Category Archives: Rants and Raves

Questions and Comments about our Move to Puerto Rico

We are now down to less than two weeks to take off and live the life we’ve been working toward for many years. People are very intrigued with what we are about to do because it is not the norm. We have been asked lots and lots of questions and received some interesting comments about how and why we are moving to Puerto Rico. The below are a few of them along with our responses.

Beach and Palm

Why are you leaving? And why Puerto Rico?
For short conversations in which we have just a few moments to boil it down, we say simply: a lifestyle change. For longer conversations we talk about all the reasons that led us to Puerto Rico, as I have written here.  In essence we basically say we have never lived anywhere other than Colorado so we want to experience a new climate, area and culture. We want to have new adventures and life experiences. For three quick reasons about how Puerto Rico fits us in particular I say: 1) Puerto Rico is a tropical island 2) It is Spanish and English speaking 3) It is part of the U.S. but distinct culturally.

Invariably, the next questions make me laugh a little inside.

So, when are you moving to Costa Rica?
Ok, I get it. Puerto Rico and Costa Rica kind of sound the same with the whole Rico/Rica thing. But come on! They are two entirely different places. There are some similarities, just as there are some similarities of America and Australia including that they both begin and end with the letter “A” but they are very distinct and different places. For a quick geography lesson, Costa Rica is in Central America. Puerto Rico is an island in the Caribbean. Oh and we are moving on September 23!

West Indies

Similarly, we hear:
I bet it’s going to be hard to leave the U.S.
Again, this just shows most Americans’ complete lack of understanding of geography of even American territory. Puerto Rico is part of the U.S. It is considered a commonwealth or a “free associated state”. It is still much more “foreign” than I assume moving to Idaho or Illinois would be, but it really is still American soil.

It may very well be difficult to adjust, but that discomfort is part of the reason we are doing it. Comfort only keeps you comfortable. That is not where memories and good stories are made (or blog fodder! 🙂 ). We are completely ready to try out this new lifestyle. We are soooo excited actually.

Will you have jobs there? What will you do?
This is one of the most common questions we get. No. We are leaving our paid jobs in Colorado and moving there job-free. We may, or may not, get traditional “jobs” there.

We are challenging the notion of “jobs” just as we challenge the concept of “retirement“. Jobs, in our world, will be whatever we decide to do that day.

It may entail fixing up the cabana or wood house -like painting, remodeling kitchens and bathrooms, building a deck and new roof, hiring contractors, removing killer bees and rats and bats from the walls. It may involve gardening and farming activities -clearing the ground, planting food crops like pineapples, avocado trees, banana trees, citrus trees, dragon fruit, peppers, squash, cucumbers, tomatoes, etc or raising animals like chickens, goats, bees or even ostriches. Our “job” may be to rent out space on our property in the cabana or maybe even in a treehouse. Our job may be to take food to the farmer’s markets around or just park our truck on the side of the road and sell stuff. Our job on some days may be to just play in the ocean, swimming, paddleboarding, surfing, snorkeling, diving, fishing, boating. Our job on some other days may be to set up a computer server or teach English or Spanish or volunteer for some of the various great causes. Or it could be to just go to a party or throw one!

Basically, our job will be to create daily the life we love to live!

House Palms and Ocean

Wow, you’re lucky!
We love to hear this one. It feels good to think of yourself as a “lucky” person. And there are some aspects of luck to this. We lucked out being born to our great, supportive families. We lucked out finding each other. We lucked out having a nice, steady career. We lucked out in finding our specific property in Rincon. And we appreciate so much all of these and other great random chance things.

But really, this isn’t about luck. We didn’t just randomly stumble upon this life we are living. We have chosen very carefully all along the way. We have jumped upon and taken advantage of the random, lucky shots we have been given. In our garden of life, we have nurtured the aspects we wanted to grow bigger and weeded out the parts we didn’t. We didn’t win the lottery or get any sort of inheritance money or property. We did this, are doing this, because we had the goal to do it! We have never let go of the end goal even when sometimes it was tough going. With determination and persistance, much more than luck, we have helped to cultivate our life the way we want to live it. We firmly believe the life you are in right this instant, for better or worse, is the one you ultimately created.

Oh, I couldn’t do this. You’re much braver than me. (Or) You can only do this because you don’t have kids.
Now, I think this is more of a reflection on the people that say this than on the ability to actually do this. They haven’t probably worked the dream-to-reality manifestation muscle in a while or they are so ingrained with what is currently in their lives they think it is actually holding them back. The truth is, the only thing holding you back from whatever you want to create is: YOU!

