Our moods were dark and somber
after that final phone call came.
The mornings are still the hardest;
Filled with relentless praying and blame.
No home, no job, no direction.
Our home goods are drifting off to sea.
We keep hearing "the world is our oyster";
But that pearl looks more like a pea.
Just like Santa's red sack,
we're lugging worries, stress and doubt.
If one more "present" is added,
ALL will come tumbling out.
Our irons are in the fire,
and hopefully soon, one will be hot.
We can't control our destiny,
but sitting idle, we are not.
Some days are full of fury.
From those storm clouds, I can't hide.
Other days are filled with gratitude;
And Jekyll isn't missing Hyde.
I fear the monster within
for he has embedded his claws in me,
But so has the white sand, and blue surf
and the crazy crabs that roam the sea.
New York is a distant memory.
Our summer will never run out.
A future filled with sunshine and swimming
is what this Salt Life is all about.
Florida is the best place I've lived;
And after 37 days I would know.
The cast of characters is vast,
even the wildlife puts on a show.
Our own bed, free wifi, and fast forward
are the little things that we miss.
Though we know if we have to be stranded...
It doesn't get much better than this!
We miss all sense of normalcy.
Anything resembling routine, we hold dear.
We're thankful for weekly trivia;
Where good friends hold our spot and cold beer.
I started this blog with a drive through Hana;
The message was metaphorically implied:
"Life is a series of journeys,
We can't forget to enjoy the (LONG) ride!"
I'm doing my best to take my own advice...
At least I'm taking this journey with my best friend.
We have no idea where this road will lead,
But we're sure there's peace and happiness waiting at the end...
Read Next, #17- Still Reeling, July 30
We had sold our lives in New York for what was supposed to be a serendipitous move to the Bahamas. What resulted days before our flights, changed our lives; and ultimately gave us the once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to seek our own Salt Life. With no ties, and no looking back, we let destiny lead us to the next chapter in our lives. This is a story of a journey that we can only hope is worth the destination...
Friday, June 20, 2014
Friday, June 6, 2014
#15- We Surrender
D-Day arrived two days early for us this year. The war
between the two hotel properties had been raging over International waters for
the last three weeks. We were now getting daily updates from Travis’s camp but
the updates left us more and more confused; wondering what we were fighting
for.
It had been 21 days since this
battle began and we had been halted in Florida. What was left of our things had
arrived in the Bahamas almost a week ago and the promised call from the
Bahamian Port was not coming. When it finally did, they told us we had 7 more
days to stall before they needed to “clear” the shipment. Clearing it means a
Customs Official has to ransack all of our belongings and assess the duty charge
before it can even be moved into storage. Having someone thumb through our
personal belongings without us there is a thought that I just couldn’t bear.
It
would soon become the least of my worries.
The third week was the heaviest. I thought at first that my constant
empty feeling was the newness of Daytona slowing fading, like our hopes of ever
leaving. Or that my 35th birthday was lying in wait, circling me like
a hungry shark. The Bahamian real estate agent kept calling and checking on us
as our home was sitting empty in paradise. Such a crime! With each call we
imagined ourselves on our patio while Bob played in the yard or ocean. I could
actually feel the weight of the passing days pulling me more and more underwater.
And then our beach was stormed..
During this tumultuous time in Florida, I never allowed
myself to think it was anything but a delay. The thought that we had been led
here for nothing would pierce my gut like a bullet and I knew that I would simply not
survive. I refused to give up hope. I didn’t even notice the Google Alert that
changed our lives forever.
An emergency call at 11:45a. My dumb ass thought: “This must
be good news!” My hopes were completely trampled by the news that this war was
over. Travis’s company had pulled out of the 20-year management agreement with
the Bahamian property and new soldiers had moved in. How could this be
happening? I felt my knees go weak, blood drained from my face. How could this
be happening?!
The calls that followed were frantic. There were three
employees already in the Bahamas (introduced in previous posts) that had been working
hard on this project for the last 11 months, now at risk of losing their visas
and having to vacate in 14 days. They had families and lives and now had
concrete fears and worries; left behind in enemy territory.
There were days leading up to this that I knew with absolute certainty that I would
not survive this news. I simply didn’t want to survive, with this news. But in
some weird way, God had prepared me for this. I didn’t turn to dust when it
happened, though for a brief moment I succumbed to my covers and prayed to not
wake up. It was the most intense pain I’ve ever felt, but I knew He’d bring us
through it.
We have no idea where we go from here...
The air remains incredibly heavy from the smoke of
destruction. There are still many bodies in the crossfire. It’s too early to assess
the damage at this point. It’s in His hands; we’ve laid down our weapons; we surrender.
Read Next: #16- When there's no rhyme or reason, June 20
Read Next: #16- When there's no rhyme or reason, June 20
Thursday, May 29, 2014
#14- SS Mosquito
Wait! If new to this blog, there's so many nitty gritty details that
you've missed! I promise that you'll want to start this adventure from
the beginning by starting with the first post, Feb 27- found on the
right side bar. At your leisure, come follow our adventure, by reading
following posts in order by date, (which I hope to keep short and
entertaining!) Welcome to the Salt Life...
