What's Next?

 I don't have any resolutions for this new year. I've been trying to remember when I stopped doing that, and I think it was 2020. When my health disappeared completely from December 2020 to January of 2021. I haven't picked up the habit again, since. To be honest, it seems slightly pointless to me.


I've been working, and hopefully growing, so consistently the past couple of years, that making extra plans or setting extra goals seems unnecessary.


2020 was a strange year. I think it started out well, but I don't actually remember anything pre-pandemic. I had a pandemic roommate for a couple of months, which was a new experience. It went poorly, which was even more of a new experience, and it definitely threw me off. In July 2020, my relationship with my mom shifted, and I became more independent. I went to Newport with just myself and Bailey. My first time taking a day trip without other people. In the fall, Mom and I went to Portland during what seemed like a lull in the pandemic, to celebrate my 21st birthday. We ate sooo much fantastic food, and I got to show her the Grotto. It's a really special place to me, and I'm not entirely sure why.


And then in December of 2020, I think I had an adrenal crash. All year, the drastic social and political climate had been wearing on me. I'd been engaging in small-scale activism and picking up other people's pain and burdens. I couldn't approach my neighbors freely without feeling defensive and endangered. My relationship with my former roommate had disintegrated. Every topic felt like an issue that no one agreed with me on, which was so stressful for my newly-forming sense of ethics and integrity.


I laid on my couch, basically paralyzed for over a month, maybe two months? I'm not sure. 


I slept roughly 20 hours a day, probably more. I was scared to walk down the stairs. I couldn't stand up straight or steady. I would wake up just long enough to take Bailey outside, and then need to nap for a few hours before I had the energy to sit up and try to eat. Sort of. My body was so heavy that I couldn't get it to move at all. I relied completely on other people to bring me food.


My doctor was no help. 


I started taking an adrenal support supplement on a hunch. I don't remember whose hunch it was.


Eventually I started feeling better.


All through 2021 I was scared and trying to find my capabilities. Whenever I would "overdo it" I would experience the same problem of feeling glued down to my couch for most of the day. Sometimes it would last a week, sometimes longer. I never knew where my limits were. They kept shifting.


Slowly but surely, I started to rebuild my life. With a lot of caution. 


I started therapy again. I started gaining more self-awareness. I started feeling like my life was too big for me to manage it. I started the project of moving into the trailer.


The trailer was a really good thing. It was always there when I had a spare bit of energy and needed something to look forward to. But there was no set day-to-day schedule. It was also something that my close friends and family really helped me out with, which helped me rebuild my sense of community, just a little.


Just before Thanksgiving of 2021, I went to Eastern Oregon. I wasn't sure entirely why I was going there, or how long I would stay, or how it would go. We parked the trailer at my Uncle Leland's place, in a spot that Aunt Sandra had lobbied for. It had an amazing view of the mountains.


I still miss those mountains.



Eastern Oregon was the first time/place in years that I'd really had a social life at all. There was always something going on, and I was always welcome to tag along. I was able to do as much as I had the energy to do, without the effort of being the one to make it happen. It was a really safe environment for me to settle back into my body and try to trust it again. And it's also where I had my first extensive set of experiences caring for babies. I didn't realize I could fall for someone that hard, but I loved and prayed over Uncle Lelands' foster baby every day. I adore her so much, and I'm really glad she has a good home now.


I explored a lot of things in Eastern Oregon. I tried out a new community, I started testing out the implications of the beliefs I'd started developing in 2020, and I started experiencing a sense of calling. A master plan for my life that fits just me. Something I greatly want to see and be a part of. I want to see who I am.


Eastern Oregon helped rekindle hope.


And then it was time to come home, in January of 2022.


I was just going to reflect on this past year, but I've gotten this far in the post and I don't feel like going back now.


This year started off with a bit more difficulty. The transition back to the valley was hard, but I knew I was supposed to be here. I spent a few months feeling discouraged that I still had some things packed up. The trailer wasn't in its (semi)permanent space, so I hadn't planned to unpack everything. But then I was stuck in a temporary parking place and also in a mid-transition rut for at least a couple months. It was depressing.


I think I started slightly entering the dating world in the early spring or so. 


I didn't find a boyfriend, lol, but I met some fantastic people, some of whom turned into lovely friends. I started learning about other perspectives, which were extremely different from my own. It was exciting and fun and deeply fascinating.