Having kids can certainly change your choices because you now have someone besides yourself to look after and think after, but people live all over the world in all sorts of circumstances with kids! Why are you limiting yourself? If we had kids we would still be doing this. In fact, I would love to raise a kid in this type of environment where anything is possible instead of the standard game. If you have a dream, go after it! After all, isn’t this what we want to teach our kids? And the best way for them to learn this is from our example. Don’t let kids, or jobs, or health insurance or whatever block you have hold you back from getting out there and playing in this crazy game of life. These are convenient excuses and nothing more. Make a plan. Get buy-in from the other players. Work towards it. But do it! Give it a go! We always say, what’s the worse that can happen? We come back and get jobs and do it all again. But at least we dreamed and we did it! You CAN too!

 

What do you think of this post?
  • WOW (5)
  • Awesome (5)
  • Interesting (1)
  • Useful (0)
  • Bummer (0)
  • Whoa (0)

Freefall

Everyone talks about making the jump. The big change. But what is often missed in these stories is the freefall, that period of limbo between making the decision to do something and landing in your new world. The freefall after a parachute jump (I have heard) is actually the most ecstasy-inducing experience. The fear of the jump is over and for those blissful few moments, you float in another world between one and the next.

For Lease
For lease!

That’s sort of where we are right now. On Tuesday I gathered up the courage to approach my supervisor and tell him that we are moving. That my last day at work will be September 20. Like climbing the ladder to the jump off the high dive, I noticed that my fear was in the build-up. Once I had done it, I was falling into a whole new experience. One where I know I will be safe and the fun is still to come.

Lazy Kitty
Kitty knows how to relax 🙂

In just this first week that Britton has been off work we have accomplished a lot!  Britton took Kitty in for his check-up and shots (the first time in about 9 years!!). We have thoroughly cleaned out the whole house, signed the paperwork to get it placed for rent, and had our first showing! And we have begun looking at airfare to buy our tickets. As for “stuff”, we are down to just two chairs and the TV. We have dropped off two more large trash bags full of clothes and things to Goodwill. And our folks have graciously held on to some of our sentimental items like photo albums. We have even sold our kitchen table and are using a card table to eat.

Glass table
Bye kitchen table of 10 years!

It is a strange place, the freefall. The transition. At work, they are already talking about hiring my position and it makes me feel strange. I think it must be that for eight years, this job has been tied up in my identity. It is how I have introduced myself many times. My little niche in the world. And just like that I can be replaced. It also brings up feelings of loss and loss-aversion. I am going to miss all my co-workers, friends and family. And we are basically taking a 90% paycut to live our dream. But when you put it into perspective, when you have what you need, when you have ENOUGH, it is by far more expensive to continue to just wish you were living the dream instead of actually doing it.

Britton said he felt this way too his last few weeks at work, but that once he was done and had walked away, the world has now opened up into this new space of creation. He feels anything is possible. It is pretty cool and weird to have a nearly empty house, and an empty yard now that the chickens have a new home as well.

chickens
Chickens loaded up to go to their new home

But every time there is emptiness or vacancy, every time there is a blank canvas, there is the power to fill, the power to create. No void or vacuum ever stays that way for long. And so when we land from this freefall, we will look around and say: What a trip!

And where do we start.

What do you think of this post?
  • WOW (5)
  • Awesome (2)
  • Interesting (1)
  • Useful (0)
  • Bummer (0)
  • Whoa (0)

Tumbling Down the Rabbit Hole

Our upcoming move to la isla del encanto has been one heck of a journey, and we haven’t even moved yet! It has come to mean so many things to us that it really is difficult to explain to others without a lengthy conversation that challenges commonly held beliefs. For this reason we normally leave it to simple things that we all understand; nice weather (no snow), growing plants, playing in the ocean, and achieving a goal. When we first started down our path and looked at properties in Puerto Rico we were simply going to get a mortgage and move. That was the extent of our planning. No idea of how we were going to make money or what we would be doing.

100_2841
First Property We tried to Purchase

Through the process of discovery which unfolded in front of us on our path we found solutions to all the big ‘problems’. How are we going to buy food? How are we going to PAY OUR BILLS!? Do I need a corporate/cubicle job down there? I was obviously still thinking in the box.  A box I had forgot existed even though I am in it everyday.