.......
.......
“Just sit right back
and you’ll hear a tale, A tale of a fateful trip…”
It’s been two weeks since our boat of life has shipwrecked in
Florida. Every day we wake up hopeful that today will be our day. But as each
day passes without news, it’s getting harder and harder to ward off fears that
our rescue ship may never come. How will we survive this?
Six days into being marooned, Trav’s company called
and advised that they were “cautiously optimistic” as big moves had been made by
both sides to try to come to an agreement. As the peace talks continued, and
the great divide lessened, we were expected to just sit tight and enjoy a "paid
vacation" in Florida until things had been resolved and the hold on our Visas
had been lifted. Easy to say when the bed you’re sleeping in at night is your
own…
As the days passed by, the only ship that was sailing was
our stuff, well on its way to the Bahamas. It’s now going to arrive before we
do and we’re stuck trying to research non climate controlled storage for a big metal crate from the
mainland. I’m honestly wondering if we’ll ever see our stuff again or what the condition will be, after sitting in the Caribbean summer heat. When we excitedly
watched them drive our sealed crate away many weeks ago, we never thought this
would be the case.
“If not for the courage of the fearless crew, the minnow would be lost,
the minnow would be lost”
It’s very difficult to relax, sleep, and have faith when your
life is in someone else’s hands and on someone else’s time-frame. Though that’s
exactly what everyone tells us we should be doing. On most days, the stress
weighs very heavy and we wonder how we can keep going on like this. On other
days, when we’re sitting on the beach, basking in the Florida sun, we are
grateful that it wasn’t much worse.
For the last 15 days there have been five stowaways- Trav,
Bob and I, and Trav’s parents. They had so graciously offered to help us with
this arduous move, having no idea what they were in for. It started over two
weeks ago, on Mother’s Day, when his family helped us clean out our apartment
on our final day in New York. The journey began the next day to Fort Lauderdale
as his parents were driving with us to
help get us to our separate flights (Bob and Trav had a friend flying them over
and I was flying the suitcases on Jet Blue). After we were well on our way,
they had planned to drive our car to Palm Beach to have it shipped to the
Bahamas. After a week’s worth of
stressful driving and strict timelines, they were going to reap their reward by
going to their condo in Daytona, to enjoy a week’s vacation and fun in the sun.
They still made it to Daytona, but with
much more "baggage" than they had expected. Every day we wake up and say “ugh,
we’re still here” and they wake up saying “ugh, they’re still here”… Joking aside, it’s only the intense ups and
downs that keep this from being a fantastic family vacation. I’m truly
enjoying our beach days, our evening
routine of cocktails and appetizers, and always trying somewhere new and on the
water for dinner. Without them, we surely would have drowned by now.
“The ship set ground on the shore of this uncharted desert isle with
Gilligan, The Skipper too, The millionaire and his wife, the movie star, the
professor and Mary Ann..”
The tropical isle we have wrecked upon, called Daytona, is
unlike anything we have ever experienced. We’ve seen a sea monster, the largest
flying frog in the world, an albino lizard, and beach hawks. There’s crazy
crabs roaming the beach and the water is so crystal clear that fish of all sizes can be seen
swimming through your toes.
The people are just as interesting. We aren’t spending our days making phones out
of tin cans and writing SOS in the sand. We’re busy taking 3rd
place at Senior Trivia night, under the name “Jake From Statefarm”, killing it
when they try to stump the crowd with questions from “Always Sunny in Philadelphia”. This isn’t the land of Gingers and Maryann’s, this is the land
of $3.50 Long Islands, separate checks (everyone asks you the second you sit
down), and is ruled by Seinfelds and Costanzas.
Even the bugs come to retire here as there’s every different
kind and they do not mess around (#dma). When my 50 mosquito bites quickly became 75,
I knew I had to get serious if I was going to survive the war they were raging.
I found that not only was I the target of many species of mosquito, I was also
being “hunted” by no-seeums, also known as biting midges (my new nickname). These f**kers, are so small you can’t see
them coming, they can even fit through the holes in the screen. Though you
can’t see them, somehow they have magnificent teeth that saw into your skin so
they can then inject you with an anticoagulant to drink your blood freely. I’m
not done. They not only can smell their prey from over 50 meters, but they then
send the signal out to all of their friends once they’ve found their buffet.
It’s only the females that bite (those bitches) because they actually need
blood to fertilize their eggs…AND they are attracted to carbon dioxide. So if
you are alive, you are a target. What sick, sadistic…. Are you kidding me? At
one point, I was dressed from head to toe in clothing in the middle of a Florida
heat wave (complete with shoes and socks), drenched in every bug concoction possible
( I even had a bug wrist band around my ankle that was so big, it was like I was on
house arrest), trying to walk the dog while taking very shallow breaths. It was
like I was walking through a sleeping lion’s den, which is exactly what it was.
Misery. After a trip to Daytona’s flea market,
another “experience”, I am now equipped with everything I could possibly
need from holistic oils to straight up poison. I will win my skin back.
“So this is the tale of the castaways, They’re here for a
long, long time, They’ll have to make the best of things, It’s an uphill climb.”