I need a sense of discovery to be fulfilled in life.


I decided I need a social life as well. That was one of the biggest differences between my life here in the valley, and the positive parts of life in Eastern Oregon.


Hannah and I decided to befriend a guy named Zeb from our church small group. The trailer doesn't have an oven that works for me, so I started baking at his apartment, where I also became friends with his roommate Mike. Between that and the people I met online, I started having people to hang out with and have adventures with.


Hannah moved into my old apartment this summer, which was amazing. We're closer neighbors than ever! It's so fun to be able to pop in for a cup of tea or a conversation. Or to just sit on her couch in the evenings and laugh at memes until I collapse.


I started doing campfires this summer. And that solidified a bit of a friend group. I reconnected with Marissa, who got to know Tristan in college and has become a lovely family friend. I started getting to know Maggie, whom I had gone to youth group with, but not really talked to before. There are many other people, but Marissa and Maggie and the guys were the most consistent, so we all started getting to know each other.


Marissa suggested baking a pie with all of us gals. We did it at Hannah's apartment, and we all connected and had such a great time, that we've been finding ways to hang out ever since! Even though the weather isn't great for campfires.


I've never had a friend group before. I've never had places to go and be with people and feel just as comfortable as I do at home. Places where I know the routines and dynamics and I can just settle in and be myself. I think that's a perk of having friends with their own places. We make our own routines.


I posted on Facebook awhile ago, that most of my friendships were formed this year.


It's amazing to me how quickly I've gotten so close to people. I mentioned to Mike last night that I've only known him for roughly 6 months or less, because he wasn't at my birthday party in May.


He's one of my best friends- Marissa and I baked his birthday cake in November. He offered to postpone his Thanksgiving plans if I needed anything during a family emergency. 


How did we get here?


I don't know, but I'm so grateful.


There's a lot I'm missing. Reconnecting with a couple of cousins on my dad's side of the family. Accidentally obtaining 2 new kittens. Having the first dtr conversations of my life. Becoming more and more independent of my immediate family. Connecting really strongly to my big sis Tiffany and her family in the past few months, especially. Learning to trust and rely on newer relationships: to trust other people. Learning to reach out to trusted mentors for guidance.


Learning the joys of discovery and the security of a strong foundation. Learning to advocate for myself and others without needing to be aggressive. Settling in to my relationship with God.


If 2020 was a year of fear and uncertainty, and 2021 was a year of loss and then rebuilding, then 2022 was a year of discovery and settling in.


My relationship with God is more natural and open than it's ever been. My desire to do the right thing has been slowly adapting to a desire to be myself. God created my core- my actual, true identity. I want to pursue that with openness and enthusiasm and vulnerability and tenacity and grace.


I want to be me.


I'm not entirely sure what that looks like, but I do know parts of it.


I am strong. I am caring. I am curious. I am full of wonder. I have integrity. I am joyful. I am open and uncertain.


I've been learning to leave room for the Holy Spirit in my life. I desperately want to be malleable. I want to be open and ready for whatever God asks of me each day, week, month....


This has been the best year of my life, I think.


I have laughed, cried, yelled at God, and confronted injustice. I have hurt and grieved and built something beautiful around me. God has given me all of this and so much more.


I'm not sure when the bubble will burst.


But until then, I choose to live with joyous abandon, relishing each moment of freedom and energy. I will cling to my friends and love them as fiercely and gently as I can. I will pursue God and continue to bring Him my challenges and questions and gratitude. I will care for the people around me without wavering for as long as I am able. I will pursue that which I am meant to be, and I will dive in, to the glorious and terrifying uncertainty of the future.


Here's to 2023. We'll see what's next.


~Dolly

The Spirit of Christmas

 To me, joy is such a part of the Christmas season.


Not just the gifts or the traditions or the food or even the loved ones to celebrate with...


It's a time that we focus attention on what is always true; we are each loved by an incomprehensible Being, to an unfathomable degree.


What's the opposite of Lovecraftian/cosmic horror?


Maybe it's wonder. Encountering the vast and unknown, and emerging better for it. Eyes wide open to take in the goodness in the world. And, speaking from grueling, painful experience... there is joy here. There is goodness in the world to be celebrated. All the way from a dog's wagging tail or a cat's sleepy stretch, to a foggy sunrise, to the very act of God Themself becoming a painfully fragile and sweet baby.



