decisions

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Oh so many changes on the horizon.

So many [good] and yet [scary] changes.

Truth be told, I spent most of Saturday in tears.  The guilt was overwhelming.  The fears of resentment or anger or blame consumed me and, for a moment, I wavered on my resolve.  Any excitement I had over moving fled and hid in a dark hole.  Stephen said his two cents.  I said mine.  Then all was quiet.

Too quiet.

It’s still quiet.

But I don’t feel guilty anymore.  And I have YOU and Stephen and my mom to thank for that.

You are a family now. You make the best decisions for you and your family. You’ve made the decision so move on. Get excited. Start planning. Stop looking back…Are you excited yet? You deserve to be.” — Kate

Stephen told me over an over again that everything would be alright.  That was excited about the move and looking forward to it truly.  That he’d already been looking at school districts and talking to my brother about good neighborhoods to live in when we can buy a home.

I spoke to my mom on the phone for over an hour and we talked through ideas and plans and she helped me put things in perspective.

And now?

I’m [excited].  Really and truly excited and [happy].

I’m going [home], you guys.

home

I’ve wanted this for so long.  For me.  For my family.  For my daughter.  So, so long and it’s finally, really happening.

No, it’s not the exact ideal situation we wanted but it’s an opportunity to get back on our feet and move forward from a, hopefully, better spot.

This is good.

This is so good.

And I’m so excited.  I’ve been thinking about it non-stop and planning and thinking more and trying to figure out how best to pack and where everything will go in my parent’s house.  My brain is a tumult of ideas and plans and thoughts and more ideas and pipe dreams and maybe not so pipe dreams.

It’s amazing.

And all I can feel in my heart is warmth and hope.  Hope that this [will work].  Hope that this will open up new doors for this family.

Family.

I forget at times that we are a family.  I mean, I know we are, really.  But I forget.  I imagine family as applying to those people over there with the three kids and two dogs and one cat and the house they own.  I still think of me and my parents being a family.  And Stephen and his parents being a family.

And Stephen and I being a couple.

I don’t know why.

But we [are] a family – me, him, Olivia and the dog….our little Max.

Family.

Us.

And we’re moving forward as a family on this grand adventure that could turn out to be something incredible.

This isn’t to say that I’m not sad at leaving Atlanta.  I do love this city and love having Stephen’s family around.  They are amazing and wonderful and I could not have asked for better in-laws.  I love them with all my heart.  And it will be incredibly sad to say goodbye to them.  The whole wishing I could fold the map?  Still applies.

But the visits?  Will be heartwarming and exciting.  And perhaps?  I can finally show off my mom’s farm to Stephen’s family [when] they come see us.

Because they will.

I said so.

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Warning, today’s happy is (pardon the rhyme) somewhat sappy.

My happy is my husband, Stephen.

I don’t think I really say enough good things about him.  Stephen and I both come from divorced homes.  Our parents, thankfully, remarried to [wonderful] partners that we have both come to love and consider parents.  Consequently, both of us have this unspoken desire to break that cycle.

I met Stephen in 2005 while working for a real estate firm downtown.  He worked upstairs in my company’s sister company doing data entry.  He happened to work in the cubicle next to a very good friend of mine.

And, one day, I casually mentioned to her that I thought the guy that worked next to her was [really cute].

Her wheels began to spin and, over the next few months, she would ask us both to lunch, down for coffee breaks and smoke breaks.

One thing led to another, we went out for trivia one night together and that was that.  He moved in with me about three months later.  We were married in 2009.  Olivia was born in 2010.

And he is the most amazing husband, father and best friend I could ever ask for.

Of course, it hasn’t all been rainbows and unicorns.  Marriage is [work] and parenting? More [work].

But it is oh so rewarding.

And right now?

Stephen is making such a leap and a sacrifice for his family – for me and Olivia.  He’s moving us to St. Louis so I can be with my family and Olivia can be near her cousins.  He’s leaving his own family – that security and comfort he’s known his whole life – and moving his wife and child 600 miles across the country in an effort to do what is best for us.

And I can’t be more grateful or in love than I am right now.

We are embarking on a new adventure for our little family of three.  It will be new and more [work] but it will be good and amazing and healthy.

And I couldn’t be happier with my husband.  He is

perfect

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reality.and.why

I was waiting a little bit before writing about this but Facebook had an announcement and then questions.  I was going to let Stephen talk to two more people that need to be talked to.

However.

Here goes.

We’re moving to St. Louis.

officially.  really.  moving.

in May.  after Olivia’s first birthday.

I know I’ve hinted around at it, spoke vaguely about it, talked about my homesickness and “wouldn’t it be nice if…”

But now it’s real as of last night when we told Stephen’s parents.  And, as expected, they’re really upset.

The reasons are many.  And that’s what I primarily want to write about.  Hopefully to help people understand the [why] even if it’s unhappy and not desirable.

Stephen and I have been talking about moving to St. Louis since last August.  Like, really, seriously talking about it and when and how and what would need to be done to make that work.  When we visited last summer to surprise my mom, Stephen remarked to me offhandedly that he could live there with no problem.  He knows my homesickness and my ache at being so far away from my family so for him to say something like that was [big] and not something he would have just flippantly said.  There was intent behind those words and an unspoken promise at that point.