See next post: #15- We Surrender, June 6th
See next post: #15- We Surrender, June 6th
Saturday, May 17, 2014
#13- Is This The End??
I saw the movie ‘Heaven is For Real’ with my mom and
Grandmother on a quick trip to Napa, a couple of weeks ago. In this entire
process, it was the only two hours that I didn’t think about anything moving-related. Completely entertained, I let the story take me for a ride. Everyone
will get their own message from this movie, but the one thing that has since
resonated with me is that the images of God we’ve come to know are not actually
what God looks like. The God witnessed by this little boy, and confirmed by
others word-wide, are of a God with intense green eyes. For the last several
weeks, above any message that movie conveyed, I can’t seem to get the intense
look of God, as he stared at me across the theater, out of my mind.
I saw that same intensity in my husband’s eyes, only two
weeks later, and just three nights ago, when our Tribulation began.
We had been successfully led out of New York on Monday and
had begun our descent down to Fort Lauderdale, Florida for Operation ‘Get Bob to his plane on Friday’. We had stops
planned in New Jersey, South Carolina, Daytona, and Fort Lauderdale before finally
arriving to the promise land (Bahamas) on Friday afternoon, 5/16. We had only
been in Daytona for 60-minutes, after driving over 1,000 miles, and had just arrived
at a pizza place to take a break from the long drive and catch up with friends
and family, when Travis stepped out to take a phone call. I noticed his normal
pacing in the parking lot but honestly didn’t think much of it. He came in,
said his hellos to friends at the table that we hadn’t seen since the wedding,
and slipped into the booth across from me. As the conversation started up
again, I glanced across the table and saw panic. Intense panic. Something wasn’t
right. I mouthed “what’s wrong?” He mouthed back “it’s really bad”.
The words and energy that continued in static movement around
us just seemed to add to the fog that I was in. I immediately asked for us to be excused and
Trav and I stepped outside. He told me that he had just received a phone call
from his new boss in the Bahamas, and was just advised that our Visas were “on-hold
due to a contractual dispute” between Trav’s hotel group and the Bahamian Developer,
BHD. Due to the dispute, all visas for this project were put on hold immediately
until a resolution was reached, if it could
be reached.
WAR…
They had no further information, as this new wrinkle had
literally just been revealed to everyone involved that very day, but they did know without a doubt that Travis and
I were not going to have our Visas cleared in time for our flights on Friday.
Our first thought was that we would go anyway, with just our passports, but
this was quickly shot down. Because we have one-way tickets and a private plane
for Bob, we have been flagged by
customs. Any arrival without proper paperwork would “result in our immediate
detainment”. How could this be happening? We walked back into the pizza place,
completely stunned, and took our place at the table. We didn’t take another
bite.
FAMINE…
How could this be happening? The skies grew dark gray and
rain the size of golf balls fell as the thunder cracked. One flash of
lightening and I watched our entire life’s hopes and dreams go up in smoke.
NATURAL DISASTERS…
My breakdown would rival any antichrist. I screamed and cried
and shortly after, my head started spinning as I cursed everyone and
everything. I cursed God for such blasphemous actions against my family. I
cursed Travis and anyone in my path for leading me to this moment. And then I
ran. I didn’t know where I was going. I had nowhere to go. We had nothing. I
was running, in the dark, with no direction. It was the most lost I have ever
been in my life.
Travis came to find me in the dark and the world stopped
burning for just a moment. We could only focus on what we needed to do right
now. There was no way we could focus on what any of this meant for our big picture. We had to cancel Bob’s
flight- heartbreaking. We had to cancel shipping our car the next day and
cancel Bob’s Vet appointment for his travel certificate. I had a commercial flight
and two hotel rooms to cancel last minute. With each phone call, our Armageddon
became more real.
After all the calls were made, we surrendered. Our NY home
was gone, we had sold everything we owned. What we didn’t sell was well on its
way to the Bahamas by boat and would arrive on May 30th, just weeks
away and we might not be there to receive it. The COO of Trav’s hotel group called to
personally apologize and gave us all of the information he had, which was
little. He gave more information on the contractual dispute that had nothing to
do with us, and advised he was hopeful that things would be resolved. However,
no one had any idea how long this could take. He told us to sit tight and enjoy
a paid vacation while things worked themselves out…
Now, I’ve always been a spiritual person but God created a
control freak. I have managed every step of this International move to a tee. I
meticulously sold each part of our lives down to our Tupperware and planned
every detail down to the cup of dog food needed before more food arrives with
our stuff, and now, my only option is to sit tight and wait for our future to
be decided? HOLY shit
Day one was a gamut of emotions, followed by a tornado warning.
No metaphor here, a real freaking tornado. We couldn’t sit still but the
terrible weather limited our options. As soon as the sun cleared, we rushed to
an outside eatery on the water, hoping to sail our worries off to sea. I came
home with over 35 mosquito bites.
