Tuesday, May 25, 2010

We're Moving!!!

Ber heard he was moving back to Rain and Fog!
In the final stages of this move back to Humboldt. So looking forward to having a "home" again. As my brother, Stuart, said, the Lake Hazel house was like living in a hotel of sorts for 18 months. Within a week of arriving in Boise, I knew I wasn't going to relocate permanently to Idaho, so I kept my roots shallow. Not to say I didn't make friends I will treasure and stay in touch with. Rather, I kept my home-making roots shallow--no garden, no real cooking, no projects, etc. No routine.

Honestly, there wasn't time, looking back. The reason I am able to move back home after only a year and a half is because I kept my head down and kept on task. If I'd had my friends and family up in Idaho, I would have taken a much more leisurely path (I think...) through this doctorate! Being alone gave me the motivation to get done, as well as the ability to focus so I could get done. :) Kind of a double edged sword.

As of June 7th, I will officially be a resident of California again. I think I may just hide for a week, and not do anything I'm supposed to. Except unpack, move in, spend time with horses and friends, and adjust. This has been a long haul. I sure appreciate my friends and family for hanging in there with me! I am so fortunate... And so grateful for the opportunity to devote this time to my education. As my friend Mark once said, "Emily, you know there is such a thing as too much education." Or something to that effect. I do believe I've come to the end of my formal education!

At any rate, Stuart was up this week helping me load up all my belongings, which I'd packed before heading to D.C.. So I was ready to go. Though it rained most of the time, we were able to get out and ride yesterday. Here are the horse pictures from Stuart's visit... Enjoy. Next blog ought to be pictures of Ber and Gio happy in their sea-side pasture!


Coming up the pasture.


Giovanna Stepping Out, I'm trying to set up a turn....


Later in the ride, setting up another turn. We do turn to the left, too, really! Gio is totally focused on wild quail or a horse-eating tire feeder or something, so I was working on keeping her busy. Obviously I have more work to do!


Ber on the move. I am loving how he is starting to move out with energy and impulsion. He's starting to be a fun ride.


My Farside Ponies. Gio is such an elegant package, I think.


Will definitely miss this pastoral setting. Been a very good place for the ponies to grow and learn. Very good indeed.


Reminiscent of Pigs Wallowing...

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Six Weeks Out

Lake Hazel house, one year ago...
The end of this Boise Venture of mine is coming to a close. Like most change, there's the good and the not so good... I've added so many friends and colleagues to my life, and though I will keep connected with many of them, I know many will drift away, as that's what happens in life. It's been good to meet new people, and see other slices of life.

I've watched Ber and Gio mature into horses, and I've become a stronger rider and regained the confidence I'd lost somewhere along the way. I've worked with several horse people, who have left their hoof prints on my horse work, and I've learned a new method of horse hoof care which will positively impact all the horses I trim. I will miss this pasture and arena, but I won't miss the scorching sun, bone chilling wind, and biting insects.

Horses at Far Pasture, last May.
I had my dear companions, Arcy and Georgia, along for this adventure, and we shared a brief "second puppy-hood" as they explored this new state. Their presence kept the loneliness at bay and kept a life-line stretched back home to what was, before Boise. Losing the girls continues to haunt me, but a little less every day. Slowly, all the good days and good memories of their many years are beginning to outweigh their final months and the emptiness they left behind.

The remainder of this northern jaunt is highly positive, and I leave with greater clarity on who I am, what I want to accomplish in this world, and why focusing on the positive in life, no matter what's coming at you, can really help.

I learned that I can start over, can build a new network of friends and acquaintances, and can muddle through things on my own without making a complete disaster of it.

I learned that I have something of value to offer the world outside of my little pond back home, and that doors will open up no matter where I land. Yet I realized that the little pond back home was home, not because I'd always been there, but because I wanted to be there.

I learned that the greatest treasure of life is the people we know and share our lives with, and it really doesn't matter where you live...it's the people you are with that makes where you live so special. And any place can become special if you open your heart and mind to the people who are there.

I learned that my place is clearly working with kids and helping them connect to their learning and their talents. That is where my joy lies, that is where work ceases being work. No matter what anyone says I ought to do with my time and skill, I intend to work with kids. It's where I belong.

So, I leave this place with more knowledge, and the inkling of an idea of where I'll go and what I'll do next. Hoping that the extra letters after my name will give me the leeway to make that inkling come to life. We'll see where the road rises up to meet me.

Meanwhile, I am in the middle of collecting the data for my dissertation, which is enjoyable and interesting. I feel pretty privileged to be talking to these parents.

My goal is to have my dissertation complete by December, so I can enter the world of "normal" work come January 2011, two years to the day since I left for Boise. Not sure how the time flew by so fast, because every day seemed so long. But it has.

Here's to dreaming big and asking the universe for what you want. It may not always arrive the way you envision it, and there may be more in the package than you bargained for, but at least it's a great ride.