Category Archives: Puerto Rico Property

Kitty Bought His Ticket to Rincón!

I went in the bedroom today and I saw something odd.  Kitty had most of his belongings packed in a suitcase!

Kitty Pack
Kitty Packing His Stuff

I asked him why he was packing and he responded that he had called up United Airlines and booked a one way ticket to paradise.  He was going to be missing out on the upcoming winter and was pretty excited about it.  He also bought Cassie and I tickets.  Which means that we are going to be closing out our contest!

I guess he really does love us and his day trading has paid off!

Kitty Leave
Kitty All Packed up!

We are all set to fly out on….well, I will leave that a secret for a bit longer.   We have a few things to finish up and are going to have a party at our place on the 21st.  By then most if not all of our stuff will be out of the house and we will be headed to Puerto Rico soon after!

Gracias, Gatito!

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Why Are You Leaving?

So as I was doing my ‘exit interview’ with HR, the question came up.  Why are you leaving?

I simply explained that I had some property in Puerto Rico and that I wanted to work on it, and live there.  I had suggested that I could help out my work team by working remote, but since that wasn’t approved, I was quitting to go start on our dream.

Good Riddance
Click To Read My Farewell Email

She looked at me and then at the boxes on her form. “So…Other?”.  I looked at the form and it had check boxes.  There were selections like “career move”, “illness” and a whole host of other reasons a person might quit their job.

Me: I guess quitting your job to move to an island isn’t on there?
HR: No, no it isn’t.  I guess this is…maybe retirement? Early retirement?
Me: I suppose so, but I don’t like that word.  Is Jubilado a choice?
HR: What’s that?
Me: Nevermind…..I guess just check “other”.

A while ago Cassie and I were talking about retirement and she mentioned that in Spanish the word for “retired” is “Jubilado”.  It comes from the same root as the English word “Jubilation”, which it would seem a more appropriate word than tired, or retired, tired again. We are totally jubilated!

It’s a good sign that you are thinking outside the box, when there is no box to fit you into.

My last day actually felt pretty good.  I don’t have to worry about all the problems that were constantly coming up at work.  It still feels like a normal Saturday, and maybe Sunday will feel about the same too.  Come Monday though, that’s when it will feel like I didn’t go to work.  And when I am in Rincón, it will really hit home. I will be home!

killer sunset

 

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There’s A Rat in the Kitchen

Time has been moving pretty fast!  We have almost all of our stuff sold most of our furniture spoken for, my Spanish class (clase de espanol) ends tomorrow.  Our garage sale is this weekend to clean out some of the items in the garage.  We are closing up some loopholes at work (training replacements; I am flying out to Chicago next week for that).  We have taken care of some medical mysteries and taken care of some financial goals.   As I write this I see our counter says 95 days to go!

house from pinapple knife rd

Sometimes when we talk about the wood house on the property we joke about the rats that are living in the walls.  Sometimes we tell Kitty that is going to be his job, to chase out all the rats.  The ratones have become a symbol for us that represents challenge that awaits us.  When we joke about it and frame it as an interesting and fun thing it becomes part of our lives in a positive and silly way!

We were sitting in the living room when the UB40 song “There’s a Rat in the Kitchen” came on and it made us laugh so I figured I’d post it:

There’s a rat in the kitchen.  What am I gonna do?
There’s a rat in the kitchen.  What am I gonna do?
Im gonna fix that rat that’s what im a gonna do.
Im gonna fix that rat that’s what im a gonna do.

You can look at the rats as a bad thing that has to be taken care of, or it can be one of the bugs that makes for an interesting chapter in your life’s story.  We prefer to tell interesting stories!

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Just Like the Goats

When we stayed with Awilda at the property we nearly bought in the rural jungle near Lares, Puerto Rico, we learned quite a lot from her. About her philosophy and attitude towards life. About how she ran her finca. About her goats. We still often think about her and the inherent wisdom that comes from living as a partner with nature for most of her life. One of her pearls of wisdom we still often quote was that we humans are “just like the goats”.

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Me and a goat on a rope in Lares

This was specifically in response to how she had helped her daughter through the labor and birth of her grandchildren without any doctor or medical help of any kind. We sort of just stood back, awed by this woman. “Just like the goats” she had said. As if we were actually the crazy ones to think we needed all the fancy tools of modern society.

As we thought about it more, it is really pretty true. We humans are a lot like goats. We give birth. We raise our young. We eat and rest and play, and need a social structure, just like the goats.

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Feeding a baby goat out of a bottle

We also have built a huge infrastructure that makes us THINK that we are not like the goats. We use examples of how we wouldn’t have survived without the system, how the system is a net, how technological advancement helps us out in situations where things might go wrong. How we have much larger brains than other animals. How we can do some amazing things unlike other animals. All of these are true. I am quite certain that without the medical system, 5 days after I was born, I would have soon died. As many goats have died. And yet, at its core, we are still animals just like the goats. Living, fragile creatures that need a community to survive.

Sometimes when we think about our move to Puerto Rico we feel a little over our head, out of water, leaving our known infrastructure for the unknown and we get scared. When we are scared we have a tendency toward trying to find some protection. In the modern world these are things like money, insurance, technology, schooling, advanced tools, experts, security systems. Helpful, sometimes, but all made-up human contrivances that make us think we are separate from nature.

estrella-awilda-and-britton
Estrella, Awilda and Britton in Lares. They have shown us that if they can do it, we can too!

Underneath it all we are just like the goats. We will figure out how to survive using the tools that are available to us. We’ve been to Puerto Rico many times. People live just fine. They don’t need nearly as much “cargo” and contrivances as we have just to survive the harsh Colorado landscape. It is warm all the time. There is food and medicine dripping off the plants and swimming in the ocean. It rains nearly every day.

If Awilda in her 60s, her stepmother in her 80s and her goats can survive in the jungle mountains of Puerto Rico, we should be just fine in Rincón. We just may need to toughen up a little. And maybe get a goat or two.

We really are just like the goats. And goats don’t need much. It will be nice to try a life that is closer to that more basic, natural existence. We are just like the goats, but with bigger brains. And sometimes those brains do us more harm than good.

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