Year End: Moving House

All told, the hardest part of moving to a new place was getting Cali into one of the carriers.

Finding a new place we liked? Actually kind of enjoyable. Our agent was super helpful and easy to work with. Banking? A bit chaotic with a few frustrating delays and dead-ends, but it got done eventually. Paperwork? There was certainly a hell of a lot of it, but in time all the t’s were crossed and i’s were dotted, and I made it a point to save every homeowner copy and pdf sent our way for future reference. Waiting for moving day? We planned it out so there was a bit of an overlap, so we had access to our new place while still emptying out the old one, and moved several things ahead of time to make it easier. Packing? Thankfully we prepared at least a good few months ahead of time, slowly boxing everything up. I must have made seven visits to the local Goodwill to donate the stuff we no longer wanted, each trip with six or more boxes of stuff. Setting up a mover? Easy-peasy, and the team I hired did an excellent and extremely quick job. Updating all the mailing addresses? Easy, though of course we’d forgotten a few post-move as is normal. Even the unpacking was quicker than expected, considering how detailed we’d been in packing in the first place. Certain items went straight down to the garage storage, while others went into specific rooms. All told, everything went as smooth as we’d hoped it would with minimal issue.

As for the cats, Jules didn’t fight too much. She got a bit cranky but she kind of understood what was happening, considering various pieces of furniture were suddenly disappearing along with the curious mountains of boxes they’d been climbing all over the previous month or two. She might be the more vocal of the two any other time, but she’s also very quiet when things get tense or confusing.

Cali, on the other hand? She turned into a full-on chaos goblin. It took three of us to get a hold of her, wrap her in a towel, deposit her in the cat carrier while she flailed and clawed, then zip it up before she could jump out for the fourth time. Our friend C was laughing the entire time, it was so comical. And Cali was not happy and made sure I knew about her displeasure until I took them both over and set them loose in the office for a day or two until everything settled and we put more boxes away.

All told, it only took them maybe a day or two to get used to the new place, and they love it here. More windows, more things to explore, more birds outside to watch, and even a stairway to run up and down. And they love skittering and drifting across the floor instead of digging into carpet. Life is good for our two silly cats.

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On a more personal note, it feels good to start fresh on that ‘clean slate’ level. I’m still feeling my way around figuring out what habits and processes I’d like to return to and which ones I’d like to change, but for the most part it’s been a lot easier than before, when I still had my creative past all around me. I hadn’t realized how much of an issue that had been, given our minimal storage space in the last two places we’d lived in. Back in my Belfry days, I could store a lot of my old stuff in filing cabinets or in the boiler room, but over the last several years I only had plastic bins and IKEA storage boxes that had to be shoved under the bed or in the deep recesses of what little closet space we had. In our new place, those bins and boxes are on the lower shelves of a unit I set up in the garage. Well out of the way but still easy to access if necessary. [I suppose I should eventually spend some time getting all of it in a better order, but there’s no rush right now. Maybe in the new year.]

This, in a roundabout way, has helped me focus more on the mental and emotional clarity I’d been working on over the last few years. There are still a few bumps in the road here and there, but I’m doing pretty well right now considering. I’m realizing that there are still a few self-built obstacles to work through, but those are much easier to face these days. Perhaps it comes with age that I’ve learned not to be so emotionally reactive to it all. I’ve learned what to work on and what to let go. I’ve learned when to keep fighting and when to move on.

It’s true, moving house did assist somewhat in all of that, partly because I’d chosen the ‘clean slate’ route. It inspired me to remain on top of it all and not get overly distracted. It offered more clarity going forward, making my path easier to navigate. Older thoughts and ideas cast aside, paving the way for new ones to form without all the clutter.

Sure, this might be another one of my patented year-end Best Laid Plans rambles, but I’d like to think that despite that happening, I have a much better chance of seeing it through than in the past. And I’d like to think that’s something worth looking forward to.

Spare Oom 2009-2025

It’s been a wild ride of just over fifteen years here in Spare Oom. All those hours working remotely for the Former Day Job. All that music streamed, downloaded, listened to, cataloged and shared. Cats coming in to visit, play and nap. Books read. Characters and maps drawn. Word seeks completed. Guitars played and playing styles honed and songs written. Views of the Golden Gate Bridge to gaze at when I needed a mental break from it all.

All those words churned out on the 750Words site. Numerous blog entries on two separate sites. Personal journal entries scribbled into notebooks. Trunked ideas gathering dust in my Dropbox. The moment I finally finished the Bridgetown Trilogy after a multi-year hiatus. The decision to self-publish my work. Learning how to properly edit my own work. Learning how to create e-book covers. Seven completed and self-published novels. And another one started and eventually making its way to publication.

Some days I felt like I was wasting time and getting nothing done, other days I felt like I was kicking ass.

It’s been an interesting time here, and now it’s time to shut down the PC and pack it up along with all the externals and other hardware, because it’s heading over to the new place tomorrow morning.

See you on the flip side.

It continues

As always, you never know how much you’ve accumulated until it’s time for you to move. Then it becomes clear that you have a lot more than you remember having. Books that have somehow fallen somewhere into the temporary alternate universe only to surface years later. All kinds of I’ll deal with it later objects that never get dealt with. Gifts, tchotchkes and collectibles that pile up on bookshelves. Things you’ve forgotten you bought and had been looking for. Clothing and other items you’ve used once or twice then forgotten about as they sink further into the back reaches of the closet. And being a writer, there are always, always, hundreds of blank or near-blank notebooks and notepads and unused pens that you’ve been meaning to use for ages.

And when you’ve got a set (or a planned and hopefully set in stone) moving date, it occurs to you that packing isn’t going to be a day long thing as you’d hoped, but a weeks long event that needs order and planning, hundreds of boxes, and loads of tape, Sharpies and packing paper. You start playing 5D chess: you want to move this so you can uncover that which is on top of those things that you know you don’t want and need to sort into recycling, donation or trash. And because you’ve (hopefully) learned your lesson in the past, there will be a method to your madness, and the things you’ve moved temporarily will be placed in a specific place elsewhere in a pile that will then be packed and vaguely labeled as ‘desk stuff’. The recycling and trash are easy, of course — you can just bring them to the bins downstairs. The donation boxes are a bit more tricky, as you’ll need to somehow find a temporary spot to put them until you have a moment to get them down to the car in as few trips as possible and hopefully find a close parking spot at the local Goodwill.

All of this, of course, during your off hours when you’re not working the Day Job. And are most likely working on a half-tank of energy.

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This has been us the past couple of weeks. Alas, I have fallen slightly behind in the writing work, but I’m allowing it only because this is a life event and not simply slacking. Once the move has taken place and we’ve settled somewhat, I’ll be able to pick up where I left off once the PC and its attendant externals are up and running and the internets are turned on. I can take my time with the unpacking, as long as I keep that consistent and don’t fall into the trap of hiding it in the garage where it will inevitably fall into the I’ll deal with it later dimension once more. I’ve seen too many local garages that are basically I’ve Got Too Much Sh*t storage containers, and I refuse to let that happen to us. After all, I put ‘having a garage’ on my wish list precisely because I want somewhere to park our car when it’s not being used.

Still, if we time this out right (and I think we will), all should fall into place with minimal distraction or distress. Fingers crossed.