BluebirdHazel
New member
- Joined
- Jul 9, 2016
- Posts
- 4
Well, we've been fulltimers for 2 months now so I thought I'd report back with our experience so far.
It's taken me the full 2 months to feel that the Navion is home. My hubby adjusts much faster than I do so he's had no issues. But I was very attached to our little country home that we had built ourselves and I've had a bit of a hard time letting go. To make it worse, we had to stay in an RV park in our community for the 2 months for medical appointments; it was so weird going to our old haunts but then not driving home to our house.
We've worked out what goes where, how we do daily things, what our routine is, and who does what. We off loaded more stuff that just wasn't useful enough on a daily basis. Simplify, simplify. Fewer things = more space for what we really need.
Because the space is small, everything takes more time and patience. Daily life is more of a challenge in some ways than in a house. The upside is that there is less to look after, less to clean, less to worry about, and more time for things we enjoy like hiking, biking, birding, kayaking, movies, reading. The trade-offs so far are worth it.
The biggest problem we've had is me getting sick. It's not much fun being sick in such a small space, not for either person! I'm still working on getting a diagnosis so hopefully we can keep to our travelling schedule.
We've survived in some cold fall temperatures and lots of rain. I think it will be so much more fun once we're down south and able to be outside much of the time.
What we've really learned.......besides how to function in tight quarters......is that LIFE goes on, the good and the bad, and you deal with it no matter where you're laying your head at night.
Hope all the other newbies are doing well!
Hazel
It's taken me the full 2 months to feel that the Navion is home. My hubby adjusts much faster than I do so he's had no issues. But I was very attached to our little country home that we had built ourselves and I've had a bit of a hard time letting go. To make it worse, we had to stay in an RV park in our community for the 2 months for medical appointments; it was so weird going to our old haunts but then not driving home to our house.
We've worked out what goes where, how we do daily things, what our routine is, and who does what. We off loaded more stuff that just wasn't useful enough on a daily basis. Simplify, simplify. Fewer things = more space for what we really need.
Because the space is small, everything takes more time and patience. Daily life is more of a challenge in some ways than in a house. The upside is that there is less to look after, less to clean, less to worry about, and more time for things we enjoy like hiking, biking, birding, kayaking, movies, reading. The trade-offs so far are worth it.
The biggest problem we've had is me getting sick. It's not much fun being sick in such a small space, not for either person! I'm still working on getting a diagnosis so hopefully we can keep to our travelling schedule.
We've survived in some cold fall temperatures and lots of rain. I think it will be so much more fun once we're down south and able to be outside much of the time.
What we've really learned.......besides how to function in tight quarters......is that LIFE goes on, the good and the bad, and you deal with it no matter where you're laying your head at night.
Hope all the other newbies are doing well!
Hazel