LOCUSTS…
Day two was oddly full of gratitude. Travis, Bob and I were
safe and we were together. Bob had handled the drive incredibly well and was quickly
acting like Daytona was his final destination. We realized it was simply not a
coincidence that the sky fell in the short window that we were passing through
Daytona where Trav’s parents have a condo. We not only have a free place to
stay, it is an amazing place to stay! And the more we surrendered, it seemed
that the more was revealed. All of a sudden, as Trav and I were walking Bob
through the condo complex, we saw an SUV with a large, bright sticker in the
middle of their huge back window. The sticker said “Salt Life”. We looked at each other without words. That same morning
we were at breakfast on the pier on what turned into a beautiful sunny day when
a gentleman walked in with a blue shirt and the stark white writing smacked us
in the face “Salt Life”. This was too weird, what were we supposed to
be getting from these messages? Later that day, another SUV set in our path,
complete with Golden Retriever in the backseat and another “Salt Life” bumper sticker screaming to
us.
SIGNS FROM HEAVEN…
So as we sit in this moment, not knowing where we’re going
to live or work or when we’ll see anything other than our few suitcases again,
I’m smiling. We’re at the beach right now, being kissed by the sun and spoken
to by the waves. My Salt Life has
always included cool breezes and sandy feet. This whole time the Bahamas has
been our promised land, but could
this be it? Have we simply already found
our Garden of Eden? As we wait for our ship to sail, it seems only time will
tell…
Read Next: #14- SS Mosquito, May 29
Read Next: #14- SS Mosquito, May 29
Wednesday, April 23, 2014
#11 Queen of Moving
Wait! If new to this blog, there's so many nitty gritty details that
you've missed! I promise that you'll want to start this adventure from
the beginning by starting with the first post, Feb 27- found on the
right side bar. At your leisure, come follow our adventure, by reading
following posts in order by date, (which I hope to keep short and
entertaining!) Welcome to the Salt Life...
...
It seemed like the day after we signed our American lives away, we woke up in a King of Beers Super Bowl commercial.
All of a sudden, the snow that was still falling well into April was graceful and beautiful instead of insanely annoying.
Bob, no joke, gave up his slow roll instantaneously and began to prance on all of our walks like a Clydesdale. (mixed with Corgi) It was a gait I had never seen before.
And every Robert Frost-esque road we followed in the moving process seemed to be leading seamlessly to happily ever after. Everything that had to do with the move now seemed way too easy. Even for me. It was like the wide-mouth can of life had popped its top and all of the blessings were flowing free.
I have to say that I am an expert mover. Since I have moved more times then years I have been alive, I'm privy to pretty much all of the do's and don'ts involved in any move. Finally, in my mid-30's this information would prove to be useful.
To start the process of moving our stuff, we learned that you have three options getting your personal belongings over to the Bahamas. Our cheapest option is to ship items by boat which takes 6-8 weeks. Since we will need things in that 6-8 weeks time to still live in New York and then Bahamas, there is an air option to take everything that can't come in a suitcase, a week before we board our flights. This option takes a week to 10 days, and is expensive, so our main goal is to avoid this need completely. That means that whatever doesn't go on a boat to disappear for two months, has to be taken in one of the few suitcases allowed by commercial airlines. Easier said then done. In addition to calculating the weight, and size when trying to realize how important your things are to you, you have to also calculate the duty you will have to pay on them to bring them to the Bahamas. Yes, those champagne glasses that my Grandmother gave us as a gift for our wedding that have been used 200 times will cost us a duty tax, even though they are used AND a gift. We will literally have a customs official unpacking our crate in Bahamian customs assessing a duty tax (35% plus 7% stamp fee) on every single item we already own. When they are done, we pay them the duty to retrieve our things. So naturally, we agreed to bring as little as possible. In order to obtain a quote from a referred relocation company, we had to go through every item we own and assess whether we were going to bring it, sell it, or trash it. I had to compile a comprehensive list of all items that we are going to bring and what size box they would be packed in. We had to pack the entire place in our head and cross our fingers that we were correct to get an accurate quote. Of course everything gets officially weighed to get a final cost when ready to ship.
We had braced ourselves for our landlord's response when after several years, we needed to break our lease in a short amount of time, and were begging his pity for having to move on such short notice. We were a bit shocked when his response was simply to ask just how soon we could be out. Ouch. Within hours of giving our notice his real estate agent called me to set up a time to show it to an interested client the very next day. And since I've seen Million Dollar Listing a time or two, I know how to show an apartment. The first client that saw the place wanted to rent it and we were all of a sudden negotiating a move date. Boom.
The next step was to try to sell our furniture since we couldn't afford to bring it with us. The homes in the Bahamas come furnished so it wasn't going to be an issue to part with everything we had and it didn't make sense to pay for a storage unit to house it all while we were gone. I took pictures of everything that we needed to sell and figured I'd start with a simple colored flyer that I would post on local streets and drop off at local real estate agents in Long Beach.
