Greetings Kittens,
Here at the close of July I’m
still heavily in the theme of freedom. In my case, it’s freedom from the
feeling of confinement.
I wrote a few months back
about the treachery of one’s own body betraying them. In my case it’s ME/CFIDS
& FMS and it put me on medical leave since March. The loss
of income resulted in having to move in with friends in April. Fortunately, it
had been something we were talking about before I got sick as a way to help us
all bounce back from the recession and get a savings going again. Unfortunately,
we didn’t get that planned, budgeted move we’d hoped for.
Because of the last minute,
unexpected nature of the move, we couldn’t move into the larger space we’d
picked out together and had to make due with the apt they already had. For a
little perspective, I haven’t had a roommate in almost 15 years, and now we’ve
spent the last 3+ months as four adults, two dogs and a cat in 700sq feet.
As often happens, it was one
thing after another once we got here. The new place had to be renovated and we
were first told it would be ready at the beginning of May, then June, then July
and now it’s August and FINALLY we get to move to the 1500sq awaiting us.
To make up for the delay, we
were allowed to start moving things in the moment we paid the deposit. Each day
of the last ten days has seen the migration of boxes and clothes and things too
long in closets. And we actually have a bedroom closet in the new place and don’t
have to store everything in the hall closet, so a big step up.
We also have a real kitchen
for the baking I miss so much, and I get my own bathroom again!
It’s the little things.
Speaking of little things. Our
“bedroom” was so small that we had to downsize to a full sized bed in order to
be able to walk along one wall. Right now I’m waiting for that bed to get
picked up and for our queen sized bed to be delivered at the new place. The new
room is closer in size to the one we moved from, so my freedom of space will
not only be in the entire house, but in those intimate locations where it’s oh
so important.
I’m also returning to work,
likely part-time as I’m still highly symptomatic, but even that gives us a
significant freedom. My sweetie found employment up here about ten days after
we moved. This, after three years of struggling post layoff. That alone makes
the small digs and expected irritations of living with other people well worth
it.
Being a two income couple
again, with $200 less in rent and half the bills, opens up so much to us. From
the small freedoms of catching a movie when it comes out, or getting a meal
out, to the large freedoms of having a savings again and being able to travel
across the country to see my family.
Ultimately, the exact things
we do aren’t important, it’s having the choice to do them that is everything.
May you all have the best of
choices ahead of you.
Ramble Done, Kittens!
2 comments:
Yay, Xakara! I'm so glad things are going better for you. Here's hoping it's all good times ahead!
Unexpectedly, your post made my cry - half out of happiness that things are looking up and half because I don't like seeing my friends struggling. I can very strongly relate with the issues you describe, from the challenge of accumulating savings to the devastation illness can cause. I've seen it with my own family (my husbands liver failed 4 years ago and, while he's now stable with medications, it's something we'll live with the rest of our lives together. Since I have worked in the insurance and financial services industry for the last decade, I see the results a sudden illness can have, the devastation it can cause.
I think the silent hero here is the sense of optimism I constantly read in your posts and emails. That's the hardest part of all of this: maintaining hope in the face of adversity. It's so easy to write pretty words that amount to "keep your chin up;" you live the reality and I am so deeply impressed by that. Truly, you are an inspiration. The world is a brighter place for me because you are in it and because you are brave enough to share your journey.
Safe travels and may your new home be safe, comfortable, and serene. Blessed be.
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