Re: Jobs in Hawaii
hi Okie, I'm happy to share about my experience moving to Hawaii.
First of all I have just been reinstated as an RN and am not actively employed as a nurse right now..
I lived in the bay area of California and fell in love with Hawaii during a weekend trip (like many do..)
I moved here in May 2005, at first into a house with other room-mates and then later into my own studio in Waikiki. I paid $800 for a 'studio' which was basically a room built on to a larger apartment, with its own entrance. I had a bed, a table, a balcony, a small fridge, a microwave and a hot plate (oh and sink and tiny bathroom). Tiny doesn't sum it up. It's like living in a closet. I spent many years in Arizona living in large houses with large yards and lots of garage or street parking. The size of accomodations here was a big shock..but this place was all I could afford at the time. Since I did not have a kitchen, I ended up walking for food most of the time (pretty easy in waikiki but it's also pricey).
I did not have a parking space that came with my unit so used to drive up and down the streets looking for a space..with groceries this can be very difficult. I did not have my baby at the time.
BUT I was two blocks up from the beach and I took up surfing..so the inconveniences of living somewhere small were outweighed by instant ocean access.
When tourists ask me what it's like to live here..I usually tell them that Hawaii should have something you REALLY enjoy or else you might as well pick California. If you like good weather, great..but if you are working all the time are you outside enjoying it? For me I fell in love with water activity and can't imagine a day without being in the water. My husband loves the water as well ..and hiking..we have a baby who is growing up as familiar with walking in sand as walking on carpet

We are very outdoor-sy. A while back I decided to CHOOSE where I was going to live then find work to make it possible for me to stay. I would go work at McDonalds to stay in Hawaii (at least during optimum surfing conditions)
If you don't have something that you are really in love with about Hawaii, I think many of the new 'fun' things about it may wear off over time. There's good weather in Southern Cal. There's also more interstate system so you can move around. Once you are on an island it CAN be tough to leave..even for a break. It's a five hour flight to the nearest airport..I believe is LA or SF. You can at times feel isolated.
The shopping and selection may not be as varied as the mainland depending on what you are looking for. Of course prices are high but you knew that
Traffic can be and usually is, horrible. Before work and after school hours I try to stay away from H1 but even the local streets are packed. We have taxis, limos, buses, tour buses, etc. I LOVE the city, love Waikiki, love tourists, don't mind getting caught behind buses, because I love it here. I don't mind swimming with tourists or sitting at a crowded beach.
Some mainlanders may feel like outsiders. As a 38 year old haole chick who surfs , I am fortunate and I know a lot of local people, I have never ever encountered any discrimation from them. My friends here are the most wonderful, generous, laid back people I've ever met. The spirit of Aloha is strong. We are family. My husband is from Malaysia and has never encountered problems either.
Things like street signs can cause confusion..and the local language. It took me a few years to be able to understand a street name someone said to me on the phone, or what 'pau' meant. If you assimilate quickly and easily into other cultures, you may do fine.
Life here is not all luaus and bikinis..most of us work a LOT to maintain a very simple but expensive lifestyle. (surfing is free after you buy the board) . I think it's easy to be lured here by the romance of paradise but living here is a different thing completely.
I would not discourage anyone from trying it..but if you can, pick up something temporary and see if you can hang for a year..before selling off everything on the mainland and coming over.
Other than that, I have learned it's easier to NOT have pets (live in high rise), large yards are hard to find on this side unless you have won the lottery, parking even in front of your house is tough, if you don't like people you will hate Hawaii because we have tourists and almost monthly festivals in Waikiki that bring large crowds. When you rent a place ask if it has a full kitchen. Be prepared for old outdated appliances and cockroaches. Be flexible enough to move around and find your niche. Maybe you like Oahu, maybe Maui. I spent a year on the big island, it was a neat experience but I am sooo happy to be back home again.
If the island bites you, you are in love. I fell in love and have tried to move back to the mainland twice, only to return here again and cry with happiness as the plane landed. There is no place like Hawaii

The only reason I'd leave is if I was offered a sweet job that paid super good..but then I'd try to work it so I spent summers here or at least buy a condo and visit part time
aloha
Jesennia
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