This past month has been a whirlwind of visiting family. Since
we are married, Sally and I have twice the family to split our time with than
most Peace Corps volunteers. We started our adventures out by traveling to Ohio
right after we quit our jobs to visit with my extended family. It was really
great to see everyone, and what a lot of people we saw! We started out visiting
Grandpa Jack in Circleville, as well as Uncle Dean, Aunt Wendy, and Lydia. We
then traveled to Columbus and visited with Matt and Alex, and got to see the
ever traveling Josh too!
Sally and I took some time out of our family schedule to
visit the Columbus zoo (which multiple Ohioans told me was the best zoo in the
country).
We then caught sight of Olivia at OSU, and traveled to Mt.
Vernon to see the rest of the Bauer side of the family: Gandma and Grandpa,
Uncle Eric, Aunt Molly, Madeline, Claire and Aunt Meg.
Our next trip that took us to my side of the family was a
short weekend to Virginia. There we were able to see Uncle’s Ralph and Boadie
in Richmond. We spent a wonderful day visiting with them and seeing the sights
before returning to Birmingham.
Finally, this past week we traveled to Houston and visited
with my parents, Mark and Amy, and my sister, Hannah. It has been great
visiting with my side of the family, and it was hard to say goodbye to my
parents when we left Houston. My childhood dogs Merlyn and Mr. Wiggles are also
in Houston. The first reality of how long we will be gone is the knowledge that
both of these dogs will probably not be here when we come back. We got to see Hannah
one more time yesterday when we gave her a large portion of our furniture and
my last snake, a ball python named Fred. Saying goodbye to Hannah seals the
deal for me. I have no more blood relatives to see before we leave town in a
few days. The reality of the time that Sally and I will be gone has not truly sunk
in for me. I feel I will miss my family more as the time passes. Right now, it
just feels like we will not see them for a while, so no tears are shed.
No doubt the joy is in the journey, but there is also a
great deal of satisfaction in reducing everything you need for two years into a
hundred pounds of stuff. The simplicity can be very rewarding. The trick will
be making it all fit and meeting that weight requirement. Wish us luck!
~Caleb