I didn’t realize what actual freedom entails or that I was even in a system that doesn’t promote or teach it, which is odd because we live in the ‘land of the free’. I didn’t even realize I wasn’t free! I like to use the movie “Matrix” as an analogy to the realization of what we were actually up against.
http://youtu.be/te6qG4yn-Ps

The answers came over time.

One essential thing was to cut our bills to a manageable size (no mortgage, very little in the way of consumer goods and NO SUBSCRIPTIONS). It’s pretty easy in the U.S. and totally normal to spend $1000/mo or more on just a spot to sleep. And that seems…I dunno…Kind of ridiculous. When you are first starting out on your own, that consumes a lot of your money. That money that you traded your life’s energy for.  Then add on cable, phone, utilities and all the other modern conveniences of life I haven’t ever been without for long.

Why do I have to spend money simply to exist?
A> Because that is the way it was decided long before me.  It is that simple.

The meaning behind this became profound.  Debt is the basis of American lives and is what our economy is built upon.  We as a nation rarely if ever mention this and certainly the paid for advertising of our mainstream media isn’t going to let it be known.  It isn’t taught in public school, or discussed on the television.  The debt based consumer mindset opened my eyes to how the things I buy hold me down. Everything I purchase has associated costs.  The concept of less is more started to appeal to me and also gets me closer to our end goal.

This is a huge consideration in my life now. Want that shiny object?  Would you trade your life for it? Is it worth 2-10 years of my life to have a new Corvette Z06 that will continue to consume more of my life’s energy (in the form of money for gas, licensing, insurance, tickets, repairs and worry)? No. I have struggled with this as an American male.  I started to question it. Where does that consumerism seed get started? Is it just an exploitation of a hard-wired evolutionary biological mechanism?  Is it installed into me by society and advertising? I think it’s a mixture, but it is deeply rooted in our culture and taught to us as children.  Want.

justification-for-higher-education
This poster was in MANY of my classrooms

You see. This decision to walk a different path, even if just slightly,  from the standard has spawned an introspective thought process.  This is where true freedom begins, with our choices.  Not just the choices of what to buy, but the choice of how to think.  How to operate this human machinery.  It has allowed me to see more clearly and be more aware of my surroundings, motivations and beliefs.  All of this came from a simple goal to move to an island.

IMG_0244

Creating the lifestyle that we envisioned is now on our doorstep. We are both looking forward to a life without the rat race. No more waking up everyday at 6am to shower, eat, commute and work towards someone else’s dream and someone else’s freedom. We get to work at our dream and our freedom.  At the age of 34 I’d say that is one hell of an accomplishment and we are only getting started.

Today marks my last day of work and entrance into wonderland.

What do you think of this post?
  • WOW (4)
  • Awesome (6)
  • Interesting (1)
  • Useful (1)
  • Bummer (0)
  • Whoa (0)

10 Things I Will Miss About Greeley, Colorado

Greeley, Colorado has, for a long time, struggled with its identity. Where other Front Range cities have a good idea who they are and what they stand for, Greeley seems to flounder a bit. It has been the butt of jokes that usually end with “the smell of money” or, more recently, “the exact opposite of Hawaii“. But there is so much good stuff going on in Greeley that it is a shame that we Greeleyites don’t share it more. All this good stuff is a bit of a secret that is finally starting to get out.

That is exactly the aim of the new PR marketing campaign Greeley Unexpected: to start a new conversation about what Greeley is and who and what makes it unique. It got me thinking about how much I really do love Greeley and how much I will miss my hometown when we move to Puerto Rico.

Britton-and-Cassie-at-Greeley-Parade
Britton and me at the Greeley Stampede 4th of July Parade one year

We know what it is like to live in Greeley. Both Britton and I were born and raised in Greeley (though I moved to a small rural town 20 miles away for about 10 years before moving back). We both went to public school here, got our first jobs here, went to college here at both Aims and the University of Northern Colorado, and we bought our house here, as well as a number of rental properties. Our families are here. Our friends. Our memories. Our life! Greeley has in so many ways large and small made us who we are, and so we are so thankful for it and will miss it greatly! Let me count the ways!

(Feel free to click around on the links provided to read more about each one. All photos in this post are taken by us from or for this very site, LifeTransPlanet.)

