Home on the Range- Back in Boise

The kid and I moved into our new place in Boise this weekend. This is the end, my friends, of a difficult two years of moving and trying to find a place. Many adventures and fine places to visit, but we decided to not settle in Albuquerque, Taos, Truth or Consequences, Koro Island Fiji, or Portland. It took two years of roaming but we decided to come back home to Boise.

The new apartment is great, with a huge shady back porch and a spot right next to a big window for my desk. The furniture arrived late yesterday and I immediately opened twelve boxes until I found my bamboo back scratcher, which apparently I cannot do without. Then, with boxes and bubble wrap everywhere, I took the backscratcher and went to the desk to work on the new story.

The new place is on a lake, and I plan to take my Wal-Mart fishing pole down to the water to cast. I don’t want to actually have to touch a fish, due to a traumatic fish incident in childhood, but I love to cast and hang about by the lake. If I want to get a small kayak or rowboat, I can tie it up to the dock. If I want to get away from the kid, I can row my boat out to the middle of the lake and lean back and think about stories! I suspect he will be cheering from the dock while I am cheering from the boat.

My parents are aghast that I am still living in apartments, at my age. The kid would also like a house, but that’s because he thinks of houses as places where the boys don’t have autism and there is a dad out cutting the lawn. I bought a house when I was twenty-five, and that thing felt like a rock around my neck until I was able to sell it. I’ve always loved to move, and living in apartments facilitated this maladaptive behavior. Now I’m determined to not move again, but I still like living in apartments. I call this guy for maintenance when the fridge isn’t getting cold, and go back to work until he comes.

I’m starting to think the key to writing well is to minimize all other distractions in life, and then lean in until my eyeballs bleed. Now I have my backscratcher and a bottle of Tylenol to deal with the consequences of moving boxes, and a cool rainy day outside my window, I’m ready to take over the world!
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Published on September 03, 2013 07:55
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message 1: by Kaje (new)

Kaje Harper Congratulations on finding a place that feels like home. I hope you both settle in and that it makes life easier and smoother for you.


message 2: by Julio (new)

Julio Genao kick-ass and congratulations :-)


message 3: by Erotic Horizon (new)

Erotic Horizon Wishing you all the best settling in. Hope you have good dreams in your new place.


message 4: by [deleted user] (new)

Kaje wrote: "Congratulations on finding a place that feels like home. I hope you both settle in and that it makes life easier and smoother for you."

Thank you- am feeling very happy and hopeful this morning.


message 5: by [deleted user] (new)

Julio-Alexi wrote: "kick-ass and congratulations :-)"

gracias, amigo. Now I need a cool fishing hat!


message 6: by [deleted user] (new)

Erotic Horizon wrote: "Wishing you all the best settling in. Hope you have good dreams in your new place."

Thanks very much- Already loving the quiet of this little corner I've found


message 7: by Lady*M (new)

Lady*M Whenever I read one of your posts about moving to another incredible place, changing your life completely, I think: this woman has brass cojones. That said, I'm glad that you finally found a place to call home. I lived my whole life in an appartment and I wouldn't change it for the world. I always felt like house is a bottomless pit.


message 8: by [deleted user] (new)

Lady*M wrote: "Whenever I read one of your posts about moving to another incredible place, changing your life completely, I think: this woman has brass cojones. That said, I'm glad that you finally found a place ..."

the clack and clang of those brass cojones was starting to drive me mad!!


message 9: by [deleted user] (new)

I might have overdone the bubble wrap, considering the bags of the stuff I've been hauling out to the dumpster. But everything looks perfect!


message 10: by Julio (last edited Sep 03, 2013 06:09PM) (new)

Julio Genao It's impossible to overdo bubble wrap.

bcuz bubble wrap, obviously.

did you find a hat?

if only there were some readily-available resource to hand, with which one could easily fashion a floppy, bubbly shield against the sun.


message 11: by [deleted user] (new)

I have a brown bowler for winter and a ball cap with mickey on the front; also a ball cap from the Albuquerque Isotopes and one from my last ship, USNS Comfort. But only old farts walk around in their military unit ballcaps. Need a hat with a brim onto which I will fasten something--flies? a joint? a pencil and tiny memo book? That last I might actually use.

Somebody down at the dump is going to have fun with all that bubble wrap- I've had to confiscate all I could find from the kid's bedroom, because he was in there popping.


message 12: by Julio (new)

Julio Genao the racket must have been glorious. wear what you like, I say. the paparazzi will be kind.


message 13: by Antonella (new)

Antonella I'm glad you seem to be well settled now. A lake nearby is a great thing! Every shape of water is calming and nice to look at.

If you tried with house-owning and you weren't happy, then stick to the flat.

For me it is exactly the opposite: when I was in the middle of a deep crisis to know that I had a sanctuary that no one could take away was deeply reassuring.


message 14: by [deleted user] (new)

Antonella wrote: "I'm glad you seem to be well settled now. A lake nearby is a great thing! Every shape of water is calming and nice to look at.

If you tried with house-owning and you weren't happy, then stick to t..."


I wonder if my son is going to need his own sanctuary after I'm gone? I'm thinking hard about the best place for him. And thank you, I am very glad to be settling back in here. I saw an inflatable kayak at Walmart!


message 15: by [deleted user] (new)

I'm always late to your parties Sarah! But it's always nivce to spot in and read where you're at. You make mundane something deep and reflective :)


message 16: by [deleted user] (new)

yesterday we visited the BFC- the Boise Fry Company, where you can get your potatoes of choice fried the way you want- russets, Yukon gold, purple, yams, or sweet potatoes, and they will cook them as shoestrings, homefries, or po balls. Po balls being potato balls. I got to sample po balls in Yukon gold and russet. They also have beer milkshakes! (Thank you, John Steinbeck!)We're very happy to be back.


message 17: by [deleted user] (new)

Sarah wrote: "yesterday we visited the BFC- the Boise Fry Company, where you can get your potatoes of choice fried the way you want- russets, Yukon gold, purple, yams, or sweet potatoes, and they will cook them ..."

That sounds amazing! My husband has been trying to sell me on Moscow as possible post Phd teaching locale...The campus does look beautiful and now that you've mentioned potato balls!


message 18: by [deleted user] (new)

Lauraadriana wrote: "Sarah wrote: "yesterday we visited the BFC- the Boise Fry Company, where you can get your potatoes of choice fried the way you want- russets, Yukon gold, purple, yams, or sweet potatoes, and they w..."

a real old fashioned college town, surrounded by the most gorgeous rivers- cross country skiing, or snowshoeing in the winter. And really outstanding regional writers are up at the uni- Kim Barnes, etc. Very distinct regional lit. We can meet for lunch! Oh, very big local foodie scene, and not just potato balls- berries and apples and the snake river wine region!


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