Instead, I offer this "year in review" of sorts. Think of it as our Christmas card in blog form.
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If I had to choose a theme for the Rogers family in 2014, I think it's best described as A Year of Surprises. Some were good -- some not so much -- but in the end, we were constantly on our toes, and found ourselves to be pretty adaptable no matter what life threw at us.
FEBRUARY -- We're Moving (Again)
I suppose it's a good thing we decided to ask.
On a whim in late February, we emailed the property management company for our rental home in Tampa. We wanted to make sure we could re-sign our lease and stay in the home for another year. The family who owned the house was living in South Africa, and as far as we knew (and had been told several times), they wouldn't be returning to the U.S. for at least another year.
Like I said, it's a good thing we asked.
We received a prompt response that, no, we could not re-sign the lease because the owners would be moving back into the house on July 1.
SURPRISE!
Just 8 months after moving to Tampa, we'd be moving again. Good thing we never got around to unpacking all those boxes.
With Jack headed out of town for three weeks, we had to act quickly. Although finding another rental probably would have made the most sense (we still own our home in Raleigh), I couldn't bear the thought of moving again only to feel "unsettled." So we decided to buy.
Our new home in Tampa |
The accompanying nausea was so bad, in fact, that en route to one of the houses, Jack had to pull over at a busy intersection so I could jump out of the car and puke. Not one of my finer moments.
At each and every house we toured, the story was the same. I would tell our agent and Jack to go ahead of me while I stood in the front yard and threw up.
I just hope none of our new neighbors witnessed it.
MAY -- Two Houses, No Water
For those of you not familiar with Florida's west coast weather, let me acquaint you. The month of May can be hot. May can be sticky. May can be nasty. May in Tampa can remind you of an armpit.
And the weekend we moved into our new house, Tampa was doing its very best imitation of an armpit.
With temperatures and humidity high, so was our stress level. And it didn't help that to save money, we had decided to move everything ourselves -- everything but the very heaviest furniture pieces.
It was slow, arduous work, but we muddled through. By dinner time on the first day of our move weekend, we were making great progress. We stopped to order pizza for dinner, and as I stood in the office and looked out the window adjacent to Jack's desk, I noticed a steady stream of water pouring down the driveway.
Huh.
I raced out to the garage to find the hot water heater spewing water everywhere -- including all over our not-yet-loaded boxes and furniture.
SURPRISE!
Now Jack and I were the ones going into hyperdrive, desperately trying to locate the water shut-off valve. And because it was a rental home and we'd never thought to ask, we had no idea where it was. After 20 minutes or so, we finally found it. But a call to our property manager, and then to their plumber, revealed the earliest the water heater could be replaced was Monday -- if we were lucky.
Water, water everywhere, but not a drop to drink at our new house. |
No water.
Again, no big deal, we thought -- we already closed on our new house. We'll just shower and cook over there. Until we realized the county screwed up and shut off our water instead of transferring it to our account.
So we had two houses but no water. And it was Friday night. There would be no water until Monday.
So how did we get by for the next three days?
Showers at the gym.
Eating out instead of cooking.
Dogs drinking Perrier.
Just like we planned it.
JUNE-- Adventures in the Amazon
Although I never finished posting all of my journal entries from our week-long trip to the Peruvian Amazon, it is pretty well documented here on my blog -- both in words and pictures.
Jack with village children in El Chino, Peru |
The SURPRISE! in this case was that we actually went through with it. All four of us.
And we didn't get eaten by a giant anaconda.
Or stung by a bullet ant.
And we not only survived it, but we absolutely loved it.
We joked on the way home from Peru that any family vacation we take in the future will be incredibly boring by comparison -- and it's true.
LJ on the canopy zipline in the Peruvian Amazon jungle. |
A few days ago I asked Julianna to tell me the highlight of her year and she didn't hesitate with her answer.
"Well, duh," she said. "Our trip to Peru."
Duh, indeed.
SEPTEMBER -- The Marriott Miracle
One bonus to living in Tampa is that we have three NFL teams in Florida. That is, of course, if you count our hometown Suckaneers as an actual professional football team. (They are 2-13 as I write this).
As a side note (or rant) ... in the two years we have been Bucs' season-ticket holders, I have seen the team win in our home stadium exactly 1 time. Yes, once. In two years. And that's why we call them the Suckaneers.
Luckily, the not-much-better-than-the-Bucs Jacksonville Jaguars play just 3 hours from where we live. Why is that good? Because they happen to be in the same division as our beloved Indianapolis Colts. And that means, at least once a year, the Colts come to Florida.
LJ at the Colts-Jags game |
When we arrived at the hotel, the place was buzzing. There were lots of people lingering in the lobby. There were temporary black drapes hanging in front of the elevator vestibule. There were security guards sitting near the hallway.
The hotel was so busy, in fact, that we were told there was no way we could get two rooms that connected to each other.
When we pressed for a reason, we were told that the hotel was completely full. There was a wedding happening on site, and there were people in town for the Jags game (like us), and there was also a football team staying at the hotel.
"Which football team," we asked?
"The University of Pennsylvania," the desk clerk said.
I became suspicious. The guys milling around the lobby were way bigger than most college players I knew. And they were certainly a lot bigger than the guys who would play at a Ivy League school like Penn.
These were ginormous, massive human beings. Absolute beasts.
And I was pretty certain that not a single one of them suited up for the mighty Penn Quakers.
Then I noticed a local news guy with a TV camera.
Curious.
Then, some teenage boys asking one of the players to autograph a helmet.
A Colts helmet.
More curious.
Julianna, who was done with all the speculation, decided to take matters into her own hands.
She marched confidently up to one of the players, looked him in the eye, and said, "Excuse me, but do you play for the Indianapolis Colts?"
Julianna and Colts' Head Coach Chuck Pagano |
Julianna stood there, staring at him, mouth agape, and said, "Uh, okay."
SURPRISE!
We had inadvertently chosen the same hotel as the Indianapolis Colts. Who knew they would stay at an unassuming Marriott in an office park just off the highway?
During our brief stay at the hotel, the kids were able to say hello to future Hall of Fame kicker Adam Vinatieri, get a glimpse of Andrew Luck, and even pose for a photo with Head Coach Chuck Pagano.
Oh, and incidentally, the player Julianna questioned in the lobby? That was the starting running back, Trent Richardson.
Best of all, the Colts won big over the Jags, 44-17.
At least a good team plays in Florida once a year.
DECEMBER - Beneath the Surface
In September I had a small spot on my face biopsied. Really, it looked just like a tiny red patch of dry skin on the side of my nose. But the results came back positive for two different types of skin cancer -- basal cell and squamous cell -- and combined they are known as a rare type of cancer called basosquamous.
SURPRISE!
Thanksgiving dinner, pre-surgery |
The good news is that, although I am probably months away from looking "normal" and going outside without a band-aid over my face, I will be fine.
We've done our best to face this with humor (no pun intended). My Christmas gifts included some fashionable Colts band-aids to cover my wound.
And as LJ so eloquently put it before the surgery, "Mom, this is one time you really DO need a hole in your head."
Touche.
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The events recapped here are just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to an eventful year for our family.
There have been plenty of highs, a few lows, and clearly, lots of surprises.
Here's wishing you and your family a wonderful New Year in 2015 -- one filled with love, laughter, and surprises -- but hopefully only the good kind.
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