I live in Southern California. More important than that: I am a Southern Californian; have been for over two-thirds of my life. There is no other place where I can imagine myself to be. But wow, did I take a circuitous route to wind up here. Let me explain.
NEW YORK, NEW YORK
My parents were Eastern European immigrants who came through Ellis Island as kids and settled in different parts of the Big Apple, including the teeming Lower East Side. By the time I was born they lived in The Bronx, which back then was—like the Jeffersons—movin’ on up. The Lower East Side was pretty nasty then; today it’s a tourist attraction.
I spent the first twenty-one years of my life in New York City and hated it. I finally “escaped” (not quite like Kurt Russell) in the late sixties. After my dad passed away and my mom and brother moved to Florida, I had no reason to go back there, and I didn’t—not for over thirty years.
Funny thing: I love visiting New York now, and I make it a point to get back every couple of years. Broadway theater is the best; I have some great cousins still living there; and we see and do things that I could have seen and done during my younger years, but never did. Ah well, I guess that’s where maturity kicked in.
THE GLASS CITY
Never having traveled anywhere as a kid, I had no idea where to go if and when I did leave NYC. I settled on Toledo, Ohio, the hometown of my first wife. It seemed—well, safe. I’d met her family, and it looked like a nice place, and the best part: it wasn’t New York.
I was right, too. A medium-sized city, Toledo had plenty to offer, and if I needed major league baseball or touring theater, Detroit was an hour away. I grew comfortable there.
Maybe too comfortable. One late afternoon I drove like a madman up I-75 through a swirling snowstorm in order to not be late for the start of my Wednesday night bowling league. On the way I asked myself the 1970s equivalent of “WTF?” When my bowling league had become the be all and end all in my life, it was time to move on.
THE QUEEN CITY
Okay, so I didn’t move too far. Cincinnati is only 200 miles from Toledo, and I had contacts there from my work, so I managed to land a higher paying job. Being a major city, Cincinnati had plenty to offer. But…
I’ll stop right there. There is little of a positive nature that I can say about my time in Cincinnati, so I’ll opt to say nothing at all. The best thing: living there gave me the motivation to make the Big Move, and though I’d never been to California, I became—well, obsessed with living there.
I will relate this one story. My ex-wife and I vacationed in California a year before moving there, just to make sure. (More on that shortly.) The month was August—comfortable in California, not so much in Cincinnati. We landed after midnight at the airport (which is in Kentucky) and stepped off the plane into 85° temperature and 90+ percent humidity. About one a.m. we arrived at our rented duplex north of Cincinnati. While opening the front door we wondered about a strange noise coming from inside. The walls, floor, and ceiling were covered with crickets. We looked at each other and said, “We’re moving to California.”
THE GOLDEN STATE
About that trip to California: we flew into San Francisco, rented a car, and drove every mile of the coastal route from Marin County to the Mexican border. Without exception, I loved every minute of being out here. To paraphrase John Denver, I felt like I’d come home to a place I’d never been before. (No surprise, I moved out here in the summer of my twenty-seventh year.)
I especially loved two places. The first, Monterey, was a beautiful seaside town with a great deal of history—especially for a Steinbeck junkie like me. But it was an expensive place to live, and the job prospects weren’t great.
The second, naturally, was San Diego. To be honest, I’d pretty much made up my mind about that before ever setting foot in California. Nicknamed “America’s Finest City,” San Diego has some of the best weather in the world. I had vowed back then never to shovel snow again—and I never have. The city has its flaws—what city doesn’t?—but coming here was the best move I ever made.
I found my creative muse here. My three daughters were born here. And best of all, I met Jacqueline—the love of my life, my soulmate—in San Diego.
I am definitely home.
Love the story.
Thanks, cousin!
Beautiful. California’s lucky to have you!
So sayeth the Minnesotan, don’cha know! The thought is mutual.
So you’ve lived on the east coast, the west coast and in-between! :0)
Yeah, Indy, but I didn’t mention the year-and-a-half sabbatical I took on my home planet. Folks might think I’m weird. 🙂
The Bronx, Toledo, Cincinnati? Really? Actually our stories are similar except I was a Brooklyn boy, grew up in the Southwest, went back to New York and then to California. You were smart and stayed. I was dumb and left….for Cincinnati and Connecticut. I have been all over your great state and love almost every inch, inland and coastal. LA is even OK if you succeed in driving someplace and then just stay there. Was just up in Carmel Valley, took a Steinbeck seminar and visited Salinas and the Steinbeck Center. Great place, great writer.
That’s pretty cool, Pat. Yeah, I’m staying. You couldn’t get me out of California with a crane. Back to Cincinnati? That would have to be in a box. 🙂
My youth years were filled with moves, even more so than yours, Mike. My Dad served in the USAF.
For me, though, being constantly moved around instilled that “Rambling Fever” (ain’t no cure…), and I get a bit anxious after being in one place a couple of years. I also grow tired of being around the same people after a time.
The result of this, I don’t call anywhere a hometown. I have no childhood friends, nor do I feel comfortable around people for extended periods of time. When I’m asked where I’m from, I have to force myself to say I was raised pretty much in Texas. I spent the most part of 38 years there, though with many addresses.
My birth happened in Northern Cali, and I have always wanted to go back. Maybe not to the North, for I strongly dislike cold weather. Probably not LA, I hear the cost of living there is astronomical. San Diego sounds wonderful!
Great new site, by the way!
— John
Thanks, John. Yeah, San Diego is great…warts and all. I’ve actually made more moves within California than I did with all the other places in which I lived. You being a military kid, I can only imagine what moving around so many times is all about. In one of my favorite movies, THE ROOKIE, Jim Morris–who later would become a Major League pitcher–moved a load of times with his military father before winding up in (ha!) Texas. They condense that nicely into the first 5-10 minutes of the film.