The job is awesome. I'm a social media moderator, which means I
I had my work schedule a month before our move. I had three convenient days off during which I could make a three-day trek across the country with Kyle and Damien. What I needed was an assurance of high-speed internet with which to report to work the day after arriving in Georgia. And every day for a week thereafter. Which meant that we had to a) stay in a hotel until we found a house (temporary military lodging being entirely unable to guarantee any kind of internet connection in its facilities); b) give up my job; or c) choose a house from a distance, sign and scan the lease never having seen said house, schedule internet installation for the day of arrival in Georgia, and thereby solidify my three days off as the ONLY possible options for our move. So of course, we chose plan C, knowing full well that creating a set, concrete schedule is just about the worst thing you can do to yourself when the military is a factor in any of your decisions. It made things scary.
Our fears were realized when Kyle was attempting to outprocess: he was missing one signature. One little nom de plume from the commander was absent from one piece of paper, and he couldn't leave Texas. But we had a signed lease, with a take-posession date. We had internet installation scheduled. We had hotel reservations for our travel. I had a work schedule. So we (Damien and I) left San Angelo without Kyle. The next morning (in Dallas) my cell phone rang. It was Kyle: "Well, I got my signature. I fly into Augusta tomorrow night at 11." Isn't that just the way of things? Damien and I had a lovely mommy-baby drive to Grovetown, Georgia, and 12 hours after arriving we picked up daddy from the airport. I always poke fun at Kyle, telling him he just wanted to avoid the drive so he made up the signature story so he could fly. Let's just say, Damien is less than angelic on the second and third days of long car rides.
Anyway, that was back at the end of February. Our household shipment? You know, the one with furniture, washer and dryer, all our dishes and most of our clothing, that one? It got here last week. The Air Force is real quick on the uptake. :D We've been slowly making our way through the many (MANY MANY MANY) boxes of STUFF. I almost wish that they could have brought my piano, the washer and dryer, Damien's bed and dresser and a few other odds and ends and then just continued on down the road to the dump with the rest of it. I'm wondering now if it's a good rule of thumb that if you don't remember owning most of your stuff when you see it again after 6 months (we got packed up from Monterey in November, if you recall), you probably have TOO MUCH STUFF. Fortunately we were able to give a LOT of the bigger stuff away, and we have a two-car garage to house all the trash. The City of Grovetown only allows one trash can per household, and won't pick up any trash that doesn't fit in said trash can each week. Lovely. Because, you know, that works out really well when your kid fills half the can with soiled diapers in the first three days of the week. He's a BOY, PEOPLE.
Random observation about moving: I am by no means an environmentalist cheerleader. You'll never find me at a Greenpeace rally, nor will I advertise for the Baby Seal Salvation Front on my t-shirts, and I have even been known, at times, to purchase paper plates. I am simply and certainly an advocate for moderation, economy, general respect for the world and smart living. But even I, the occasional-butcher-of-the-environment-via-the-purchase-of-disposable-cutlery non-activist, am alarmed and distressed by the vast amounts of unnecessary paper used in packing our things. We're talking... SOCKS. WRAPPED IN PAPER. It honestly struck me as such a gross overuse of resources, such an unnecessary compilation of flat-out TRASH, that I might even be moved to write to someone about it, if I can figure out who. End rant.
So we're almost entirely moved in, after nearly two months. Three boxes left to unpack, and I already know they mostly contain wall decor for which I have yet to choose locations, so I'm not in a hurry. After watching out for the washer/dryer hardware/hookups in every box, I was finally advised to check INSIDE the washer and/or dryer for said hardware, and there it was in the dryer. Smart placement, because, you know, I was going to OPEN the dryer at some point without having yet been able to hook up and use the washer. *massive eyeroll* As it turns out, though, Electricity, that drama queen, is far more needy in Georgia than in California and requires four prongs on her dryer plugs, as opposed to the currently installed three, and so I must go yet another day without laundry; Kyle couldn't find Home Depot. He hasn't been into town as much as I have yet to get his bearings.
That's the story of our move-in to Georgia, random and boring as can be. Cool things are going on, like Damien's developmental assessment/speech therapy, my tummy-tuck referrals, going to the Atlanta Opera (!!) this month, Kyle being on eternal casuals (the lovely waiting game before he can actually do his job, not really very cool but quite boring), etc. But those are another boring blog post for another time.




