Our story: Getting out of the City and into the Country

in #homesteading7 years ago

Mollygreen.com asked if we would be willing to share our story with their audience, so I thought I would share it here as well. I know many people have lived a variation of this story, and many more are hoping that it is written in their future chapters. Maybe hearing our journey so far will be an encouragement to you as you figure out yours. :)

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Life changes happen to everyone. Sometimes, we are struck by them unexpectedly—a close family member dies, a job is transferred to a different state, or we inherit money. Other times, we cause the changes and have to prepare ourselves for the slew of adjustments that trail in the wake of the paradigm shift. And that’s exactly what my husband and I just did this past May … we upended our lives entirely and on purpose!

Here’s the story of how we left our “normal” city lives in Akron, Ohio, to try to become off-grid homesteaders in the Missouri Ozarks.

Tiny City Backyard.jpg Our tiny city backyard

Ever since we met, Andrew and I have been unified in wanting to take responsibility for our lives. We are deeply concerned about where our food comes from and how it is raised. We want to live sustainably, and we want to raise a family that can run around in fields, forests, and interact with healthy animals. We saw that through all the technological, ethical, sociological, and medical complications that had been layered onto modern life, there was a good design still at the base—we believed that plants, animals, and people could be healthy and whole if they were just allowed to live the way that they were supposed to.

We were both teachers (I taught environmental education; he taught biology), and so it was easy to find people to talk to who understood and even agreed with our positions. But conversations about recycling centers, buying local produce, and “caring for the environment,” started to ring a little hollow in our ears. We knew that no matter how much we reused shopping bags, were mindful of our gas use, or gardened on our postage-stamp sized urban lot, we were still city-dwelling consumers, and the most common wildlife our son would see in our home was parking lot seagulls and the neighbor’s yappy dogs.

That gnawing desire to live meaningfully and responsibly spurred us on to more research. We read countless books about people who made radical changes to their lives, started watching their YouTube channels, and were introduced to the idea of “off-grid” living. We learned about modern homesteaders across the world who were finding land, forging a life on it, and becoming largely self-sufficient. They knew how their non-GMO, organic food had been grown, they knew how the animals they ate had been raised, they healed the land they were living on. Their kids got to grow up exposed to the responsibility and the hard-working life ethics that we wished had been instilled in our students.

These people were producers, not consumers, allowing the living things they surrounded themselves with to live in a way that honored the design. And it was exactly what we were looking for.

So even though we were both employed with full-time jobs at schools, we decided to start looking for our homestead and turning ourselves into homesteaders. It was a strange mix, waking up in the morning and leaving to do “normal” jobs, and then using our free time at home to practice splitting wood, canning food, and reading books upon books about alternative building practices, raising chickens, and managing waste without a sewer.

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Homemade buckwheat sourdough

In March of 2016, we found twelve acres of land that fit our list of hopes perfectly. It had a barn, a south-facing hill, and a trailer where we could live while we painstakingly built our off-grid house. It was a dream come true.

We had never planned to move to the Ozark Mountains, but visiting the property felt like coming home, and so we bought it, full of hope for what could be. Since Andrew wanted to honor the teaching contract he had already signed, we weren’t able to move out to our new homestead for a full year. In that year, we tripled our efforts to learn and practice our up-and-coming new life.

We started up a YouTube channel of our own, delighted to become a part of the online homesteading community that we had learned so much about. We broke the news to our friends and family, and received a mixed bag of responses. Many were encouraging, some were baffled, yet amused, and a few questioned our sanity. Some asked why would we give up comfortable, full-time-job-cushioned lives for the uncertainty of a piece of land that would require years of hard work? But many more others said, “I would love to do something like that,” or even more soberingly, “I wish I had done that before my kids were grown.”

So a long year passed, full of much preparation, waiting, anticipation, and a little impatience. May of 2017 couldn’t come soon enough. When the end of the school year finally came, the teacher clothes went in the donation bin, the boots and flannel shirts took up their rightful place, and we finally … FINALLY made the move to our homestead. It was overgrown, it was unkempt, and it was the most beautiful thing we’d seen in a long time. We were home.

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We have been here a little over two months now, and it has included some of the hardest work we have ever done. But even though we drop into bed exhausted every night, we wake up to clean-smelling air, free-range chicken eggs that gleam in the coop like precious jewels, and the sight of our young son running through a field with the ducks at his side. We have no idea what the future holds (does anyone?), but we’re ready to rush into it headlong, supporting each other as we finally try living the way we feel we were designed to live.

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Here's my article in context: https://mollygreen.com/blog/moving-city-country/

Other places to find Simple Life Homestead on the Internet!

Blog: http://www.simplelifehomestead.com/
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCwDzB6sjt8sZfB9hVUojxrQ
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SimpleLifeHomestead/
Twitter: @SLHomestead

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Thanks for sharing your story. Did you know that in sociology you guys are called "neorurals"? ;) Followed, look forward to more.

Hah! I didn't know we had a term other than "the kinda crazy ones." Thank you so much for your comment, and for following along! We're so excited to share the adventure.

'kinda crazy ones' might get mentioned somewhere in the literature too ;)

Truly an inspirational post!
I have always loved the Ozarks and I see more and more people veering towards them as well as becoming homesteaders; at one with God and nature.
I wish you all the luck and will have to subscribe to your YT channel

So kind of you to say, @goldendawne! I had never been to the Ozarks until we became residents, and I am surprised by the beauty of this place every day. Thanks so much for reading and following along! We're excited to share this adventure. :)

@slhomestead since you have your own place, it becomes far easier to set up composting "toilets." Anyone who does not know about them only thinks they know about them and have crappy opinions to boot.

Haha, exactly, @aedroberts. We just watched a fascinatingly awful documentary about what happens to the city of Manhattan's poop, and it was...interesting. We're excited to finally get to take responsibility for and benefit from the output of our land.

So true. We have been composting our poop for years and have a nice ornamental garden.

i love growing stuff and being close to nature but i live in an apartment, this sure gives me inspiration :)

@vinshero, that makes us SO happy to hear. We got really inspired by other people's stories when we were still in our little city house, so knowing that our story can encourage you is a HUGE blessing. Don't give up on the dream! Ours was years and years in the making, but it's worth all the hard work.

cheeth robot you are wrong . This guy has best post because the pople approved it on Gild are smarter than you . If he copied from anywhere he wouldn’t get approval on curri , and never got this reward. Cheetah robot you are gliching .

@kingjan haha. It gives me comfort, in a strange way, to know that we are smarter than the robots we surround ourselves with. For all the world's crazy technological advances, nothing replaces a human mind, and I hope it stays that way.

We have very similar interests, living in a small rural town in Florida. Enjoyed your post!
Love and Peace,
Melissa

Awesome, @joearnold! After finally getting out of urban living, we can't imagine ever going back. Thanks so much for reading and commenting!

My fiance and I are looking for property in either Oregon or Arizona.

Happy hunting! My father spent a lot of time in Arizona, and he loved it. I'm sure both places come with their challenges, but also their joys.

Truly inspirational story for those of us dreaming of getting out of the daily grind of city life!

Thank you so much for your comment! We were so encouraged by the stories and experiences of others who had gone before us---to think that we can now inspire people likewise is a crazy thought. :)

This is a good positive cheerful post. I upvoted and resteemed it. Good luck.

Thanks so much, @debmund! We try to look at every day as the "best day ever." Even if things go wrong, an animal dies, we get sick and it's a hard day, we can learn so much from it that it can still be a good day. We appreciate the upvote and resteem, and most of all your cheerful attitude. :)

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