I hate change. Not pennies, nickels and dimes or sweeping move across the country change... just the new shoes/new glasses/ getting used to lovely new computer blues....
Trying to cut down on words of late so won’t belabor the point, but suffice it to say we moved a lot when I growing up. Not excessively but enough. I went to three high schools and two universities. Over the course of my life, I’ve lived in five states.
When my husband and I moved to Flagstaff, Arizona from Iowa more than 20 years ago, the move literally made me sick.
Or so I thought.
True, I was getting used to high altitude living. But what I mistook for abject unhappiness turned out to be stomach flu.
I threw up, felt fine, and loved our five-plus years there.
Later, two-year-old in tow, we moved to a university town in West Virginia. It rained every single day that autumn, a fact I’ve blogged about before. I’d take toddler Erik to the park in the drizzle and wonder how on earth I’d ever meet other moms and make friends.
I just had to have faith.
Big changes I seem to sail through after the initial nausea and need for an umbrella. Moving to Nebraska was a little choppier for me but only in the job department. The prairie grasses of this state differ enormously from the Great Lakes of Michigan, my beloved birthplace. Still I lump these places into the category of ‘Midwest’ and feel like I’ve come home.
It doesn’t hurt that we’re close to western mountain ranges, another love.
But getting used to a new computer or even a new pair of shoes throws me. Is it my discomfort with the unfamiliar or am I that set in my ways?
Isn’t moving across country ‘unfamiliar’? Or changing elementary schools or high schools or jobs or states?
I don’t know the answers. Usually when I commit words to paper--rather screen--for this blog, I have some idea of the outcome, the destination, the denouement.
Maybe big moves are an exciting chance to start anew, and small changes are just annoying.
Or it could be having the soul of a makeover artist and the personality of she of the Princess and the Pea notoriety?
I do know we are who we are. We adapt, we morph, but we never fundamentally change.
Especially when it comes to change.