Then the wheels began to turn, rolling towards a destination known but down a path unknown.  How could we move there?  What about Stephen’s job?  What about the baby?  What about Stephen’s family?

I’ve spoken of my homesickness many times on this blog.  You guys know that the ache to be home runs deep in my soul.  Ever since my mom and I repaired our relationship about five years ago, we’ve become incredibly close.  When it was just Stephen and I, living 600 miles away from my family, while not ideal, was live-with-able.  I was fine with it and fine to visit and talk on the phone and what not.

Then I had a baby.

And this ache to be near my mom became more than just a desire, a [wouldn't that be nice].  It became a need.  I don’t know if it’s a mom thing.  Or a daughter thing.  Or a me thing.  Maybe some of you other moms can weigh in on that one.

I find myself [needing] to have my mom around, sad when I get off the phone with her, despondent for days when we return home from a visit to see her.

And it’s not just my mom.  I haven’t lived at home, in that city, in that house, in over a decade.  My brother and I, while we get along famously, don’t actually know a ton about each other.  I don’t know my sister in law at all and that upsets me.  She’s the mother of my brother’s children and I know hardly anything about her.  What did she want to be when she grew up?  What does she love?  What does she hate?  Does she enjoy these things here that I enjoy?

I have no idea.

and that bothers me

a lot

And my nephews.  Olivia’s cousins.  Oh the joy there in those two boys.  The instant affection between them and Olivia.  The gentle and the happy.

I had that growing up with my uncle’s daughters.  I loved being around my cousins pretty much any time I wanted.  Stephen had a cousin he was extremely close to and visited constantly.  We want that for our daughter and all our future children.

So, there are my reasons.  And they are all [I hope] understandable…and valid…

Stephen’s reasons.

He has lived his whole life around his family.  and that is not meant in any way to demean or discredit that AT ALL.  In fact, that has made him the man he is today.  I have never met anyone who has a stronger sense of family, community and loyalty.  He is proud of his family and loves all of them deeply.  And that love and that bond has, in turn, helped him become an amazing husband and father and I would [never] have it any other way.

He knows the value of having family nearby always.  And he wants to give that to me.  He also wants to see what it’s like “on his own” away and off and yonder.

a change of scenery from this state to a different one

new opportunities come what may

Yes, he is moving largely because of me.  But I don’t want to be “that wife” or “that daughter in law” or “that mom” that spirited him and Olivia halfway across the country for my own selfish purposes.  He wants to go, too, and he has his own personal reasons for it that actually don’t have anything to do with me or my family.

I hope that makes sense.

The financial part of it is actually the last piece to the puzzle.  The last impetus.

Originally, we wanted the move to be to our own place in St. Louis.  A house.  That *maybe* we bought and owned and all that happy.

But then our debt became too much.  Threats of collections have caused us to use credit cards we didn’t want to use.  Our rainy day fund was used up paying off medical bills and the like.  And we’re left with a pile of accumulating interest that eats away more and more of Stephen’s paycheck each month.

We never wanted the financial to be a part of it.  We never wanted that to be a motivating factor.  We never wanted it to come to this.

But we’re drowning and this gives us the ability to get back on our feet.

My parents own a nearly 200 year old farmhouse that was added onto twice over the decades.  The result is a large, beautiful home that they only, actually, use about half.  So they have ample room for us to live there while we get our finances under control.

I haven’t lived in that house since I turned 18 and left for college.

It’s not ideal but it’s a solution to this very real and very stressful situation.

But it’s not just a house to move into.  If it was just that, we’d accept the offers we’re getting from family here in Atlanta.  It’s more and what I’ve said above.

Everyone here is upset and I’m trying to find the excitement I [should] feel at getting to go home and be with my mom and my brother.  But all I feel is guilt.  I do feel like “that wife” and “that daughter in law” and “that mom” … Whether there’s a modicum of that in reality or it’s all just in my head, I can’t get the weight of it out of my heart.

The reality is this.

We’re moving in May after Olivia’s first birthday.  Stephen, because his boss is AMAZING and AWESOME, will keep his job here in Atlanta and [maybe] even score them some St. Louis clients in the future.  He will return for probably a week every month to attend meetings and work in his company’s office and see his family.  Every few months (or as often as we can manage it), Olivia and I will come back with him for a visit.

It’s not the ideal solution.  I mean, if I could fold the map and put St. Louis and Atlanta side by side, I would in a heartbeat.  If we could have both families all together in one city, that would be perfect and wonderful.

But it isn’t.

and we have to do what’s best….or, rather, the best option at the time….for our family.

Like I said, we’ve been discussing this since last August.  We’ve gone through all the ramifications of it in our heads and hearts.  We’ve weighed every option and every alternative and thought and talked and prayed and thought and talked some more.

This wasn’t made lightly.

I miss my family so much it hurts.  Stephen wants what’s best for us and to forge his own relationship with my family.  Our finances are dire.

I don’t actually really know how to end this.

I just hope something I’ve said helps to explain the reasoning, the impetus, the motivations, the thoughts behind it all.

My heart and head are in turmoil now.  I feel like I’m ripping something apart that has so many roots and ties.  I feel like there will be resentment.  Stephen tells me not to worry.  That the sadness will pass; that there will be no resentment; that there is no “blame” or “fault”; and after the sadness passes, there will be support and understanding.

My head believes him.

My heart still feels guilty.

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