Kress-Outside Kress Beer and Popcorn
Magical Land of Great Movies, Beer and Popcorn: the Kress Movie Theater in Greeley!

1) Indie Options
I know I will miss our favorite Greeley indie hangouts. Some of these include the Kress Cinema and Lounge, or Margie’s Java Joint (now the Blue Mug at Margie’s). At the Kress you can have a beer with your popcorn or food and watch a free cult classic on late Friday or Sunday nights, or watch a new indie film at other times. At Margie’s you can have a coffee and check out art and it even has a weird doll in the floor! We haven’t yet tried the Moxi Theatre, but that sounds cool too. We even have a local, independent brewery called Crabtree and a new one is slated to open up soon! The downtown Roma restaurant has a totally hippie/indie vibe to it with a loud, rowdy college crowd in a long-ago converted church. And Cafe Panache brings a touch of funky French sophistication. We will also miss all our favorite, local and inexpensive restaurants.

Walking-around-Sandborn-Lake
Westlake/Sandborn Park

2) Beautiful Parks
Greeley really is blessed with some of the most gorgeous and abundant parks in any city I have visited. It has over 30 parks in the city limits from skate parks, to open space parks. All of them are beautifully landscaped and filled with many varieties of trees. We love Josephine B. Jones Park for its natural wandering trails, Bittersweet for its long path, memorial monuments and huge lake, Sandborn for its perched view around the lake and sand volleyball pit, Ramseier Farm Park with its farm animal footprints in the cement, sundial and access to the ditch trail and I have mentioned it before but Glenmere Park just has something magical and alluring about it that is hard to describe. And on and on. Greeley really has it going on with its parks and I will miss them treemendously! 🙂

 Awesome sunset
Greeley gets awesome mountain views and sunsets -picture taken from our Greeley backyard!

3) Small Town Charm with Big City Amenities
Greeley is pretty cool because you can get nearly anything you would in a big city (nearly every chain and corporate store you can name), but it just doesn’t feel like a big city. There are nearly 100,000 people, but it still feels like Mayberry a little. We just know each other: our neighbors, our mechanic, our hairdresser, our grocery store clerk, etc. Maybe it’s because I have lived here so long, but it’s a rare occasion that I leave the house and don’t see someone I know. You can be a big fish here pretty easily or you can remain relatively anonymous if you want to as well. And being just on the edge where the prairie meets the front range, we get the most gorgeous 180 full view of the Rocky Mountains of any of the Colorado cities.

Longhorns-in-Parade
Longhorn Cows on Parade

4) Greeley is easy and safe to live in  
There are many pluses to living in Greeley for health, finances, employment and schooling. Greeley passed a smokefree law a full 3 years before the rest of Colorado. There have been huge strides in smart growth. The city has maintained a high standard of living with overall clean water, land and air, honest and effective police, fire and rescue teams, and many medical providers including a large hospital. The job market is shifting from primarily blue collar into a few more white collar, higher paying positions. Gang issues have been overall addressed appropriately and are no bigger a problem than in other large cities. Housing and cost of living in Greeley is dramatically lower than other places. The grid driving system is easy to navigate and parking is FREE nearly everywhere.

There are two Recreation Centers (the Rec Center and the Fun Plex), swimming pools and splash parks, and even an ice skating rink. We have a top of the line library system that we use extensively! There are many learning options including Aims, the beautiful campus of UNC and the vocational schools. Overall, you have everything you need to succeed in Greeley!

Cassie-and-Einstein
Cool Mural next to Lincoln Library

5) Progressive City in a Traditional/Conservative County
This is another rare combination that is hard to find in other places. While most of Weld County is very rural, conservative and very ok with things remaining as they had 50 or 100 years ago, Greeley, the county seat, is, by comparison, remarkably progressive and forward thinking. This combination makes for an interestingly diverse political and social dialogue. I think it has resulted in a city that is rooted in and values its history and what was good about the past, but ready and able to leap into the future as well.


Connie Willis and Me
I met Connie Willis at a book event

6) Its People
What is a city without its people? Truly Greeley has some of the nicest and most interesting people who have lived here or are currently living here. Most are not flashy about living here, because Greeley is not about flashiness. Most are good, friendly, helpful and hardworking people. Some are extraordinary like the people highlighted by Greeley Unexpected: Connie Willis, the sci-fi writer, Amando Silva, the performance artist, or Ryan Mayeda the philanthropist chiropractor, but many are just honest, decent and living good lives. It’s hard not to like people from Greeley and I will miss them dearly!