It was a Thursday by the time the rain had stopped enough for me to leave the fliers in neighboring mailboxes, not wanting my masterpieces to be ruined. I only had enough time that evening to stop by one realtor on my way to the grocery store and I figured it would be the one who rented our place, in case the incoming Doctor liked the sound of a furnished apartment. Rhonda wasn't available and the one woman who picked up her head gave me an icy reception until I mentioned the word "sale". All of a sudden, one-by-one like whack-a-mole, the women in the office started poking their heads out of their cubicles and all of them asked me for a flyer. I was soon out of every flyer I had left and the volume reached ear piercing levels when one of them asked why we were moving and selling everything. I was suddenly stuck in a hen house being bombed with questions. By the time I left, I had been sent an invitation by one of the realtors to join a facebook group for a neighboring town in Oceanside. I accepted the invitation when I got home, ready to post my flyer, and was surprised that my acceptance needed to be approved. Huh? How could I not foresee the intensity that was about to be bestowed upon me? I was "approved" that evening and simply posted a jpg of the flyer I had made, asking people to stop by that Saturday afternoon, giving all needed times and information. By the time Travis got home, I had over 150 messages in my inbox and was freaking out about how that number was growing by the second. I wouldn't go near the computer as I didn't dare open Facebook, as if all electronics were now possessed. Travis took a position with the laptop on the floor and studiously tried to answer as many as he could but he was obviously no match for these Long Island housewives. Within minutes people were fighting in the comment section over their perceived new ownership of particular items that were pictured in the flyer and we were being called out for bad business because we were unintentionally responding to people's inquiries out of order. That night I just kept dreaming of being chased by hundreds of short ladies with expensive handbags. It was awful.
When Saturday came, we didn't know what to expect. We half expected to be playing cards in beach chairs because everything had been sold out from under us to ravenous women. We also had company arriving any moment who were staying with us for the weekend, and we were a bit afraid that we might have to sell the guest bed they intended to sleep on that evening. It was a day of anything goes and my nerves required a beer. We posted our last sign and got ready for the sale that was supposed to start at 12:00p. At 12:01pm there was a minivan casing our drive and by 12:06p, we had made our first sale. By 12:07p, three of our neighbors asked us where we had advertised. We began to feel the power of social media. Thanks to this FB group, throughout the weekend, we had a steady stream of people coming and going. We didn't sell everything but we made a decent dent and have continued to sell items ala carte on that site.
The packing has been a breeze and we seem to have more boxes then stuff and I find myself wondering if I can sell unused boxes on that FB site as well. All of the furniture that is for sale had to be cleaned out and "take it away" ready, so every drawer and closet has already been gone through and packed up, which is always half the battle.
The table and bar stools are gone, but we're thankful to still have a couch and snack trays. We now start every evening by eating dinner and watching a taped episode of Caribbean Life where couples from snowy areas of the US finally break free, and move to the Caribbean. Still miles to go before we sleep, but soon enough, that'll be us in that Corona Commercial.
Next post: #12- In The Year Of Our Lord... Apr 17
...
It seemed like the day after we signed our American lives away, we woke up in a King of Beers Super Bowl commercial.
All of a sudden, the snow that was still falling well into April was graceful and beautiful instead of insanely annoying.
Bob, no joke, gave up his slow roll instantaneously and began to prance on all of our walks like a Clydesdale. (mixed with Corgi) It was a gait I had never seen before.
And every Robert Frost-esque road we followed in the moving process seemed to be leading seamlessly to happily ever after. Everything that had to do with the move now seemed way too easy. Even for me. It was like the wide-mouth can of life had popped its top and all of the blessings were flowing free.
I have to say that I am an expert mover. Since I have moved more times then years I have been alive, I'm privy to pretty much all of the do's and don'ts involved in any move. Finally, in my mid-30's this information would prove to be useful.
To start the process of moving our stuff, we learned that you have three options getting your personal belongings over to the Bahamas. Our cheapest option is to ship items by boat which takes 6-8 weeks. Since we will need things in that 6-8 weeks time to still live in New York and then Bahamas, there is an air option to take everything that can't come in a suitcase, a week before we board our flights. This option takes a week to 10 days, and is expensive, so our main goal is to avoid this need completely. That means that whatever doesn't go on a boat to disappear for two months, has to be taken in one of the few suitcases allowed by commercial airlines. Easier said then done. In addition to calculating the weight, and size when trying to realize how important your things are to you, you have to also calculate the duty you will have to pay on them to bring them to the Bahamas. Yes, those champagne glasses that my Grandmother gave us as a gift for our wedding that have been used 200 times will cost us a duty tax, even though they are used AND a gift. We will literally have a customs official unpacking our crate in Bahamian customs assessing a duty tax (35% plus 7% stamp fee) on every single item we already own. When they are done, we pay them the duty to retrieve our things. So naturally, we agreed to bring as little as possible. In order to obtain a quote from a referred relocation company, we had to go through every item we own and assess whether we were going to bring it, sell it, or trash it. I had to compile a comprehensive list of all items that we are going to bring and what size box they would be packed in. We had to pack the entire place in our head and cross our fingers that we were correct to get an accurate quote. Of course everything gets officially weighed to get a final cost when ready to ship.
We had braced ourselves for our landlord's response when after several years, we needed to break our lease in a short amount of time, and were begging his pity for having to move on such short notice. We were a bit shocked when his response was simply to ask just how soon we could be out. Ouch. Within hours of giving our notice his real estate agent called me to set up a time to show it to an interested client the very next day. And since I've seen Million Dollar Listing a time or two, I know how to show an apartment. The first client that saw the place wanted to rent it and we were all of a sudden negotiating a move date. Boom.
