On February 1st it will be two years since I moved to Minneapolis. I remember the date because four months before that I had moved back to Iowa from Alaska. Before I begin, I should go even further back to when I graduated from college and moved to Nome, Alaska. I graduated with a social work degree and I was eager to work with Native Americans. I had finished up my senior year with an internship at the Division of Indian Work here in Minneapolis and had my sights on finding a job on a reservation or joining the Peace Corps. Instead, a friend told me about an interesting volunteer program at a radio station in bush Alaska that broadcast to several isolated Native villages. Within a week my application was dropped off at the post office. On July 1, 2002, I boarded a plane for Alaska. I had signed a contract to volunteer at KNOM for one year. After a year, I signed on for another. After two years, I took a job with Kawerak Native Corporation. Three years in Nome. It was the experience of a lifetime in so many ways; good, bad and a little something in the middle. Living in isolation does something to a person. Want to know what it does? Ask me over a beer! Just don't ask me after three. Anyway, after three years, I decided to return to the midwest for my master's degree. Since I already had my bachelor's degree in social work, I finished my MSW in one year. At the end of the year, KNOM offered me a job and I gladly accepted. I returned to Nome with my sights set on a future in Alaska. Yes, I would continue to advocate for Native issues. Yes, I would get married. Yes, I would build a life on the tundra and allow myself to be swallowed up by mother nature! I gladly traded in my professional clothes for a full suit of Carhart and fleece. Three months later, after finding my soul being sucked away in several different ways, I quit my job, ended a handful of relationships, and boarded a plane for Chicago. With tears streaming down my face and my possesions packed in a bag, I learned one of life's biggest lessons. Life doesn't always turn out the way you plan.
I had my whole life planned out (or thought I did) when I had left for Alaska. I returned to find that I didn't know what I was going to do the next day. I sulked for awhile. I got angry. I felt defeated and then I slowly put myself back together. I felt a need for a plan, but nothing was really calling out to me so I decided to try something different. The city. On New Year's Eve two years ago, I declared that I would be moving to Minneapolis. On February 1, 2007, I packed up a few boxes and moved into a small room in a lady's basement. It was actually the same room I rented when I interned my senior year of college. The same room I had completed my phone interview with KNOM. Only this time I didn't have a plan. Two years later, and I find that life is good. I took a chance without a plan and it has worked out for the best. I've found myself again in my little apartment by the lake. I'm a social worker at a residential facility for adults with severe and persistent mental illnesses. I've gotten back into performing improvised comedy and what initially was a hobby, has now become an obsession. I've found friendships with creative, interesting and caring people. I still pull out my fleece and take walks in the snow, rain and sunshine. I no longer feel isolated. I'm more open to the unknown than I ever was in the past. At times, I still worry about the future, but I'm finding it more comforting to enjoy what is.
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Hey Em,
Are you the Emily we came to know and love in Nome? Methinks so. I'm happy to stumble across your blog (I have google alerts set for "nome alaska"). Good to hear you're doing well. Carol and I make it to Minneapolis now and then - if you ever want ghosts from your past visiting.. /jd
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