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I talked about Columbia Heights specifically in the other post, so here's some more general stuff:
1. Where to live. CH has been pretty well gone over already here because it's kind of the new trendy place to be. If you want to live in DC, look at Columbia Heights and its environs, along with Mt Pleasant, Adams Morgan, Capitol Hill, and parts of Southwest. Unfortunately, there's really only a pretty narrow strip that combines both a liveable neighborhood with affordable rent (where do people get all the money they pay for housing with? I still have no idea). Your best bet is to stay north of, say, Massachussetts avenue, west of Georgia avenue, east of the park, and south of... I don't know... the end of the two-syllable alphabet.
1a. However, if you're moving to the area, don't automatically discount the burbs. Some of the suburbs are absolute monstrosities (I'm looking at you, Reston and Bethesda), but there are some really nice places in parts of VA and MD. Particularly, Old Town and Del Ray in Alexandria (served by the King Street and Braddock Road metro stops respectively), and Rosslyn, Courthouse, and Clarendon in Arlington (served by eponymous metro stops). In Maryland, Silver Spring is actually quite nice. All of those areas are great examples of what public planning can do: developers didn't just do whatever they felt like, the cities made them build walkable communities with lots of public space (or at least space that appears public; it's probably privately owned).
2. DC isn't like NY. In NY they actually give a shit about whether you can do your job. I don't mean to discourage you, but if you're a 25-year-old hoping to break into policy wonkery without any contacts, be prepared to do really, really boring work for a while. I mean, really boring. I mean like, answering phones, making copies, teaching people how to "Respond to All" in Outlook, etc. This city is chock full of overachieving 20-somethings and really doesn't use them for much.
3. That said, there are some opportunities. I know some people who found small, 1-issue organizations and associations (and one thing we have more than enough of here is associations. We even have the National Association of Association Executives). Inflate the resume as much as your conscience allows you to, go find one somewhere in Dupont or Alexandria, and be their legislative affairs guy or something. You'll make almost no money, but you'll get some press time (and more importantly, press contacts), and you'll get a taste of whether or not this life is what you're into.
4. But beware! For every overachieving 20-something here (and like I said there are plenty of us), there are 3 useless, braindead 40-something middle managers who were dumped into an association or organization from whatever industry or concern the association works for. Nobody could figure out what to do with them so they "promoted" them to DC to keep them out of trouble. They will make you hate your job, the business, and the city. Consider yourself warned.
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