
Buttercup marries Humperdink in little less than half an hour. I love The Princess Bride
So, let me sum up: It looks like we're moving...to Indiana. After two full-day interviews, a couple of months of silence and assuming they'd found someone else, a job offer, an angry former employer, being slapped with a temporary restraining order, going to court, laboring through settlement negotiations, and trying to figure out how the move would actually proceed, we will be moving...to flat, cold Indiana. I include the map below to show you it's precarious position NORTH of the Ohio River. *shudders*

Yes, I know, you're jealous of our new exotic location. I can admit that it's not what I really want. I can say that I'm less than thrilled to move from a town I really love, to take my kids out of a really wonderful school, and to leave friends and family. But, it was clearly God's will and my dad told me that the most dangerous place you can be is outside of what God wants. He is taking it much better than I am. He's a dad though, and he can see how professional advancement is good for his grandchildren and their future. That, and he's just a great dad.
Nathan started his new job about a month ago and has been staying there during the weeks and coming home on the weekends. He seems to like his new job and new employer. But I can't help but think he has to be lonely without us. I mean, he's living in a Hilton. Where these nice ladies come in and straighten his room and clean his bathroom every day. That has to be so annoying after living here. Who needs a bathroom cleaned every single day anyway? And there's that breakfast buffet. If you know Nathan, you know Nathan hates buffets. He likes the cold cereal he gets here. And what about getting to go where you want, when you want, as fast as you want? That just gets old. There's nothing like trying to herd three kids into the van and get them all settled down into a seatbelt and then listen to them talk endlessly about whatever it is they talk about while you desperately try to listen to the radio. That is a skill set he is totally losing. And let's not forget how much he is missing the baby...in the middle of the night. I get to enjoy her every night, several times as she has yet to sleep through the night one single time in her 9 months. He is missing out with all the Indiana sleeping he's doing. Poor guy. So lonely.
Meanwhile, down here in the Promised Land, we are on a strict weekly schedule. I love a good schedule and really don't deal well with deviations. My kids love deviations. Or rather, they must love to cause deviations. They get strep throat (for the first time ever, might I add), antibiotic allergic reactions, and stomach bugs that just throw us into a tailspin. I cannot schedule those and they know it. Being a single mom is really much harder than I ever thought. And don't get me wrong, I pretty much suspected it was going to be exhausting. But I rather egotistically thought I could get this good schedule going, because experts tell us that KIDS LOVE SCHEDULES. Perhaps these experts haven't met my kids. The genetic offspring of Mr. Fly-by-the-seat-of-his-pants Go-with-the-flow. I believed those experts because I love a schedule. Apparently that is not a dominant trait on the DNA double helix.
So, when are you actually moving, you are asking. That is a super good question. Since the job offer basically coincided with the beginning of school and the subsequent legal snare took us about a month into school, we didn't want to move the boys out of classes they were already settled into. Not to mention schools they both know well and feel secure in. Carter's school is wonderful and he has made it clear he doesn't want to move from it. I admit the fact that Will won't go to Kindergarten there next year brings tears to my eyes each time I think about it. Also, we have to fix up and sell our current house. And from what I hear, we are in a recession and the housing market is kind of flat right now. The short answer to when we will actually move is: at the end of the school year. At least, that is how I see it. Nathan might see it earlier than that, especially with how lonely he is and how clean that Hilton bathroom is. Carter has said he thinks he'll have to move there by the time he graduates from high school. Will is only vaguely aware of moving, and Arabella, she couldn't care less.
Even though this situation is difficult, I'm learning a lot. I've learned that I can't do it on my own even with a good schedule. I have to let others help me. I have to ask for help. I have to admit that I am not Super Woman or even Martha Stewart. Most importantly, I have to ask an all-powerful God for strength and patience every. single. day. minute. I have learned that my children are sinners. And that, like Paul, I am the worst of them. They have more patience with me than I do with them a lot of the time. They are tender-hearted and really love responsibility.
These days, I am surprised at how old Carter seems. He's like the best big brother anyone could want. Arabella lights up when he gets home from school. She clearly wants his attention and basks in it when she gets it. Carter is so good with her it amazes me. He talks sweetly to her and holds her and plays with her. He never even complains that many times his job is to get Arabella to stop crying. Maybe twice he has said, "Sometimes, it's hard being the oldest." God has given him the personality for being oldest: responsible, introspective, and caring. Will is, for the most part, like a ray of sunshine. He is buoyant and light. He loves hugs and just wants to do what Carter is doing. Where Carter seems like an old soul, Will is the innocent. He sometimes reminds me of Spongebob in that optimistic,

The best part of the whole thing is how clearly God is taking care of us, showing us grace and mercy, and really giving us strength. He is faithful to us and loves us. He is good all the time.
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