These are things to gawk over. Things that strip away our facade of dignity in the best possible ways.


There is wonder in this world, if we have the strength to look for it.


Sometimes we don't. But in this season where (hopefully) the people around us are also feeling the "Christmas spirit", may we all help each other to recognize the good and the beautiful and the wondrous.


Anyway, that was all intro, haha. 


The second of the Advent devotionals I wrote for church, came out yesterday. 😊 It's about joy. It's a little rushed and squished together. I wrote it last-minute, amidst a very intense family emergency. I also struggled to fit my thoughts into the the word count. 😅 


But I offer it to you anyway.


There's a podcast  version on Spotify, or you can keep scrolling on this post to read it, if you prefer that method. 


The Wonder of Joy


Receiving presents has never been the biggest highlight of Christmas for me. As a child, I definitely loved the excitement of whatever could be hidden in a brightly-colored package, but there's something just deliciously exciting about all the effort that goes into giving something. The time spent picking just the right thing, or the investment of making something meaningful.  


When my family opens presents, we go around in a circle. Whoever is taking their turn doesn't receive a gift, they choose one to give. And all the planning and excitement builds into the bated breath of that one moment. 


Because we're all caught up in the excitement together, the response is always worth it. Everyone comments on what a great choice the gift was, while the recipient displays it proudly.


It's lovely to know that you chose something meaningful to show care for someone you love. But there's something to be said about the moment right before the wrapping is pulled back. That feeling of vulnerability and excitement and love that all wraps up into a wondrous bundle called joy.


I wonder if that's how God felt a couple thousand years ago. He had spent so long preparing to give the most precious and meaningful gift available to Him, and here was the moment that it was about to be unveiled. Was God excited to give us something so precious? Was He nervous about making His Gift vulnerable to the rejection of so many? I don't know how God felt, but I do know that the angels rejoiced and the shepherds were in awe, and that God was behind it all.


Sometimes a small gift holds so much meaning and depth that it brings out a bigger reaction than you'd expect. But those are the most precious gifts of all.

Advent, Wonder, and Peace

 Hello! Merry early holidays! 😊


During the Advent season, my church does a devotional, where each day is written by someone from church. 


This year they asked me to write a couple, so I did. The overall theme for the whole Advent series this year is wonder, which seems so fitting to me. Wonder speaks to the bigness of God; the fact that we can't understand everything He's doing, but whatever it is, it's good. It's that awestruck moment that catches your breath away for a moment, when you catch a true glimpse of beauty and glory.


Like seeing a leaf trimmed with frost crystals, or a rainbow refracted in a dewdrop, or a golden sunset reflected on the creek. The little things that God sets in front of us, that reveal bits of Himself.







The first devotional I wrote was on Peace.


It came out on the church's Advent podcast a couple of days ago, so now I feel free to post it publicly, hahaha. It's not a spoiler anymore.


Anyway feel free to listen to the podcast, but if that's not your thing, here's what I wrote:



The Wonder of Peace


I love traditions. There's just something about the comfort of falling into a routine and being able to be fully in the moment, because you know exactly what's coming next. There's no worry about what each moment may hold, and no pressure to make any plans or decisions.


My family's Christmas Eve ritual is one of my favorite traditions. I remember being a small child, and running all through the house to collect every candle my brother Tristan and I could find. Mom and Dad would get out the oil lamps, because we probably would've spilled or broken them.


We'd gather all of them in the living room and light every single one. Tristan and I would excitedly compete for the privilege of turning off the big lights.


And then ...


We would all sit quietly and watch the dancing flames, until Dad would start, "And it came to pass, in those days..." 


We would all join in: "...that there went out a decree from Caesar Augustus, that all the world should be taxed," and together our family would recite Luke 2 from memory, still watching the flickering lights. I can't describe that feeling of absolute contentment and stillness and amazement. In between the big meal and the exciting presents, we would all pause to let the truth sink in- that God really came and He was a baby, just like we each were, at one point. I don't remember all the gifts I got over the years, or all the delicious dinners. But I do remember pausing to reflect, to be still and know what Christmas is about. That feeling comes over me afresh every Christmas Eve- the peace and wonder of the Presence of God.