The next step was to try to sell our furniture since we couldn't afford to bring it with us. The homes in the Bahamas come furnished so it wasn't going to be an issue to part with everything we had and it didn't make sense to pay for a storage unit to house it all while we were gone. I took pictures of everything that we needed to sell and figured I'd start with a simple colored flyer that I would post on local streets and drop off at local real estate agents in Long Beach.
It was a Thursday by the time the rain had stopped enough for me to leave the fliers in neighboring mailboxes, not wanting my masterpieces to be ruined. I only had enough time that evening to stop by one realtor on my way to the grocery store and I figured it would be the one who rented our place, in case the incoming Doctor liked the sound of a furnished apartment. Rhonda wasn't available and the one woman who picked up her head gave me an icy reception until I mentioned the word "sale". All of a sudden, one-by-one like whack-a-mole, the women in the office started poking their heads out of their cubicles and all of them asked me for a flyer. I was soon out of every flyer I had left and the volume reached ear piercing levels when one of them asked why we were moving and selling everything. I was suddenly stuck in a hen house being bombed with questions. By the time I left, I had been sent an invitation by one of the realtors to join a facebook group for a neighboring town in Oceanside. I accepted the invitation when I got home, ready to post my flyer, and was surprised that my acceptance needed to be approved. Huh? How could I not foresee the intensity that was about to be bestowed upon me? I was "approved" that evening and simply posted a jpg of the flyer I had made, asking people to stop by that Saturday afternoon, giving all needed times and information. By the time Travis got home, I had over 150 messages in my inbox and was freaking out about how that number was growing by the second. I wouldn't go near the computer as I didn't dare open Facebook, as if all electronics were now possessed. Travis took a position with the laptop on the floor and studiously tried to answer as many as he could but he was obviously no match for these Long Island housewives. Within minutes people were fighting in the comment section over their perceived new ownership of particular items that were pictured in the flyer and we were being called out for bad business because we were unintentionally responding to people's inquiries out of order. That night I just kept dreaming of being chased by hundreds of short ladies with expensive handbags. It was awful.
When Saturday came, we didn't know what to expect. We half expected to be playing cards in beach chairs because everything had been sold out from under us to ravenous women. We also had company arriving any moment who were staying with us for the weekend, and we were a bit afraid that we might have to sell the guest bed they intended to sleep on that evening. It was a day of anything goes and my nerves required a beer. We posted our last sign and got ready for the sale that was supposed to start at 12:00p. At 12:01pm there was a minivan casing our drive and by 12:06p, we had made our first sale. By 12:07p, three of our neighbors asked us where we had advertised. We began to feel the power of social media. Thanks to this FB group, throughout the weekend, we had a steady stream of people coming and going. We didn't sell everything but we made a decent dent and have continued to sell items ala carte on that site.
The packing has been a breeze and we seem to have more boxes then stuff and I find myself wondering if I can sell unused boxes on that FB site as well. All of the furniture that is for sale had to be cleaned out and "take it away" ready, so every drawer and closet has already been gone through and packed up, which is always half the battle.
The table and bar stools are gone, but we're thankful to still have a couch and snack trays. We now start every evening by eating dinner and watching a taped episode of Caribbean Life where couples from snowy areas of the US finally break free, and move to the Caribbean. Still miles to go before we sleep, but soon enough, that'll be us in that Corona Commercial.
Next post: #12- In The Year Of Our Lord... Apr 17
Thursday, April 17, 2014
#12 In The Year of Our Lord
Things were moving faster then a New York minute state-side but real estate negotiations were definitely on island time.
Even though my recent trip to the Doctor had come with strong recommendations to see a stomach specialist for my ulcers, I had a surprisingly calming feeling in my gut that our housing in the Bahamas would work itself out.
Welcome to the dichotomy that is me. I first noticed the giant discrepancy in my need to control the universe when planning Trav and I's wedding in the Caribbean. I realized quickly that I had little power from the US and oddly, willingly conceded. I was as surprised as our guests were on our Big Day and it was perfect! As I found myself continuously following up with our Real Estate agent in the Bahamas, with no results, I realized our new home would have to be the same way.
Looking back, I'm surprised I was able to sleep at night because a lot of factors are involved in acquiring a new home in a foreign country. Especially fully-furnished homes. We had been home over a month since seeing Bahamian properties and now all of them were rented. After looking through the minimal pictures on Bahamian listings, it became increasingly clear that another trip would need to be made to secure housing. Securing a safe home, in a safe neighborhood, where the furnishings fit our needs wasn't going to be as easy as catalog shopping. Or was it?
Rewind...
In the beginning of March, Trav and I had visited the Bahamas and I posted our experience and the homes we saw in my blog post, dated March 14th. #8- Live Where Others Vacation... I posted two pictures and one video. In the video, I accidentally filmed a pink house while we were waiting for the listing agent who was bringing us keys. We actually wound up touring the green house beside it because the pink house was rented. I posted the video because it was the only media I had from that days' real estate excursion. http://lifeisabahamianbeach.blogspot.com/2014_03_14_archive.html
A month later, our real estate agent emailed us the news. He had the perfect home for us.