Quince
A Private Quinceanera Party at Island Grove
 
7) Mexican Influence
Greeley has a large immigrant population, primarily Latinos and specifically mainly from Mexico. Some are second or third generation, but all have brought a distinct and awesome Latino flavor to Greeley. With this cultural influx we have authentic Mexican food, tiendas (shops), events and more. Often I think the general population doesn’t fully take advantage of this great opportunity!

Because of this influence I have been able to become fluent in Spanish and use it in my daily life. Britton and I cannot stand store-bought old Mission tortillas when you can have local tortillas fresh from the comal or made-that-day tamales or barbacoa from Los Comales or La Espiga Dorada. By simply getting to know our neighbors we have been invited to fun Mexican parties including quinceañeras. Because of this Mexican influence, we have also met a curandero (traditional folk healer), and our frozen confection of choice during the summer are those paletas sold from one of the men walking behind the ringing carts throughout Greeley.

Greeley is becoming more and more diverse as well with immigrants from all over the world. I will miss getting to know all of these cultures as well.

ferris-wheel
The Carnival Comes to Town at the Stampede every year around the 4th of July

8) Cultural/Community Events
Greeley has such a plethora of community and cultural events it’s hard to know where to start. Most events occur in the summer like the Arts Picnic, the Blues Jam, Friday Fests, Cinco de Mayo events, and, of course, the Greeley Stampede, but there are also nationally recognized shows, performances and events at the Union Colony Civic Center like the Greeley Philharmonic Orchestra and sometimes at the University like the Canvas and Chocolate event I went to or the Gasland event there or at the libraries.

Cassie-at-train-museum
At the Train Station Museum in Greeley

Other cultural hot spots include the Greeley Freight Station Museum, one of the world’s largest miniature model train set museums in Greeley as well as Centennial Village, a village museum of the late 1800s where kids can even have a summer experience as a child of 100 or more years ago, the City of Greeley’s main museum downtown and Nathan Meeker’s home/museum. We also have a summer farmers’ market and a few festivals and charity events like the huge Relay for Life.

Cassie-Ponytail-on-Bike bike-bw
Biking in Greeley

9) Walkablity/Bikeability: This is sort of in the same vein as Parks and Community Events, but I think it merits its own point. Greeley is a very flat city that makes it very easy to ride bikes. Its bicycle infrastructure has improved dramatically as of late with the City of Greeley recently being awarded the Bronze Level as a Bicycle Friendly Community with its 85 miles of bike lanes. There is always a great Bike-to-Work Day event each June as well as the Moonlight Bike Ride  in July put on by the Greeley PD. We are so thankful to have and will miss greatly the Poudre Trail that connects Island Grove in Greeley to Windsor and Fort Collins via a walking/biking trail and other trails like the recent ditch trail by our house. They are also adding more sidewalks and bus stops to encourage alternate forms of transportation than just by car.

Outdoor-Grill

BBQing in our backyard

10) The Summers
In Greeley, the summers are fabulous! There is so much to do. The evenings are cool and it’s sunlight until what feels like 10pm. It is never humid or muggy. People are out in the neighborhoods, going to events, parties, growing gardens, hanging out in their yards, BBQing, swimming, walking, biking. It is such a vibrant community that you really see in its full glory of the summers. For me, summertime in Greeley is the best and I am sure I will miss it a lot, even living in a tropical environment.

PlumsCold-over-the-lake
Plums on a tree in summer and a snowy winter day in our backyard

Many people enjoy the other seasons of the year in Greeley as well with changing leaves and crisper evenings of fall, the cozy indoor lives of warm foods, puffing chimneys and glistening snow of winter, and the new growth and excitement that comes with blooming flowers and trees throughout town in the spring, Some people say that the seasons help them appreciate each one more and they look forward to the (sometimes daily) change in the weather.

Kitty-and-Colors
Our cat Kitty and the changing leaves of a Greeley autum 

Overall, while Greeley has its share of problems that cannot and should not be just brushed aside, there is so much more good about it. I hope you enjoyed hearing about this wonderful place I will always call home.

What do you think? What do you feel are the best parts of Greeley? Do you ever miss your home town?

What do you think of this post?
  • WOW (7)
  • Awesome (31)
  • Interesting (4)
  • Useful (2)
  • Bummer (1)
  • Whoa (0)