Having Pride

 June is ending. Soon all the corporate logos will be back to their monochromatic normalcy and the world will be a little less rainbow.


I remember when I first realized gay people exist. I don't know how old I was, but the panic over the "gay agenda" was going around church. I remember the pastor talking about it in youth group. And I remember, before I was old enough that adults felt the need to talk to me about these things, being uncomfortable. I remember watching Worst Cooks in America, online, and there was a gay man competing. And of course, they had the episode where the contestants' families visit, and this man's partner came. And I remember wanting to close my eyes because I was very uncomfortable, but I thought that would be wrong. Because even as a kid, I realized that some people are just gay, and it's not okay to be uncomfortable with who people are. So I made myself not turn away when those two men kissed, and I kept making the choice to not look away when I saw homosexual people in media. And after a little while, I wasn't so uncomfortable. 


Obviously that's a very childlike and simplistic perspective. I'm not saying I did things right. I had no clue about the very broad spectrum of gender identity and sexual orientation. But I am proud of my childhood self for at least knowing that it's not okay to fear people.


It was a start.


A few years later, the topic came into my life again in a very personal way. People I love and grew up with, started realizing they're not straight and/or cisgender.


Once again, I was scared. But this time I wasn't scared of a progressive agenda. I was scared for my friends and how others would treat them. I was particularly nervous about church. My family's church had a course about the "issue," which I did not participate in. Everything was very confusing, and everybody seemed to be in a different place on the "issue" and loving people seemed secondary. The conversation was rarely, "How do we as a church reach out and love the hurting and repent to the broken?" it was, "Is being gay an abomination, or just a 'normal sin '?" "Is attraction a sin, or is just a relationship sinful?" "Is any of it a sin at all, or has the Bible been taken out of context for decades?"


Everything was very confusing, and experts, who seemed very qualified, were all over the map on what the Bible actually says and what God actually wants. 


Things were contentious. 


They still are.


Most Christians I know would consider homosexuality, being transgender, etc., as sins. At the same time, a lot of them are loving people who wouldn't/don't otherwise discriminate against others who do happen to identify with one or more letters in the LGBTQIA+ acronym.


And I've found my own position on all these things, which has brought me more emotional and spiritual stability.


All of this said, I've slightly taken for granted, in the past couple of years, that society and the church have been making progress. That we're moving beyond, "Are people sinning?" and on to, "Am I loving?"


And then.


I went with my brother Tristan to my first pride event last weekend. It was absolutely lovely. The whole thing was at a waterfront park in Bend, with live music and lots of booths by nonprofits and advocacy groups and vendors and even churches. Tristan's outfit and Bailey's existence were big hits. They both got many compliments. 😊



I'm really glad I went. 


But I've also felt heavy ever since.


While we were there, there was a protest on the outskirts of the event. A group of "Christians" carrying a sign that said "God does NOT love you as you are!"


My barometer for when a situation is spiritually unhealthy, is when I feel a need to stand up and preach. And wow, I still feel like preaching at people about it. I guess that's why I'm writing. There are so many things I wish I could say. Scriptures, especially. 


Nothing, not any created thing can separate us from God's love.

The greatest expression of love is sacrificing your life, which Jesus did for all of us when we were absolutely undeserving.


He loves us as we are.


No qualifiers to that statement. No ifs, ands, or buts. If God can love me, He definitely loves you. 


I have so many emotions that I don't think I can express myself well. 


If you care about someone's soul, you tell them there is hope.

If you truly receive God's love, you know it's freely available to others.

If you say you love God, but you don't extend love to others, you don't love God. 


All the things these people were expressing, are things that Jesus would call them snakes for. He would say they're being self-righteous and rejecting the very God whose Name they use to perpetuate condemnation.

At least, that's what He told the rule-following believers of His day.


And I wish I was brave enough to say these things to these people's faces. But there was mockery on both sides of the fence, and I saw myself on both sides, and I teared up and walked away.


I wish I could've said, "That sign you're holding is the abomination; not any of the people it's directed towards."


But I didn't, and now I sit at home and feel heavy with all the words and feelings I didn't feel safe to express in the moment.


On the flip side, I still have pride. I'm proud of myself for reaching past another cultural barrier that made me nervous and uncomfortable, and going to pride. And just like my childhood decision to sit with my discomfort until I wasn't scared of people who are different from me, it was so worth it.


