If you didn’t notice, eWillys was down on Sunday. It wasn’t just my server, but seems to have been the entire server farm (or the connection to the server farm). Even the web host’s site was down. Things seem to be working fine now.
With eWillys not working, you’d think I had some extra time to take it easy. No sites, no updates, no problems …. Instead, it just gave me extra time to pace and fret over the VA’s delay of the paperwork we need to close on the house. We were expecting to close on April 2nd, so every day of delay drags on us.
I suppose this house is more than just a house; it’s a transitional period, a bookend to the Finding Virginia story that ended in mid-2011, just before I met Ann. I had just started eWillys a few years earlier as the Recession crushed the companies I’d helped launched in the 00s. By 2011, the Recession had also wiped out half the value of the house I’d bought with my girlfriend in Idaho, meaning it was greatly underwater. The house got sold, I lost money, we split up, and I moved temporarily back in with my parents. So much fun!
Then, I met Ann.
We hit it off immediately. I soon moved in with her and her mom, as Ann was already caring for her mother at that point. Not having to pay for housing and having few bills, I didn’t have to work and, instead, was able to focus on eWillys, research, writing books, traveling, and helping out with my father. It was a unique opportunity to step away from the ordinary work-a-day world and, after all the my stress in the early 2000s of raising money for startups in Silicon Valley, it was a big mental relief (something I didn’t explore all that deeply in Finding Virginia).
And, if that wasn’t all, my mother and sister may be moving to Texas this fall, meaning they will be selling their houses. Having the extra space at our new place to put some of the family ‘treasures’ (like a coal cart from my grandfather’s Idaho mine) just adds to the pressure of needing this place.
I’m sure it will all work out this week, but that thought doesn’t making the waiting any easier, especially with Ann’s mother’s health so fragile.
So, it’s not that we are at the worst parts of our life; instead, we’ve climbed up from the worst parts, together, and can see the best parts before us; the house represents a huge step in that direction and we are ready to proceed. This is why the waiting is intolerable, because we are very, very ready to move forward!!
Dave……..thanks again for the update and more importantly……..thanks for giving us a glimpse into your journey and where you are at currently. I hope it is a very positive week for you, Ann and all your family.
I feel you, as I too am at a crossroads. Covid cost me a great gal, eventually a great job, and so its a perfect time to wrap up that chapter and start a new one. I have listed my home for sale, bought a flat fender Willys, and am heading to the Blue Ridge. Relocating from urban California to rural Virginia to care for an elderly parent. I wish you the best in your journey, and hope your house sale goes smoothly. Happy Motoring!
i’m very happy for all of this coming together for the both of you , good luck and best wishes
Hang in there, Dave. Good Luck, hope you get past this rough patch successfully.
Dave,
Thank you very much for sharing this with us.
Thanks guys. Folks have always been very supportive throughout the life cycle of eWillys in numerous and I’ve always appreciated that. I’ve done my best to return the favors.
Ivan: Good luck on your move and your flattie and I hope your time with your parent is as good as can be. I know there are a number of other readers (obviously including us) who are juggling life and aging parents. It’s that time of life for many of us.
Dave-
Good luck to you and Ann on your upcoming move into larger quarters and with the care of her mother. With your mom and sis moving to Texas, that in itself will be a big change for you to make. It will take more than a few hours to drive over and see her now.
Thanks for sharing your experiences of late and we wish you well!
The good news is that Phoenix is on the way to Texas … sort of 🙂