Tuesday, September 10, 2013

Possible Reasons #s 2 & 3: It's time to slow down and it all started with free tickets

Possible Answer #2: It’s time to slow down.

I have never been good at sitting still.  Never.  I was really an excellent student and quite compliant all through school, but I still managed to get myself in trouble pretty regularly.  (I’m certain that if I was in school in today’s world, they would have wanted to medicate me despite my flawless grades.)  Nearly every report card I ever received includes a note or comment to my parents: “Your daughter is a very bright young lady and a joy to have in class, but she talks way too much!”  I did my work quickly and well, and when I was finished I needed something else to do (reference previous comment about not being able to sit still).  Thus, I would fidget or strike up a conversation with my neighbor.  My teachers did not appreciate that.  (What I never understood was that, as punishment, they would send me to sit out in the hall so that I would no longer have anyone with whom to talk.  They failed to consider that every other teacher who had a chatty student did the same, so we would all just sit out in the hall to talk instead.)

In high school, I took mostly Honors/AP level courses, worked 20+ hours a week, volunteered at church and kept a pretty busy social life.  College went pretty much the same way.  I carried 15+ hours most of the time and filled the rest of my schedule with rehearsals, student organizations, social activities, work, etc.  Then, I graduated and worked full time and volunteered.  Even when I stayed home with my kids when they were babies and toddlers, I filled my schedule leading Bible studies and playgroups and more volunteering.  It was volunteering that got me back into the work place.  I volunteered so much at my son’s school that they asked me to apply for a job.  That job was fun, intense and very busy, and I absolutely loved it.  I also loved that it was flexible enough to work only minimally in the summer.  However, I, of course, managed to fill my summers by being the swim team mom among other things. 

See.  I don’t know how to sit still.  Everything I do, I do completely.  I don’t know how to do things halfway.  I love to help people with their work and I love to do all of my work well.  That gets exhausting after a while.  For everyone.  I didn’t even mention that my husband has also run his own business for the past 10+ years.  Anyone who is or has ever been self-employed knows that you never get to slow down in that kind of position.  Between my full-time job, his self-employment, three growing kids, church, friends, numerous volunteer activities, the kids’ schoolwork and extracurricular activities, and the fact that in an urban/suburban environment there’s ALWAYS something to do, we’ve been going non-stop for years now.  9 acres is a lot of work, but country/small-town life is just a slower pace.  Maybe it’s time for our family to give that a try.

Possible Answer #3: It all started with free tickets.

So, put aside the family heritage and the I-love-history thing.  Forget the slower pace.  Maybe it all started with free tickets.  Seriously.  One day while sitting at my computer while my students were taking a test, an email came through via a church forum.  Somebody had tickets to see Brad Paisley that night at the Rodeo.  My neighboring teacher, also one of my dearest friends, suggested that my husband and I take the tickets and he (my friend) and his wife would watch our kids so we could have a night out.  Long story short, we got a high school student to babysit and the four of us went out together.  How does this have anything at all to do with selling my lovely suburban home and moving to the country, you ask?  Well, here it is:

When I first met my husband, I was thrilled to see that his CD collection was almost identical to mine.  Our musical interests ran the gamut from blues to classic rock to classical to Broadway.  There was an obvious absence of country music in both of our collections.  Regardless of what he might tell you now, he didn’t like it.  He could tolerate it but got no enjoyment from it.  I grew up on a wide assortment of musical genres, from Jimi Hendrix and Janis Joplin to Kenny Rogers and anything ever played at Gilley’s to mariachi music, the Beatles, Led Zeplin, Lighting Hopkins, Carlos Santana, Elvis and everything in between.  I grew up spending nearly every birthday at the Rodeo, so country music was in my wheelhouse but it didn’t dominate my iTunes account the way Elvis and U2 did (and still do).  It was really more of a seasonal or social interest though and not one I pushed since he really had no interest.  Brad Paisley changed all that.

We went to the concert that night, and my husband, a lover of fabulous guitar music and a guitarist himself, discovered that Brad Paisley was not just any country singer, but, as the inebriated gentleman next to us proclaimed throughout the night, he could really play the *!@% out of that guitar!  Never mind his incredibly clever and charming lyrics.  The next day, our joint iTunes account grew to include a number of country songs.  Over time, he started tuning in to the local country stations in his truck and discovered the wholesome charm found in the songs that told a story, the songs about trucks and tractors, and even in the homages to beer.  Because of that one night and those free tickets, he began to explore the culture of country music and realized that it really is as much a culture as is being Southern or being Texan.  It’s about hard-working men who love their wives and children and mommas—men who go to church, love America and drink beer, men who drive trucks and want to instill good strong values in their children.  He found a musical genre that fit him and a culture that appealed to him, and over a little more time, our iTunes account has grown to include scores of country songs and that musical influence has been part of what has led us to where we are now.


Now, I’m not saying we are moving to the country because of country music, but let’s face it, what we listen to does influence our actions.  Just look at the world around us proclaiming that “it’s just music” but denying that the stories of sex, drugs and violence that we see every day are completely unrelated yet shockingly similar to popular music.  In country music, there is a wholesomeness (not in all of it, mind you—there’s plenty of trash out there too—ALL things need moderation and discernment and a healthy dose of parental discretion).  There’s talk of a slower pace and enjoying family.  And that’s what we are getting with our move to 9 acres.

No comments:

Post a Comment