I'm also proud of everyone else at the event. I'm proud of the churches that put themselves out there as a safe place. Of everyone who dressed up to express themselves freely. Of the musicians that poured out their pain and their hope and determination onstage. I'm proud of the person who had two lesbian bearded dragons and painted their nails rainbow and was excited to let us pet them. 


Multiple people at the event thanked me for rescuing/adopting Bailey. That's never happened to me before. And it makes me think, how many people have traumatic experiences that they need(ed) rescuing from, for things they can't change? And how could I help? And why won't the broader church help?


I don't understand why it's all so complicated. Am I loving God? Am I loving everyone, including the most unaccepted people around me? If I am doing those two things, I can claim to be a follower of Christ. If I'm not doing both those things, I don't think I can say that I'm truly doing what God wants. There's a lot of craziness and nuance and dichotomy in life, but I truly believe that's what it all boils down to. 


I don't feel so heavy now, so I guess I've written what I needed to write. I don't know if it's what you needed to read, but here we are.


Pride is a mixed bag for a lot of people. One of the musicians called it "Queer Grieving Month" I think. It's a time to reckon with and accept who you are, but also a time that can remind people... that not everyone else will accept them. The subject of identity is firmly in the forefront, and that can be both validating and painful.


Even for me, as an ace person who can very easily just live my life as a "good Christian girl," it's a conflicting time. What happens if I get married? Is that even a possibility? What do I even want a potential relationship to look like?


I don't know. 


I don't have answers for myself, let alone anyone else.


So, while I bumble along and do my best, I will hang onto what I know to be true of God. I desperately love Him for it all. And I will continue to try to extend love to everyone around me.


That's all I know. 


And I hope other people will extend the same courtesy to me. Because this is a difficult world and people can be cruel and uncaring.


Thanks for reading. Happy Pride! And may we all continue to seek God, accept ourselves, and love others for who they are. Even when it's not Pride Month.

Beauty

 "I am going to make a beautiful life for myself, no matter what it takes."


I'm sitting and going through my nighttime routine, but it can wait for a bit.


I'm experiencing a little warm glow of gratitude. And that's worth pausing things to just sit and focus on. 


I've been a bit discouraged lately. When I was in Eastern Oregon, I had my life together, a little bit. My trailer was organized. It was clean a lot of the time, even! 😅 The fact that I maintained things is a really big deal. Given the ups and downs of my health, keeping things manageable and putting them back in order is really difficult to do over any period of time. Often I feel like my life falls apart periodically, and it is so exhausting to pick the pieces back up again, that I often just ... don't. 


It causes me a lot of shame. I hate not feeling able to invite people over. I hate sitting down to rest and just seeing a bunch of "to-dos" everywhere I look. 


It's overwhelming and discouraging, and I hate asking for help. 


It can be hard to tell someone else how to help me. It's mentally taxing, and when my brain is already overloaded by the clutter in my home, sometimes articulating goals isn't possible. And, asking for help means admitting that I'm having trouble. Which isn't a great feeling. Also, for someone to help, they have to enter the mess: the source of my stress and shame and exhaustion. It's a very vulnerable position to put myself in. So I usually don't.


But then I'm isolated in a pile of dirty dishes and laundry and I still need to eat and wear clothes and be with people. So I get depressed and stressed and exhausted, and the cycle continues.


The apartment never really got fully clean after my first few months to a year there. When I moved into the trailer, I purposed to be intentional about what entered this space. I also wanted my things to be limited enough that even if everything were to pile up, I could look around and say, "Give me a couple of good days and it'll all be taken care of."


In Eastern Oregon, that was the case. I had just moved in, so things were organized and fresh. Hannah had helped me with everything, so when it was time to unpack boxes and settle in, I didn't have to explain it all to her. She knew where things were supposed to go. It was a lovely start, and I was able to keep things in that condition. 


After a project, supplies went back to their place. I was using my cousins' laundry room, so I had to be efficient with it, out of consideration. I had people over sometimes, and I never knew when Uncle Leland or one of the boys would need to come in to look at something or fix something. So I kept blankets and pillows piled in cozy corners of my couch, and kept the floor swept clean. 


