Why I started my media project The Vivid Minds

in #myproject5 years ago (edited)

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When the war with Ukraine broke out in 2014, I was working as a business journalist in Moscow. I saw firsthand how families were torn apart simply by living on opposite sides of the conflict.

As a journalist, I would often interview entrepreneurs, many of whom had begun to focus on international markets, looking for ways to move out of Russia. Emigration was in the air. A tipping point had arrived in the region, wherein maintaining a positive attitude became a challenge. I could no longer continue to tell inspirational stories of self-made men while surviving within this zeitgeist of political pressure and moral despair. Many of the entrepreneurs I interviewed described feeling the same way.

In the summer of 2017, I went to Kamchatka, a beautiful peninsula in the middle of nowhere. I contemplated the mountains around me and thought about my future. By the time I returned to Moscow, I knew that I needed to make a big move. Two weeks later, I left my job, packed up some clothes, and bought a one-way ticket to New York.

So there I was, with a tourist visa, no employment rights, and three-thousand euros in my pocket. The first year I got by on my life savings, crashed on a friend’s floor, and tried not to blow my daily $10 budget on coffee and cigarettes. In the evenings, I read Kerouac or went to the East Village bars, making believe that I was some bohemian character from my favorite books. My first year in New York was as exhilarating as it was difficult, but my spirit thrived despite my bank balance.

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In my second year in New York, I started a communications agency after my entrepreneurial friends in Europe began asking me to help tell their stories overseas. I went from being a respected journalist in Moscow, receiving dozens of pitches a day, to being someone in PR trying to chase journalists who wouldn’t give me the time of day. It felt like I was losing my identity, and trying to put on a new one that didn’t quite fit. I realized I was now working with people who embraced a different set of values than I had grown accustomed to. However, I was convinced that this new venture would allow me to save money and write more.

As an immigrant, I was craving new friends and a sense of belonging. I was able to survive those tough times for a few reasons: I understood I wasn’t perfect and it’s fine to make changes; I’ve met compassionate and supportive people who helped me find my sense of belonging. Besides that, I was immersing myself into stories of random people I met, here and there — a bartender in SoHo who later became a financier for a friend’s nonprofit organization; bold entrepreneurs at fintech meetups; a waitress, who accidentally attended a lecture of a famous Soviet poet Joseph Brodsky. These types of chance encounters with strangers and hearing their stories have become one of the main reasons I live in the city.

The Vivid Minds (thevividminds.com) is a project I was working on for a while — a collection of stories of the remarkable people who are not afraid of being imperfect, are ready to open up about their challenges, and who help me discover a tiny bit more about my own self.

I've never been interested in small talks. Connecting on a deeper level is really important to me. When I interview founders, the most captivating part of their journey is always a challenge they have overcome. In order to make an impact and bring a vision into the world, you always have to go through failures and hardships. It's always exciting to hear those stories and I love recounting them to others.

I admire those who are not afraid of being vulnerable and are willing to open up about their struggles. Sometimes, it works like a magical healing power for others -- when what you hear speaks up to you and all of a sudden you realize you can make it too. That's the storytelling power I'm trying to convey through the interviews we publish.

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