And guess what? It was THAT pink house.
I had goosebumps immediately. Seriously- This was kismet like never before. It had a fenced yard for Bob which I had already seen by touring the neighbor. The former tenant was going to take all of the current furnishings so we were given the chance to approve the new furniture, which was an incredible relief. The home is in the gated community that we have had our eye on so we knew we would be safe. And best of all, the price was too good to be true. Travis and I took two minutes to decide that it was meant to be, and we took it before it even went on the market.
It was the easiest lease we've ever signed. All we provided was our phone number, address in New York and full names and a lease was drawn up and scanned over. We both signed it and sent it back. Within hours we had a fully executed lease. I printed out a copy.
When I read the bottom signature line, I smiled. How could I have missed that previously? In our signature line, we had filled in the date in the space that had read 'in the year of our Lord'. I had never had God's signature so heavily on my lease before.
Hallelujah. Home Sweet Home.
Even though my recent trip to the Doctor had come with strong recommendations to see a stomach specialist for my ulcers, I had a surprisingly calming feeling in my gut that our housing in the Bahamas would work itself out.
Welcome to the dichotomy that is me. I first noticed the giant discrepancy in my need to control the universe when planning Trav and I's wedding in the Caribbean. I realized quickly that I had little power from the US and oddly, willingly conceded. I was as surprised as our guests were on our Big Day and it was perfect! As I found myself continuously following up with our Real Estate agent in the Bahamas, with no results, I realized our new home would have to be the same way.
Looking back, I'm surprised I was able to sleep at night because a lot of factors are involved in acquiring a new home in a foreign country. Especially fully-furnished homes. We had been home over a month since seeing Bahamian properties and now all of them were rented. After looking through the minimal pictures on Bahamian listings, it became increasingly clear that another trip would need to be made to secure housing. Securing a safe home, in a safe neighborhood, where the furnishings fit our needs wasn't going to be as easy as catalog shopping. Or was it?
Rewind...
In the beginning of March, Trav and I had visited the Bahamas and I posted our experience and the homes we saw in my blog post, dated March 14th. #8- Live Where Others Vacation... I posted two pictures and one video. In the video, I accidentally filmed a pink house while we were waiting for the listing agent who was bringing us keys. We actually wound up touring the green house beside it because the pink house was rented. I posted the video because it was the only media I had from that days' real estate excursion. http://lifeisabahamianbeach.blogspot.com/2014_03_14_archive.html
A month later, our real estate agent emailed us the news. He had the perfect home for us.
And guess what? It was THAT pink house.
I had goosebumps immediately. Seriously- This was kismet like never before. It had a fenced yard for Bob which I had already seen by touring the neighbor. The former tenant was going to take all of the current furnishings so we were given the chance to approve the new furniture, which was an incredible relief. The home is in the gated community that we have had our eye on so we knew we would be safe. And best of all, the price was too good to be true. Travis and I took two minutes to decide that it was meant to be, and we took it before it even went on the market.
It was the easiest lease we've ever signed. All we provided was our phone number, address in New York and full names and a lease was drawn up and scanned over. We both signed it and sent it back. Within hours we had a fully executed lease. I printed out a copy.
When I read the bottom signature line, I smiled. How could I have missed that previously? In our signature line, we had filled in the date in the space that had read 'in the year of our Lord'. I had never had God's signature so heavily on my lease before.
Hallelujah. Home Sweet Home.
Tuesday, April 1, 2014
#10- Let's Get This Party Started!
Wait! If new to this blog, there's so many nitty gritty details that you've missed! I promise that you'll want to start this adventure from the beginning by starting with the first post, Feb 27- found on the right side bar. At your leisure, come follow our adventure, by reading following posts in order by date, (which I hope to keep short and entertaining!) Welcome to the Salt Life...
It may not have hit me when I was in the Bahamas but it definitely hit me when I was home. I had a longing that even now, I can't explain. I missed the people, the island, and everything about it. I had to get back. I had an overwhelming feeling that I had to get home.
The journey of life was mimicking Toad's Wild Ride again but we didn't mind as much because the grass was truly greener on the other side and we knew it would be worth the wait. It took two weeks after we had returned home to obtain the official offer letter and another week to agree on a start date.
May 19th was the date chosen and the clock began to tick.
First thing we needed to do was secure Visas. Travis is applying for a Work Visa and I'm applying for a Permit to Reside since I'm not legally allowed to get a job in the Bahamas without sponsorship. It goes back to the Bahamian Government's commitment to it's citizens that expatriates will not take local jobs. I know, the bad news just keeps coming, right? All jokes aside, when you've been working all of your life, it isn't as easy of a decision as one would think. It's been a mind struggle that I don't see resolving easily.
We needed more wallet-sized photos and I decided to test my luck again at the same CVS who had sabotaged my previous passport photos (previous post). A few minutes later, as I paid for our new Visa photos, I began boiling inside. The girl who took this round of pictures had apparently not received the no smile and no ear hiding memo because she didn't say a word about either. I knew I had been played...