I think the biggest thing, though, is that I was always around people. Whenever I wanted, I could pop into the house and hold a baby or talk to Aunt Sandra or my cousins. We did life together, and it consistently fed my soul and replenished me. So life in general was easier to manage. Also, the sun shines every day there, pretty much. And it is so life-giving. Even in frigid temperatures, I would walk out to the mailbox or to say hi to the cows, or give a carrot to Ike the old horse.


But then my time there came to an end. All of a sudden, I just knew it was time to come back to the valley. So things were very rushed coming back. Basically, as soon as we were confident that it would be safe to go over the passes, Mom and Dad came and got me! So packing was hurried, and things were shoved into boxes that still haven't all been opened. I think. And the trailer got parked by my parents' house, which was a temporary arrangement. So I was stuck in a liminal state for a few months. (Much longer than I expected.)


Then, finally, my little home got moved to the shop area on the other end of the farm. Right below the apartment I used to live in, actually! I decided I would settle in here, even if it's only temporary. Living in an in-between is worse than potentially packing boxes in a few weeks. And I looked forward to settling in and finally feeling at home again.


But then I kept getting tired. Again. And then I got sick! So some things have stayed in boxes, and other things are just not quite organized. And I was stuck in that cycle of looking around at all the "to-dos" and feeling incapable and exhausted. (To be fair, I was going through conflict with someone I love dearly, so that's where a lot of the sudden exhaustion for "no reason" was coming from.)


But the past few days I've started feeling better. My dishes have been consistently getting washed. My laundry has been getting folded and even put away!


And my pantry is disorganized and there's random stuff just sitting on my table....


Baby steps.


And while I wish I had the energy to reorganize the baking section of my pantry and clean off my table and wash my rugs and sweep and do everything else.... I'm pleased that I have clean dishes and clothes, and that they're not piling up and adding to the pressure. 


And then, today? I bought 3 cassette tapes to test the tape player that's built into the trailer. 😁


And I cobbled together the most lovely little dish set and got some teacups and saucers, since I'm going to give one of my dish sets to Hannah as a housewarming gift when she moves into the apartment. (We're going to be such close neighbors!)

Such cute teacups!!

There wasn't a full set of these blue floral dishes, so I mixed them with these solid blue ones.

My bounty!


And as I was winding down with a glass of kombucha before bed, (don't ask me why, but it works for me, despite the caffeine,) I looked over at my new dishes, and I noticed that I'm playing my cozy playlist for the first time in a little while. And I thought, I'm doing it again!


I am fighting to make a safe place for myself in a very big, exhausting, volatile world. I am investing heavily in the good and the beautiful. Not just investing my money, but my time. My mental, physical, emotional and even spiritual energy. I will continue to do my best. And I will continue to pick up the pieces of my life when they scatter and get away from me. I will put myself in a position to feel safe and secure and loved, so that I can reach out to the next person and honestly tell them that there is good in this world. Because I don't think I'm the only one who doubts and questions that. 


So I invite you; seek the good with all your might. That's where God is. He's with us in the dirty and the broken, but His character and His dream for us is revealed in the sweet and the safe and the strong. 


Brew a cup of tea or a pot of coffee and sit with yourself in a safe place and thank God for being there. Or just be grateful that you're here, investing a moment into something wholesome.


Build something as beautiful as you can out of broken pieces. And if you don't have the strength right now, come to me and I will invite you into my safe, cozy home. And we can have tea in my new little teacups and I will do my best to create a moment of beauty for you. I think everybody needs that sometimes. Or as often as possible, honestly.


Now that I've spent a really long time writing, I'm going to finish my kombucha and go to bed. I hope you have a good day/night, and that you get some time to rest yourself. Life can be exhausting.


-Dolly

Settling In

 Hello! I'm finally back at it again!


When I last left off, the trailer was basically a construction zone and I was incredibly overwhelmed.  Not in actuality, but in the blog post.


The housewarming/send-off party was lovely. My favorite friends and neighbors and family came and hung out, and saw a pretty clean, homey trailer. We ate snacks, and almost everyone painted a wooden handle to go on a cupboard or drawer. Mom kept track of who painted which one, and afterwards I labeled them all, and then Hannah and I sprayed sealant on them, and we installed them all because we were excited. 😁


All the lovely handles that people painted! And you can see a little bit of where Mom wrote the names of the artists on the paper underneath. These are from when we were sealing them, though, so they're not next to the correct names. 😅

After the party, Hannah and I sat and talked for a long time. I think it was sort of both of us preparing ourselves for what would happen in the next few days. It was so good to just sit and be, between all the chaos and stress and change. 

