Tuesday, March 3, 2020

Future

I have several options in my mind about what would be the best thing for our family in the future.

KANSAS
Positives:
1) Affordable
2) Extended family, roots, belonging.  Not only would we have have Allen's extended family, Daryn and Andre are starting their own family.  Our children are so happy when they are there with family.  It's like they can relax, and they know they are accepted.  We are so lonely and isolated here and we have been forever.  It's just Allen and I, and we have so many struggles.  I think ahead to when all of the kids start having their own families.  It would be so good to be close by.
3) My family.  Living in Kansas is only a day's drive to both Heidi and Dustin's homes.  It might make it easier to see them more frequently than once or twice per decade.  It is also halfway between both of my parents.  Rather than across the country from my dad.
4) Convenient location/proximity to the rest of the country.  It is a great place to live regarding working with churches all around the country.  You will never have to travel too far, making your trips shorter, and the time zone change won't be so difficult to adjust to.  It also allows us to take vacations easily to a large variety of places.  Then I think about when our children grow up.  I think there are options for them to have opportunities and a good future in that area.  It is affordable.  If they are too bored in Topeka there is Lawrence, or even Kansas City.  Or Colorado is more interesting and not too far.  If they decide to live somewhere else, no matter where they live it will be an easy flight and driveable, and never across the country and a huge time zone away.
5) I know it's not necessarily a beautiful or exciting place.  However, it is peaceful.  80% of our life is the same wherever we live.  We can sleep in our bed, go for walks, do school and work, eat breakfast lunch and dinner, go to activities and church and shopping and out to eat wherever we are.  There are people everywhere. If we want to go someplace special, we can take vacations. I'm sure we can find interesting things to do around there.  And the open sky is the beauty in Kansas: sunrises, clouds, storms, sunsets...Plus, there are basically four seasons, which is very nice; and the kids would enjoy the snow.  Kansas City isn't far and there is a lot there.  I think we could have a fulfilling, simple life in Kansas.  It's not too different from living in Turlock or here, really: flat, not terribly interesting but close to a lot of interesting things.  We have managed to live here and in Turlock ok.  We do live closer to the mountains and the beach here than in Kansas, but I think your sister gets to the beach more often than we do.  We can still take a vacation at the beach.  Every year if we wanted to.  We could go to Colorado to be in the Rocky Mountains.  We could explore a lot of places together.

SOUTH CAROLINA/NORTH CAROLINA:
Living "here": Greenville area, SC coast, SC/NC mountains
Positives:
We already live here.  Easier to explore and find a place to live.  Less expensive of a move.
Four seasons climate.  Proximity to beach and mountains
Affordable cost of living
Beautiful places in nature

Negatives:
the South
so humid, bugs, snakes
so far from the west coast, more difficult with a lot of travel, potentially far from our adult children
I wonder about their future options, if here is best.  So much of the church world and business world is still so "southern" and it's a world our kids have a disadvantage in because of that.  And honestly, I think I would really, really, really struggle if our kids married into a southern family.  Either the redneck kind or the snobby kind.  Still trying to work out some arranged marriages but I haven't figured that out yet.

OREGON/WASHINGTON
Positives:
Near my Dad, Janet
outstanding natural beauty
mild summers, long hours of daylight
NO HUMIDITY
colder climate, I like to wear colder weather clothing, etc.
near CA
I think I would feel more comfortable around the people, churches there.
I like the culture there~ relaxed, more natural, outdoorsy, books, music, coffee, etc.
schools seem to be better there

Negatives:
slugs and snails
constant rain~ I don't like being out in it and I think it might make my depression worse
far from east coast, more difficult for some work travel
politics, taxes, so many regulations
higher cost of living
expensive move, logistically harder to move coast to coast
because the cost of living is higher, would be possibly a bit more difficult for our kids to get started in life but still much better than a lot of places (like CA).

???
I am not sure what other places would make any sense.  I have family in Georgia, Texas, Wisconsin.  I don't see how I would want to live any of those places. 
I don't mind Georgia, but it's basically the same as here. 
Texas is so unbearable hot and dry and land-locked I don't think I could deal with it.  I mean, maybe.  I would consider it I guess.
Wisconsin is so cold, plus I'm not very close to my brother. 
Lots of people retire to Florida.  There are things that are appealing about Florida to me that I think we could maybe look into. For example, I know it is affordable for retirement and there is so much to do there.  I can imagine that Jesse would love growing up at the beach.  I can imagine us living in a place that has a screen porch and is easy to maintain, going for walks on the beach regularly, walking places, and having a sun-shiney life there.  I think it's a pretty affordable place for our kids to start their lives.  Much like CA, it's got that relaxed and carefree vibe that I do really like a lot.  It feels free.  But I'm not sure about the heat and the lack of seasons and all the creepy creatures that live there. Maybe we could explore.
There's obviously still CA but not only does that seem unfeasable for us, I think it would be really hard for our kids to all have good future lives there~ it doesn't seem to have a great future in a lot of ways~ especially now that we've been gone so long and have no home that we bought years ago there.  I also have some bad memories there that maybe would be best to leave behind. I would consider it though.
Tennessee actually has some pretty and affordable areas to live.
Montana is a place I think I would really like.
I can't really think of anything else that would make much sense (Nevada?)

