WHAT ARE YOU DOING?
By: Amy
Written Sunday, July 13, 2014 on my bed in my bedroom in the
house we’ve owned for the last 10 years at 12:30 pm.
Short Answer: Moving
to Ireland August 26th to March 24th.
Long Answer: Selling
off the things on our life holding us down and taking a dream off the shelf and
doing it.
The house sold and we close July 31st. That in itself was an undertaking 1-year in
the making. There were repairs and other
prep work required to get the house ready to be put on the market. Questions of whether this repair/improvement
or that repair/improvement would be best have dogged us for a long time. We (and I say we, but we all know that Ker’s
been doing the bulk of the work because I worked so much!) have ate, slept and
breathed this house for a long time to get it ready.
I’ve felt the most good about getting rid of the piles,
stacks, shelves, and bunches of the various and sundry STUFF that has
accumulated over the last 10 years of living in this house. Those of you who have been over in the last 2
years can remember just how full this house always felt. No matter how clean I got it, the house still
felt cluttered and untidy. That’s a direct
result of having too much stuff. Click this link to see a virtual tour of the house after we had de-cluttered a little.
A purging of this severity has definitely showed me what has
been needlessly holding us down. We
don’t need all that STUFF. We don’t need
to spend time maintaining and cleaning all the STUFF in our life. I don’t know why we kept (or bought!) most of
it around. Inertia? Laziness?
Anyway, asking the question of whether or not we need to keep this or
that object has clarified what exactly we want in our life—what’s worth carting
around, protecting and saving. If you
haven’t done it in a while, I suggest going through every room in your living
space and doing a purge. I’ve never felt
so light.
My beloved car—EAB—sold while I was in New Jersey. I say beloved, but I think I’m the only one
who loved him—he gave everyone else in the house motion sickness. I didn’t get a picture of the car with me
leaning on it but Ker took this one.
I wished I’d had time to
do that before I left for the East Coast.
It’s weird being without EAB.
He’s the first car I’ve had that I’ve paid off, the car that went on the
RV road trip, the only car I have ever PAID OFF, and generally, the guy I’ve
spent the most time in over the last 6.5 years.
Even though he is just a thing/object, I miss him. Also, I’m driving Ker’s rigs, which I’m not
real fond off. Not liking his trucks
really hasn’t been an issue because I’ve always had my own car and have taken
the “his car—his problem” attitude. I’m
a little surprised that I’m feeling this way.
But, it’s a mild sort of irritant and when you stack it up against the
rest, it’s kinda petty, so in the spirit of getting rid of the stuff holding us
down, I’m over it.
To give you a glimpse of all the moving parts necessary
let’s take a look at this week’s to-do list.
Before Friday I’d like to:
·
Finalize Abby and Colleen’s enrollment into an
online virtual school. We have chosen
the Oregon Connections Academy. It seems
like it will be a good fit for them. The
current thought is that they will be attending Irish Public School for the
socialization piece, but we do not want them to lose any momentum in their
current academic trajectory. But, this
is just the current thinking. We may end
up just doing the online school and having them join other
programs/teams/classes to socialize them.
But, who knows!
·
Oversee the final repairs requested by the
buyers of the house. Not gonna say much
more on that issue in this blog entry—it deserves one of it’s own.
·
Decide on health care now that I’m on a Leave of
Absence from North Clackamas and taking a couple of terms off from Portland
Community College. Do we take
international coverage? What about
Devan? If we take international, he
won’t have coverage. Those are just some
of the concerns.
·
Pick up Abby’s new glasses. We have been trying to get every medical
issue resolved in the family before my health care runs out at the end of
August. So, there are multiple doctors,
dentists, orthodontists, and optometrists appointments that need to be resolved
before we leave. Ker’s even got to get his knee fixed before we go. And since I’m tattling—I was supposed to go in
for the obligatory mammogram/ultrasound last summer and put it off. This week, I promise I’ll make an appt (I say
this and we all know that has a 50/50 chance of actually happening, right?).
·
See friends and family that we’re leaving
behind. That sounds so simple, but we
are a very social family and have made deep and lasting relationships with our
family and those friends who have become family. These people who keep me sane, stable and
happy. The thought of leaving them is
the most terrifying feeling of this experience.
·
Get the RV—Reggie—ready to be moved into. This means a good deep clean and some
repairs. We are moving into him from
July 29th to August 26th.
Then he gets sold. My dad’s gonna
do us the favor of selling him while we are gone.
·
Schedule the annual kids trip. I’m thinking Sunriver, but who knows.
·
Schedule a meeting with the tax guy. Why are taxes in two countries so freaking
crazy?!?
·
Figure out our phone situation. This means researching the best way of making
sure our numbers and devices are saved for when we get back. Abby is the only one on our plan that is
still under the contract so at this point, Devan will take her iPhone and the
rest of us will drop off the AT&T plan till we get back. Kerry has “unlocked” my iPhone and his
iPhone, so we will be taking them with us and using them in Ireland.
·
Pick up my parents, Diane and Val from the
airport and make sure there is a wheel chair for Mom in every airport. I’m glad they are coming back, I miss them.
·
Install Skype on all friends and family
computers.
·
Come up with a “How To” sheet for Skype for all
the users here in the states.
·
Find a temporary home for Roger my boat, and
Kerry’s boat—the Ire.
·
Schedule a time for Julie to come in and meet
the kittens. Julie—a lifesaver!!! –has
volunteered to watch them for us for the time we are in Ireland.
·
Get Maddie’s arthritis medications and make sure
they are transferable to the vet in Forest Grove. My sister, brother-in-law, and nephew are
caring for my elderly dogs—Maddie and Riley.
It would be less hassle to have all the dog’s meds and food local to
my sister rather than here in Portland.
Also, my dad has volunteered to pick up dog food and meds to help
out. Grateful doesn’t even cover it.
·
Finalize, print and distribute bottle and pop
can-drive flyers for the fundraiser for the National Brain Tumor Society. Pick up donated cans and bottles Saturday
morning.
·
Get a gift for a very special 40th
bday. Chris Reichman is coming to town
and we get to celebrate his bday with him by a party and a boating trip. It’s gonna be fun.
·
Repack up and take all my work stuff to the
storage unit.
·
Memorize storage unit.
·
Begin to figure out what clothes to take to
Ireland.
·
Stay sane J
I’ll let you know how each of these plays out.
" Memorize storage unit." - I respect the ever lovin' daylights out of you Ms. Amy. I know you will get it all done, but really, just take a few pictures of the storage unit. You don't have to memorize it... ;-)
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