The group has been organizing Monday morning hikes — this week they're hitting Muir Woods for a 4.8-mile loop with about 977 feet of elevation gain. Not a casual stroll, but not a death march either. Just enough to get your heart rate up and your head out of the doom-scroll cycle on LinkedIn.
What started as a modest idea has clearly struck a nerve. A photo from last week's outing showed roughly 40 people gathered together, all navigating the same uncertain chapter. That's not a support group — that's a movement.
And honestly? This is exactly how communities should work. No government program. No taxpayer-funded "workforce resilience initiative" with a $2 million consulting contract. Just people showing up for each other on a Monday morning, trading stories on a trail instead of staring at a screen refreshing their inbox for recruiter emails that may never come.
San Francisco's tech-driven economy has always been boom-and-bust, and the current wave of layoffs — from AI reshuffling to belt-tightening across the industry — has left a lot of talented people in limbo. The mental health toll of unemployment is well-documented, and isolation makes it worse. Getting outside, moving your body, and talking to someone who actually gets it is genuinely therapeutic.
The group meets Monday, April 27 at 10:30 AM at Muir Woods. If you've recently been laid off — or know someone who has — pass the word along. The best networking doesn't always happen at happy hours with name tags. Sometimes it happens on a trail in Marin, slightly out of breath, surrounded by redwoods and people who understand exactly where you are.
No résumé required.




