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A Silicon Valley investor is living through the pandemic in his 500-square-foot San Francisco apartment, teaching himself to play the violin and fly-fish in the bay

Jacob Mullins and his wife Nancy have been sheltering in place in their 500-square-foot San Francisco apartment since March.

day in the life silicon valley investor jacob mullins shasta ventures
  • Mullins, a Silicon Valley investor at Shasta Ventures and a San Francisco resident of 11 years, is teaching himself how to play the violin and fly fish and is making the most of life during a pandemic.
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Jacob Mullins , a partner at the Silicon Valley venture capital firm Shasta Ventures, is one of the estimated 6.7 million people in the San Francisco Bay Area who have been sheltering in place since March 17.

He works out of his 500-square-foot San Francisco apartment, fly fishes in the Bay, teaches himself how to play the violin, takes video meetings in virtual reality, and is growing a "COVID beard."

He and his wife also have a socially distant happy hour with their neighbors on their respective balconies every Friday at 7 pm to maintain a grip on some semblance of normalcy during a global health crisis.

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"In a world where it's Groundhog Day and every day feels the same, it's nice, the things we look forward to every week," Mullins told Business Insider.

Here's how Mullins, a San Francisco resident of 11 years, is living through the COVID-19 pandemic.

Jacob Mullins

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It's also known for the tourists that typically flood its streets, but there are still some long-timers.

"A lot of our neighbors have been here for generations," he said.

Jacob Mullins

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Before the pandemic, he'd get up around 7 am.

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The early-stage VC firm is known for backing the likes of connected home startup Nest before Google acquired it for $3.2 billion TaskRabbit, dating app Hinge, and at-home fitness company Tonal.

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Jacob Mullins

His life in the "Before Times" was hectic and was usually on the go until 8 or 9 pm.

"My Uber bills were expensive," he said. "You're taking four or five Ubers a day. And some days combine the Jump bikes, depending on how far you were going, and it's just really highly programmed."

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He was also traveling about six days out of the month for work to places like Seattle, LA, and Chicago.

"You take a nap for 15 minutes in an Uber when you have the time," he said.

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Workers were measuring the windows to eventually board them up.

"It was a very visceral shift in life," he said. "That was the personal moment of kind of feeling it."

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Jacob Mullins

When the shelter-in-place order was issued, he and his team were already taking meetings virtually.

"You started realizing that it was in for the long haul," he said. He's adapted though, just like millions of others have.

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Jacob Mullins

Then he'll do a 20-minute phone guided meditation session most mornings during the workweek.

"It helps me kind of center and remember that I can't control the world around me, but I can control how it affects me and how I let it kind of get into my brain," he said.

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Then the calls start, but he said the mass migration to videoconferencing has its perks.

He'll hop on a call with investors in Saudi Arabia at 7 am and then he'll join a Hong Kong-led meeting at 8 am, for example.

"It actually leaves me with more open windows in the day I'm finding than before because you don't have all that travel time," he said.

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Jacob Mullins

In-person face-to-face interaction may be less feasible at the moment, but Mullins said connecting with people is much easier in a way.

Mullins, who's of Latinx background, and nine others launched an organization in 2019 devoted to bolstering Latinx representation in the venture capitalist world. He said the LatinX VC team is still able to connect regularly thanks to virtual conferencing becoming so normalized.

"It's just been easier to schedule these types of things because everybody's, you know, at home," he said.

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Jacob Mullins

He'll have some standing happy hours, but the workweek tends to end a bit earlier than it used to, usually around 5 pm.

He has a lot more free time in the evenings, which is why he's taken up a couple of hobbies.

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Jacob Mullins

It uses your smartphone's microphone to grade your pitch and rhythm and then scores you.

"It's like taking an actual music lesson on an iPad," he said.

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Jacob Mullins

He said he hasn't caught anything yet, but the practice is meditative and helps him reset.

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Jacob Mullins

Jacob Mullins

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Jacob Mullins

Jacob Mullins

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On the first day that outdoor dining was allowed again in the city, Mullins said he went to Sodini's, one of the oldest restaurants in San Francisco, and dined outside.

Jacob Mullins

"You don't take Uber to go across town for dinner anymore," Mullins said. "So everything you end up consuming and eating is all within your local area."

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Jacob Mullins

When Friday nights roll around, they gear up for their building happy hour.

His wife decides which drink everyone should have and gets the supplies, including little bottles of liquor or wine, and delivers it with a note to the neighbors.

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Jacob Mullins

One of the neighbors that joins is a woman in her 70s who he's never gotten to know very well before.

"We'll stand out on the balcony, and she'll start talking about her love of the Giants and her cool jeans," he said.

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He's making the most of the situation, but he said he does miss life as it was before in some ways.

"I miss seeing new cities and going to coffee shops and going to restaurants," Mullins said. "But in another way, I don't miss it really too much. It'll come back at some point."

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