Life changes are not easy for LeeAnn. Four years ago, we moved her and mother into our home in Kansas. Leaving Amarillo was the hardest thing she experienced in a long time.
(The first hardest for her, was when she moved to Austin to attend the Deaf/Blind school in 1972.)
The move to Kansas was for the better for her and for mother. She didn’t understand she was safe with us. She also did not understand she had not been safe before. Mother's dementia had stolen her ability to properly care and protect LeeAnn, or herself. Predators, or at least one particular predator, was circling their waters. We saved them in the nick of time (but that's another story).
This latest adventure, moving to Colorado, has evolved over the past four years. Fulfilling our dream to live in Colorado became doable as our own lives were changing (but...that's yet another story). Colorado is where we want to be buried, some day (like 50 years from now!), and we want this to be our final place to settle and retire. (Remember I’m 57 years old and my husband turns 50 this year.)
One of first trailer loads. |
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Photo from google images, not my sister. |
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The Castlerock, by Honest Ab Log Homes |
The Raleigh, by Honest Ab Log Homes |
As set on building the Raleigh as we were, we paid for blue-lines, tweaked the floor plans to our likings, discussed mortgage options with our bank, etc. Everything was being readied to move forward. But in our hearts, both of us were terrified of the mortgage payments, yet we said nothing to the other. Okay, sometimes our communication skills are…lacking. We knew it was at the upper end of our range. We were both worried and somewhat miserable about the decision. I kept hearing one of our pastor’s messages about peace.
You know when something is from God when you are at peace with it.
I wasn’t at peace with this, but I refused to address it because I thought, “This is what we want. It’s the right thing to do. We will love living out there on our land.”
The price was much more reasonable for our day-to-day budget. We’d have wiggle room to “do other things,” which is very important to us. You know, we want to have adventures, go camping, fishing, see Yellow Stone, the Red Woods, make trips back to Kansas to see family and back to Texas to see the grandkids (and our children, of course. Ahem!). I could go on and on. We discussed it all the way back to Kansas and we were leaning heavily toward buying this house.
LeeAnn is settling into her blue room, and we have hung several of her paintings in there and the bathroom, which is virtually hers unless we have company. Soon we will unearth her what-nots for her shelves, but she has her desk set and is on her computer again. She has asked me several times, “Rent this house?”
Not finished, but here is our Library |
Our Aunt Dorothy lives just two and a half hours from here. LeeAnn is excited to be closer to her and we anxiously wait for her first visit.
U-haul (Paul), Pam, William, and me, last in convoy. |
Another friend from Denver has already been here. (She helped us move by coming back to Kansas with us, kept us on track, and then she was the fourth driver when we made the U-haul trek a week ago.) Thank you, Pam Wright! You are a friend in deed!
She agrees.
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