dave, our co-worker and pal Mallory, my ex-girlfriend, and I needed a place to live. The search began. Thankfully (and surprisingly) it wasn't a lengthy or arduous quest for a new home. We found a beautiful flat down Post Street near the corner of Lyon (right off the 38 Geary line at Kaiser Hospital). Sure, that wistful side of me understood that I would miss the Tenderloin and my room at the Pacific Bay Inn... just a little. But the flat we moved into was spacious and included 3 1/2 bedrooms, a working fireplace in the living room, baroque woodwork throughout, and a laundry room in the back with washer and dryer. There was a backyard as well, though we rarely utilized it.
There I was, now ten years in my past. I was 3,000 miles from everyone and everything I'd ever known and I had found a measure of achievement in San Francisco. I was ready to enter this new phase of my life there. The hotel and my room there became a memory I have consistently revisited over time, in both my writing and to relate stories of the 'Loin to friends. The "corporate" job at the tourist trap known as Fisherman's Wharf was underway, and though it was something I did not necessarily want to do, it could have been worse.
I had accrued enough knowledge (and enough credits for an Associate of the Arts) at the Academy, and I had to decide if I wanted to return in September. Okay, yes, I wanted to, but I did not want to fall further into the fissure of student loan debt, and I also felt I had learned what I needed.
Sometimes it feels like my life there was a dream - as if it was a step toward change in my life that I would never have had the audacity to ever really take. I suppose that time and distance - and the fact that I have not been back since I departed in August 1997 - have created this illusion. But occasionally I recall so vividly an intimate moment with the sounds and sights of the city. It could be the bray of the Sea Lions sprawled on their wooden planks at the Wharf as the sun rose and I finished a graveyard shift. Or a chicken-steak dinner at Mel's Drive-In. Or a preternatural 'Loin mutant I had to deal with at the front desk of the Pacific Bay Inn. Or the clangor of a cable car bell. Or seeing
The Pillow Book, Dead Man, The Crossing Guard, and
Dream With the Fishes (among dozens of other films) at one of the city's many independent cinemas. Or a particularly memorable evening at the clubs
So What! or
Roderick's Chamber. Or that commute to an overnight shift at Travelodge when I was alone on the 42 Van Ness bus the entire time.
I found my direction in San Francisco. I left reluctantly and not without reservation, even if I tried to not let it show. I left behind something that had blossomed, but I departed before anything could wilt. I had to move on and discover my future here in New York City. Ten years down the timeline of my life I have not yet fulfilled each promise and goal of that sanguine, unhinged youth, but strides continue every day. The same optimism that filled my soul when I lived in San Francisco may wane on occasion, but it is never irretrievable.