Brace Yourself

One year ago I drove through the desert in a Ford Fusion so packed up I could not see out my back window. After over twelve and a half hours, I then spent another twenty minutes circling an apartment complex trying to find my new building. It was 7pm and 96 degrees out but I was just so excited to finally be in Scottsdale, Arizona instead of Fort Collins Colorado. I was ready to explore, meet new people, go to the gym consistently, kick my depression to the curb, and start a new life. If I could go back in time and tell this version of me anything, all I would say is…

“Brace yourself.”

You can make all of the plans in the world but if they get disrupted, there is not much you can do. With how disrupted my plans were, I may as well have just gotten in my car with nothing and decided to wing it.

My first big disruption was my living situation. The excitement of it all quickly wore off after a week of sleeping on an air mattress before I could get my bed and other furniture put together. Once I had a bed, my only real source of stress in the apartment was having to walk Koda around the complex at night, which as a 5’1 woman, is a little scary, and even more so when my roommate had to call 911 a week after moving in because a block away there was a domestic dispute resulting in some gunfire. 

How I wish that had been the only problem.

Two days before the first day of school, five minutes after getting back to my apartment, a puddle began to form on the floor between my room and bathroom. Then water began to gush from my ceiling. Then through the smoke alarm directly outside of my bedroom causing the alarm to sound. Koda did not like that. 

The aftermath of a broken toilet on the floor above me led to $2000 in personal damages. My bedding, brand new bed, and mattress were ruined among many other things, though thankfully nothing of sentimental value was ruined and I was there when it happened which meant Koda was okay. But I was back to sleeping on an air mattress. My new plan was to buy a bed after the insurance check came in, but after waiting six weeks I had to just buy one out of pocket. It took six months of constant calls, emails, photo evidence and filing a claim with the state of Arizona to finally get an insurance check that was still $600 less than my damages. 

And then came the cockroaches.

A couple who also lived in our building were evicted. I am sure there is an official term for it but I am just going to say it is due to the fact that they were absolutely filthy. My upstairs neighbors watched as people in hazmat suits went into the next door unit bringing out trash bag after trash bag, many filled with the remains of fast food, others with what could only be described to me as “black sludge.” It was a roach’s paradise. But once it was vacated the roaches had to relocate and chose my unit as their new home. There were daily sightings, egg sacs in multiple cabinets, and cheez its were forever ruined for me after reopening the box and pouring those delicious squares plus one cockroach into what was going to be a part of my lunch.  It took weeks and me almost getting thrown out of the office by security (long story!) to get our unit sprayed and traps set up.

My lease does not end until September but I found a good deal and moved into a house just last week. One housemate is twice my age and the other one and landlord is eighty five and has plans to live another forty years and I believe if there is anyone who can achieve it, it’s her (we put up drapes on step stools together!) Koda has a yard, and I have yet to see a roach and I am known for being an old soul so this is certainly an upgrade, though paying two rents is not ideal.

The second big disruption was my job. I joined during a season of change for the district and one of their big changes was doing a trimester system. I am somebody who builds relationships slowly and this new system proved challenging, as did some of the class sizes. I will never forget the first day when I had a final class with 39 students, 30 of which were boys. A group decided to pass around a speaker blasting music. Sadly turning it off did not work due to it being bluetooth and as I did not know most of these kids I marched all 39 of them to the office to hand it in. Things stayed a little chaotic throughout the term but definitely improved from that day. But building relationships with such a large class size was tough. 

If you thought my apartment flooding was going to be the only flood story, you were mistaken! It all started with water dripping from my classroom ceiling any time it rained (which happens in AZ way more than you’d think!). Well dripping turned into pouring and tiles falling from the ceiling. It eventually got so bad I had to relocate and finish out the school year in a different room a teacher loaned out to me. 

I also had courses I never taught before and class periods were 70 minutes long each day so preparing these lessons took up a lot of time. I worked over 65 hours a week that first term, which effectively destroyed my daily gym visits and attempts at having a blossoming social life. Though there was clearly Godly intervention here. My mom’s old friend from college has a brother who lives in Arizona and heard I moved out here. I met him and his wife and they introduced me to their deceased son’s widow, and his best friend, Ryan. We got to know each other over the course of a few months. I then went to their other son’s wedding as his plus one where he was the best man. We have now been together for nearly 8 months. 

But back to my job. I really did have great coworkers and superiors and I loved my hooligan students. There were just so many challenges and so much chaos both in school and in my real life that made me realize I could not stay teaching. At the end of July I will be starting a new job as an educational coach for a private company. I will still have students but no more than twelve, they have their own curriculum picked out by their parents and no grading. I am just there to help them and develop their social skills (and yes I see the irony in that!).

My last area of major disruption was finances. Teaching is not a high paying job, especially early on in the career. I was prepared for that. Moving is expensive. I was prepared for that. My rent went up several hundred dollars. I was prepared for that. Koda was not ready to be on his own and had to go to daycare a few days a week. I was prepared for that. Unfortunately I was not prepared for everything else. Obviously my apartment flooding was costly, even with insurance money. My car window seal broke and that was costly. Koda kept having weird medical stuff right after we moved and that was costly. But what really hit me hard was my paycheck.

It turns out different states have different rules regarding teacher pay that I was not aware of. For starters they take out more in Arizona for their retirement system. But what really hit hard was the social security pay. In Colorado, if you work for the public school system or other government jobs you do not pay into social security but that is not the case in Arizona. About $300 a month I did not anticipate was now gone just from that. My overall salary here was $6,000 more than my salary my first year teaching but my monthly pay was somehow $200 less. I was prepared to save less money than I had in Colorado because I knew I was very fortunate with my rent and cost of living situation out there. However, I was not prepared to not be able to save anything at all and sometimes even be forced to dip into my savings. 

Getting a second job was not a viable option either. Especially first term with my work load and then after that, I couldn’t do that to Koda. And the summer break here is much shorter and only 8 weeks, so even finding a summer job would have been nearly impossible. It still feels funny to say this was so challenging for me because others struggle and have struggled in ways that go beyond having to live paycheck to paycheck while still having money saved. It was just such a drastic difference and one I was not ready for. But this new job will have higher pay, and less money taken out of it. Plus Koda no longer needs daycare so once the job starts and I am no longer paying two rents, things will get better and I will recover.

This past year had trial after trial. The previous year was a horrible year for my depression while this one was a horrible year for my anxiety. And yet God was with me through them both and I think he is about to calm the storm at least a little. There were a lot of other things that transpired over this last year but I wanted to just stick to the highlights. Through it all I have learned more about what it truly means to be resilient and what it means to give up control because I had none. I am still a planner but I understand God may teach me more things by taking me in a totally different direction and I have to be okay with it. I wonder what the version of me a year from now would tell this version of me. Hopefully not “Brace yourself. Again.” But if it is, I can do it. The Lord is with me.

If you’re intrigued by this post and looking forward to what I’ll write about in the future, you can expect a new post at some point in the future. Also, if you feel inclined, feel free to leave a comment below about what you think. Thanks for all your support and I hope you’ll come back the next time I post. Stay Amazing!

3 Replies to “Brace Yourself”

  1. Teaching and all it entails does not get easier. But the trials you were given you persevered through with the love of the Lord. He sees you reaching out to others in warmth and steadfastness. I wish you all the best; moving forward surrounding yourself with positive people.

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