We were feeling pretty cute on my little green couch. 😊


It was a lovely and peaceful evening. Absolutely nourishing. 


And then chaos came again. Everything got packed up, to the best of our ability, so that it wouldn't all move and break on the upcoming voyage. And off we went! Hannah and I went in my car, with Izzy. I didn't have a cat carrier, so Izzy just sat herself under my seat, snuggled against my leg. (There was a scary moment in Redmond, I think, where she wanted to sit underneath the brake pedal instead. But otherwise things were pretty uneventful.)


Mom and Dad came in the pickup, towing the trailer, and bringing Bailey. Everything and everybody made it safely here!


Where is here?


Well, we parked the trailer at my Uncle Leland and his family's house outside of Mount Vernon, in the John Day Valley, in Grant County. We're by the Painted Hills and the Fossil Beds, if that helps anyone. It looks like this.






It's so pretty here! And there's actual sunshine sometimes!! 😁 I think there have only been a couple days I've been here, that have had the sort of darkness that's so prevalent in the Willamette Valley this time of year. So that's definitely a perk of being here. And it's also slightly the entire reason I gave when I pitched this idea to everyone involved.


When I got here, there were no water or electricity hookups for the trailer. There was, and still is, a ditch running through the area right next to the trailer, with water lines in it and such, but things weren't hooked up when I got here. So Dad and Uncle Leland ran a bunch of extension cords from an outbuilding, and I hauled water in a gallon jug. The first afternoon here, Dad and my cousin Dale installed insulation board all around the bottom of the trailer, and Dad unloaded the flooring we'd brought along. The next day, Mom and Dad and Hannah headed out, and here I stayed.


My first couple weeks here were really busy. On Saturday was cider making and a bonfire, Sunday was church, and then came settling in, and visiting people or going somewhere almost every day, it seemed. Somewhere in the middle of all this, my cousin Dale installed flooring in the trailer! There was juuust enough to do the whole thing in the same color. I made him a chai latte as payment. 

The flooring is definitely a lot nicer than the subfloor!!!

Dale, hard at work.

My beautiful, smooth, non-splintery, waterproof floor!!!

The payment for services rendered. 😁


Around the same time as Dale was putting flooring in, Uncle Leland got a backhoe and some conduit and got to work finalizing the water line.




A lot went into settling me in here, and I'm really grateful.


The first few weeks, I was having to fill a propane tank every 5ish days to keep the heat running, which was a lot of money and trips to the gas station. On Thanksgiving, sometime in the wee hours, I realized that the propane had run out, and the heat system was just pumping cold air from outside directly into the trailer! I turned off the "heat" and piled all my blankets onto the bed, and went back to sleep.


When I got up in the slightly later morning, and stepped outside, I was surprised to find it warmer outside the trailer than inside! The sun was probably starting to warm things up out there, but the effects hadn't spread to the trailer yet. Both areas were probably in freezing temperatures, though. I went into the house and sat by the wood stove until somebody woke up. Thankfully, it wasn't too long until my cousin Gabe came down to the living room, and I asked for his help. Turns out the trailer has a dual propane tank system, and it's super easy to turn off the empty tank and open the full one. So I've been dealing with that by myself ever since.


I wrote in the Smucker Family WhatsApp group that Thanksgiving morning, "I'm thankful for each and every one of my blankets! 😁😬"


After a few weeks of me burning a LOT of propane, Uncle Leland got out a really heavy-duty electrical cord that can handle more watts. This means that I'm now using a little electric heater, and the propane heat only kicks in if the temperature gets below whatever temperature I decide I don't want it to get below. 😁 This has saved me a lot of money, and it's greatly reduced my slight fears of running out of propane and freezing again. 


Trailer life has definitely been an interesting learning curve! Dealing with propane was really intimidating to me at first, but I've gotten pretty used to it. I still haven't been brave enough to try the propane oven, though! I think it would take some trial and error to find out how accurate the temperature settings are, and I don't want to deal with that here and now. 


