
As for me, I have wanted to live and travel abroad for as long as I can remember. I got my BA in International Politics because I wanted to live and work abroad. I built up my professional skills and experience in areas that I thought would give me greater opportunities to work abroad. I married a woman who shares my love of travel and desire to live and work abroad. And yet, the one company that provided me the greatest opportunities for professional growth - and to which I dedicated my professional career so far - is also probably the only company in Washington, DC that neither conducted any business further abroad than Windsor, Ontario, nor ever seemed to want to.

Until the day that I finally ripped them off.
Being a true American, I find that few things focus the mind and motivate efforts more than desperation. I couldn't dedicate myself fully to finding new work if I was already fully occupied at my old job. But if I am living solely on savings while trying to find work, I have a strong encouragement to find that work as quickly as possible. And so, without any idea of how I would find a job in Berlin, I resigned from my old job. I have skills. I have experience. I am ambitious. And if I may be allowed to brag, I like to think that I am slightly less -ahem- not-so-bright than many people out there (of course, most people think that about themselves, so that probably just makes me about average). Surely, so I convinced myself, somebody in Berlin would need what I have to offer.
And so, I have hit the ground in Berlin running. I have been talking to everybody I can find who has any kind of entrepreneurial or business contacts. I have been seeking out startup businesses that need an experienced manager who can help them expand into the North American market. I have been seeking out American companies that are expanding operations in Europe, and who need experienced people who are already on the ground here. I have been contacted about starting a European chapter of a professional association to which I belonged in the U.S. I have been war gaming my own entrepreneurial ideas. I have even been working pro bono on a strategy paper for a neighbor of mine who is interested in fielding a new marketing concept in the renewable energy industry. In the meantime, I send out at least one resume a day in the hope that I can generate some interest. If life has taught me anything, it is that the biggest opportunities are the ones you least expect, so I have tried to avoid focusing too laser-like on a single career path. Rather, I have been advertising my skills and experience, and have invited companies to utilize those assets where they think they would be most profitable.

At this point, this job search isn't even about making money (yet). I have a freelance work visa here in Berlin, so I can do pretty much whatever I want to do from home. I just miss working in an office with other professionals.
I know there are jobs out there for me in Berlin. Everybody I talk to says that there are companies here that would trip over themselves to hire me. The trick is finding them.
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