Sunday, March 1, 2020

Winter

I don't use this blog really, but I am going to attempt to write and courage, dear heart is the right place for it.

It is early on a Sunday morning, clear and 26 degrees.  I came in the living room for a quite place to write, but as soon as I opened my computer loud children came in the room.

I feel a lot of things but have trouble making sense of them, of expressing them.  I often feel stressed and overwhelmed but it's usually suppressed.  It comes out in ways like leaving my keys in the front door (when my husband is out of town). I feel unmoored.

This winter has been hard.  Allen's mom's decline and passing away has overshadowed most of it.  Lots of sickness and losing our dog suddenly has been difficult.  Sam had to miss a lot of work because of all that has been going on, which put his job in jeopardy.  He gets "points" whenever he calls in sick.  They stay for a year and he is one point away from getting fired, which won't go away until the end of February next year.  They don't accept any medical notes from the doctor and they don't give him any funeral leave.  It's very difficult. Yesterday he decided to give his two week's notice and tomorrow is his last day.  He complains a lot about his job but he also takes a lot of pride in working and I know he is really discouraged that it is ending this way.  I'm proud of how he has grown through this experience and that he has stuck with his first job for almost a year and a half, has been recognized as doing a good job, and even earned Employee of the Month.  He has learned to dress appropriately for work, to pay attention to his time and punctuality, to stick with something, to try to get along with all kinds of people, and just matured and grown a lot.  Sam has a few more classes to complete before he graduates: a US History class to study for and take the exam, an English class to finish (12 more lessons I think), first semester Geometry to finish (he's got 11 lessons left), second semester Geometry, and two sessions of Probability and Statistics.  It's a lot of work, and he deals with a lot of health issues and often doesn't feel well, so I think it will help him a lot to not have to deal with work on top of school these next 3 months.  By April he should only have his last math class left and that will be smooth sailing.

We are adjusting to Allen working for lifetogether again.  He sometimes works in the evenings, is traveling more, has some spontaneous meetings and trips and things that come up, and the biggest thing is that he hasn't been driving uber or lyft.  This means that he is not gone all day Fridays into the night, he does not work on Saturdays or Sundays.  The weekends are looking a lot different.  It's a big adjustment.  I don't know if it is due to the fact that things have been so difficult for us for so long, the exhaustion of survival mode for years, losing Alice, winter, or what exactly, but we are just tired.  These last couple weekends we've been healthy I just don't have a lot of energy to do things.  I have been struggling with energy and motivation in the weeks as well.  I feel like everything I do is through fog, with resistance.  The simplest tasks are difficult for me.  I guess this is depression.

Starting 2020 I had big plans of how things would go but I really haven't accomplished anything.  My health has been neglected and I am not doing any side work.  I am focused on my word of the year, consistent.  Each day I try to do the daily chores needed to keep our household running and take care of my people, and also to make progress moving forward.  For the past month I've been focused on decluttering the downstairs.  I guess I have made progress but it's been really slow.  I got the very messy white shelf cleaned off and organized, and a paper system that works for me set up, but a lot of things I took off that shelf are still sitting out on the island and floor waiting for me to deal with them.  I think realistically it will take two to three more weeks until the entire downstairs is finished, including the entry way shelves and the hall closet.  It will probably take me until summer to get the upstairs in order and declutter the attic as well.  I thought I would have made more progress than I have but that's okay.  I don't think I will be able to really make progress with my health until I get my home in order.  I can't seem to tackle both of those areas at the same time, though I am still trying.

This year I had several goals that have fallen to the wayside so far:
Purchase a SC park pass and start visiting all of the state parks in the state.
Walk/exercise 150 minutes per week
Spend time outside daily 2-3 hours (or about 20 hours/week)
Spend a maximum of 2 hours per day on my phone.

Jesse is the only one getting enough outside time, but even with the outside time he is spending too much time watching tv/youtube since he was sick.  He got in the habit of it then and I haven't been able to keep us on a more productive schedule since then.  We will continue working and trying to get back on track.  I've also been trying to make breakfast Sunday mornings and most weekends that has happened. 

Getting our home physically in order without any clutter is my first priority.  Along with that is putting the systems in place to keep it running smoothly with everyone pitching in.  That includes the bedrooms and bathrooms being cleaned, the weekly cleaning of dusting and floors and bathrooms, the laundry kept up, and being able to feed all these adult-sized people on a budget, which involves menu planning, a good system for shopping, and keeping the kitchen clean.  I plan to get the attic cleaned out this spring.  Once that is finished and the house is in order, I will go back to working outside and in the garage.  I need to finish the rest of the garage and we need to get the front and side yards and exterior of the house in good shape.  Realistically this will take another school year to complete all of this plus a deep cleaning of the upstairs.  At that point we will need to decide whether to begin fixing up this house or selling as-is and moving into something else either here or in Kansas while Julia and Timothy complete high school.  That is the point where I also hope to be making good progress on my health.  At that point I should be able to be making some kind of regular income as well.

Sam's school and all of the above weigh on me heavily, and when he graduates and I can get out from under these overwhelming problems life will feel so much better to me.


Future

I have several options in my mind about what would be the best thing for our family in the future. KANSAS Positives: 1) Affordable 2) E...