After CVS, we made a stop at our local police station for Good Standing Certificates. Along with the application, we needed to provide hard evidence that we had been law abiding citizens, which just turned out to be a letter stating our address and that we haven't been arrested, all on City of Long Beach letterhead.
Lastly, we needed a Health Certificate advising we were in good health and free to leave the US. I hadn't been to a Doctor outside of an emergency room in over 7 years, so I was more then a little nervous on the morning of our appointments. After arriving to the Doctor's, they split us up in separate rooms so I was alone when the Nurse told me she needed to draw blood for the physical. I'm not sure what ever made me think I could be a Veterinarian because I scanned the room immediately for an escape when I heard this. A million possible scenarios to get out of being poked ran through my mind as she approached me abruptly with the needle. Nothing smells more like doom then rubbing alcohol. It all happened so quickly. She immediately incapacitated me with her man-hands around my bicep and my only option was to be brave and make awkward conversation. I looked everywhere but at the bad business that was happening to my arm as I secretly held back tears. Apparently, it wasn't a well-kept secret because she silently slid me the box of tissues on her way out of the room. I am 34 years old! Do I get a sucker and a plastic toy too? I'm such a schmuck.
The test results came back and we obtained our good health letters. Lastly, we needed to provide reference letters stating what truly wonderful people we are. Of course we wrote these glowing letters ourselves and had the first willing participant lend their signature.. kidding.. The Work Visa and Permit to Reside process takes 4-6 weeks so we have little time to get this in the mail. I'm getting used to this.
The next matter of business was in my opinion, the most important. The importation of our beloved Golden Retriever, who is starting to resemble his new nickname Bahamas Bob. How does one get a very spoiled, 100-lb, dog-aggressive, hairy beast over International waters to the Bahamas? GREAT question and one I had been asking myself for the last 6 months. It was time to put some kind of a plan into action.
Bob needed an exam and all necessary tests to confirm his almost 8-year old body was ready for this type of big move. This guy has already traveled across the country in his short life, so I wanted to minimize the stress of his next venture as much as possible. He also needed vaccines as required by his import papers.
Going to the Vet in Long Beach is always an experience in itself. Bob's current Veterinarian works out of the basement of his home that was destroyed by Hurricane Sandy in 2012. He is usually in his driveway when Bob and I pull up and he always leads us through his garage and into his basement for the exam. It's just him, no receptionist, no Technician, and no staff of any kind. Silence of the Lambs haunts my nightmares so the first time he asked me to follow him into the dark, I immediately thought that pulleys and baskets were in my near future.
The small space where he did Bob's current exam was cold and dark. In the room with us was just a scale, an examination table and an equally sparse desk. And even though, every time that I'm in that sterile room, the theme song of Dexter plays in my head, there is something about Dr. Hal that puts me at ease. And that's all that matters.
Bob was everything but 'at ease', as he was poked and prodded, just as I had been the day before. With a sturdy hand-shake and a promised future call with results, Bob and I checked this visit off of our to-do list.
There is no Quarantine in the Bahamas for dogs traveling from the United States, thank goodness. In order to obtain an Import Permit, I have to apply in writing to The Bahamas, stating all of Bob's information, and provide his current vaccine history, and $10.00 cash. Once The Bahamas receives this information, they will mail me an Import Permit which needs to accompany Bob the entire time during travel, as well as a list of permit requirements. In addition to the permit we will need to provide a Health Certificate and Bob will need to see a Vet in Nassau within 48 hours of our arrival to The Bahamas. Everything was ready to go except we needed the date of Bob's travel for the application. We needed to figure out how to get Bob to the Bahamas
When something is meant to be, the harp music starts playing in the background and rose petals fall at your feet. Getting Bob to the Bahamas has caused me six months of anguish and restless nights. I had no idea how I was going to get him there without flying him commercially, which I refused to do. Since he is insanely dog-aggressive and any standard travel options included him being kept in areas with other dogs, I knew he'd probably have to be sedated to be allowed to travel. Since sedated dogs can't regulate their body temperature, this poses a dangerous risk and makes it a necessity to travel in a guaranteed climate-controlled environment. This left us VERY minimal options. Especially in such short time.
And then...
Heaven itself sent us an Angel. Trav's Aunt has amazing friends from high school and college that she has kept in great touch with through the years. We often have the pleasure of hanging out with everyone and catching up at family events. These salt of the earth type of people always include a very special duo, Kristy and Dave. Big Michigan State fans, they live in Michigan, but have a plane that they keep in Florida during the cold winter months. I remembered that in September, before we knew this job was a possibility, we had been chatting about them flying their dog, Mullet, to and from his pet sitters. When Dave told Travis that he would be happy to fly Bob over to the Bahamas, I cried. Nothing else mattered. I was overwhelmed with relief.
And to be honest, a little envy. It's on my bucket list to jet off on a private plane. Leave it to my Golden Retriever to beat me to it. I guess blondes really do have more fun...
Read Next: #11-Queen of Moving , Apr 23
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