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Getting my house in order.

“Our homes are not containers for stuff, but rather a place of joy and connection. Let’s make room for more of that.”

Courtney Carver

So many people ask what am I doing with all of my “free” time. I have to chuckle, because I feel like I haven’t stopped since I arrived here in October. COVID lockdowns be damned! I have managed to find something to work on every week. At this point, I think I can see the light at the end of the tunnel in getting my new home to be exactly what I want it to be. I almost have my house in order.

When the work finishes, I’m going to wrap myself in the cultural blanket of Italia for several weeks. I feel like I need to return to the place that brought me here originally and where my heart still rests much of the time. I also need to get my house and affairs in order there, before I return to France to experience spring and eventually feel the warmth of summer.

I’ve made the difficult decision to let my apartment in Torino go when the lease expires. In these strange times, it just doesn’t make sense to maintain it when getting there is not so easy. I still maintain my main residency there, so I can return home after I complete a few technical steps. (A negative COVID test being the most important one.)

I will always find Torino to be an important part of the quilt that I have crafted over the last two years in Europe. Life delivered me there for a reason. I must honor that memory while I seek a more permanent place in Italia. Hopefully after summer in France, and when things normalize a bit more, I will return to Italia and find that happy place.

Every house has a story to tell.

The whole idea of getting my house in order struck me when I took a walk with Sofia just a few days ago. The was shining before the rains and wind arrived, and just when the light turned into the golden hour, I took the photos above. This is somebody’s ruin that has a story to tell.

This house is clearly being retaken by nature with spiraling branches around the staircase, ivy cascading from what is left of the ceiling and moss reclaiming the quarried stones that still remain as a perimeter wall.

There’s something hauntingly intriguing about the pictures. Clearly, the house in the photo has seen better days. But, would you not agree, there is something magical about seeing it in its current state? I wonder what it was like when people and animals called it home. Who was the family that abandoned it to let it slowly return to the earth. Perhaps they lacked the money or desire to maintain the house. It’s sad, but you see this everywhere throughout Italia and France. Once beautiful stone structures that are slowly being reclaimed by the environment.

Thankfully, my house has been cared for throughout the years, and isn’t ready to return to nature yet, but it’s been a project and a story nonetheless. Along the way, gifts keep appearing in the form of people that move my vision forward to get my own house in order.

There is progress despite the chaos around me.

I must remind myself that the most of the world is still shut down as I continue on my home improvement efforts. Everything I need to go about the work is open for me. It creates the illusion that life is still normal. I’m learning a lot thanks to those geniuses on YouTube who post all of those do-it-yourself tasks that one wouldn’t typically do-it-themself.

As I mentioned in a previous post (you can read that here). There’s something different about this house and the reward it is providing me for my efforts. I think that’s the point of this move, to heal from the inside out and prove that I’m made of more than I thought. Perhaps getting my house in order here is about changing a mindset about what I am capable of doing on my own. It’s a launching place for what I will do next.

In the past I found myself creating my home it tandem with Darin. We always had a shared vision (after some lengthy debates) of what we wanted to create. Along the way, I got something from the joy I created for Darin and my friends and family as our vision materialized.

This time, I don’t have the same feeling of joy or even the desire to please somebody else. But it has been replaced it with a desire to make this my own personal exploration. You can see how getting a house in order can take on an entirely different meaning. Along the way, the surprises keep coming.

What’s cooking in the kitchen?

Barry and Luc arrive to help get the house in order.

New roof..new space
Nobody clears trees out like Luc and his fantastic “digger”

Max, aka “The party killer” comes to visit.

Yeah…that’s what you think it is hanging out of a heating vent.
Hmm..let me see, mice cages, snap traps, a Bordeaux, a few Côtes-du-Rhône, and a Saint-Émilion. Yes, all is in order.

It’s easy to get lost when getting your house in order.

You know there’s always an emotional hook in my blog, so here it goes.

I am grateful for the help from Jeremy, Laurent, Barry, Luc and Max in getting my house in order. These are all people that arrived when I needed them. One cannot question the undeniable system of support the Universe can deliver when you need it.

At the same time, I have used his time to get myself in order. I guess the last three-years have had a traumatic impact on me in a way that I wasn’t ready to cope with yet. I had to pause to listen to it, and much of that listening came over the last few weeks.

One of the most common things to happen to people dealing with grief-related trauma is to shift further into isolation. Hmmm. Throw a confining pandemic into the mix, and you have yourself the potential to go quite deep and lose the desire to stay connected to the outside world.

There are days now where I am quite happy to just continue working and be alone. Each day I have to push myself to stay above the cloudy skies and seek out the connections of others. Perhaps many of you find yourself in the same daily struggle.

I am not telling you this because you need to worry about me. However, I think it’s important to share an honest message with you about what is happening with me and what I am uncovering along my journey. Now I can recognize the symptoms when they appear and can counter them. Sometimes it’s a phone call to a friend, reading a book that inspires me or just simply taking Sofia for a walk. I hope sharing my experience will make you feel a bit more ok if you are feeling the same symptoms. We are all on our own journey of self-discovery during these difficult times.

I want you to know that when I write and share my stories with you, and in turn, feel and see your reactions, that keeps me connected to the greater world. Even if I can’t be with you personally, knowing you are there is everything to me. Thanks for following me on the road to get my house in order: physically, mentally and spiritually.

Sending love to you from Sofia and I, along with a few remaining mice that call this little place in Europe home.

Be well and stay well.

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