Bailey and Izzy are both very settled in their little routines. In the mornings I get up and hang out with Izzy while Bailey sleeps in, then I let Izzy outside and Bailey wakes up and has her breakfast. After a little while, Izzy comes back in and they both nap in their comfy spots. They're not best friends, but they've definitely gotten used to coexisting in a small space. In fact, the first time I let Izzy go outside for awhile, Bailey was pretty anxious.







As far as life itself, over here? I think I've learned a lot so far. I'm not entirely what all of it might be yet, though. 😅 I do think I learned more of what it takes to integrate into a new community, how to relate to people who are different than I am in a lot of ways, and how to see more nuance in life in general. Most things aren't black and white. The world is a swirl of grays. And since being here, I've gotten a lot more comfortable with sitting in the grays, and letting them be confusing and messy and difficult sometimes. Since 2020 I've been trying to recover from the very "black and white" mentality that seemed to engulf so many people, including me. And I think I've definitely made some strides with that on the past couple of months here.


One of the most impactful things, if not the most impactful thing, that has happened here for me has been the babies. My Uncle Leland and Aunt Sandra are foster parents who currently have two little girls: a baby and a toddler. I can't post pictures of them, so you'll just have to imagine things. 


Before coming here, I had never picked up a baby. I had never fed a baby or changed a diaper or tried to reason with a stubborn toddler who can't talk back yet. I know how people often see me and my arms, so I never wanted to ask a mom to let me help with her fragile, little baby.  I wasn't confident I could do any of these things with safety or competence, and I never really had an opportunity to discover or develop any skills in that area. My plan was, if I ever get married, to just adopt slightly older toddlers at the youngest, that can already walk, and sort of circumvent the whole issue. 


BUT!


Aunt Sandra patiently showed me how to do some things, and watched as I tried to figure out other things. She made sure I was doing everything safely and competently. And now, when the baby starts fussing, I can say, "Is it time for a bottle, or should I check her diaper?" and whatever the answer is, I can deal with it. 


And the toddler hasn't been as intimidating as I assumed they generally are. She gets stubborn and opinionated sometimes, but she's so fun and funny! I have trouble holding in my laughter when she's being disobedient with a particular bit of sass, or when she makes faces or accidentally calls the friend I'm messaging. And she's starting to form sounds into words, which is so exciting! I'm okay with her being loud or having fits sometimes when she doesn't get her way. We all feel like that sometimes, she just feels things really loudly. 😁


Anyway, this part of life here has made me a lot more confident about dealing with babies and children in general. I feel like now I actually know a bit of what I'm physically capable of, which is a huge help. 


Other than that, I've just been doing life here. I've checked out a few churches in the area, and connected with friends and cousins that I had lost touch with, a bit. I'm really glad to have had this opportunity. I also feel like, with my fluctuating energy levels and being sick for a week, I haven't made as much connection here as I would've liked to. Yesterday I was at my honorary Aunt Reba's house and she said, "... You're leaving already; we were just getting used to having you here!"


I feel the same way, a bit. I'm heading home tomorrow, and it simultaneously feels like the right time, and way too soon. Especially when most of the ladies and girls around here are heading to a retreat this weekend, so goodbyes are a bit rushed. 


This morning I held the baby for what very well might be the last time. Changed the last diaper and fed her the last bottle I might ever give her. And that's pretty hard. I'm gonna miss both the little girls. I'm gonna miss the sunshine, and Ike the horse who asks me for carrots whenever I walk by. I'm gonna miss being just steps away from having cousins to talk to. I'm gonna miss exploring cultural differences and getting to reconnect with a whole little church community. I'm gonna miss Julie and Annie's piano playing, and talking to each of my cousins about what kind of lives they're working towards.


At the same time, I'm so excited to be close to my family again. I haven't seen my parents or Tristan or Hannah for awhile! And I'm looking forward to reconnecting with my church families 'back home'. I miss being with the people who have known me my whole life and whom I can be fully transparent and vulnerable with in the way that only comes from many years of relationship. I am SO EXCITED to have so many restaurants with totally different cuisines again, and I'm thrilled to be able to get boba whenever I "need" it. 😁 I'm looking forward to taking Bailey to "Grammy's House" in the evenings for family dinner, and to having cell service again.


It's a mixed bag. Just as I was settling in, I'm uprooting again. But that's just how things go sometimes, I guess. I really hope we all arrive at the next phase of things safely. 


-Dolly