While we house hunted, I managed to scrounge a little bit of time for editing and even adapted some of my world building into a D&D campaign with friends to test its viability as a story. It seemed to play well overall, and confirmed some of my plans for Book 2. I know I have a lot of work still ahead of me to finish Book 1, but I’m really excited to be able to dive into the wider conflict in the next book. When I started this series, I always knew I wanted to have the second book started before I published so I could ensure the story line flowed seamlessly from one to the other and I’m really glad I did it that way. Each thread that I connect between the books is making the story stronger.
I do wish I’d had more time to write last year, but I’m happy with what I was able to accomplish overall. Our main focus had to be fixing our living situation, so anything extra was a nice bonus. The world building was the most significant achievement since I’d been debating about one course of action that would change what happened later in the series, and I really like the way the story flows now that I’ve committed to it. I still have a few more revisions to make in the current draft and then I can polish it up for beta readers.
As for the house hunting, it took us a few months to find something in our price range but, once we did, things moved pretty swiftly. I spent my days boxing up our belongings, leaving my office space for last so I could sneak in a little bit of editing here and there, and tried to figure out how to balance the holidays with our move. We weren’t able to put up any Christmas decorations since we expected to be moving mid-December, but I planned to put the tree up as soon as we got to the new place and leave it up through January for a belated Christmas season.
And here’s where we get the cherry on top… In the middle of all of this, my health took another dive and I ended up in the emergency room. They ran a bunch of tests, found one issue that might be contributing, but couldn’t give me a definitive answer as to what was causing all the pain. I left, wondering if I would ever get a clear, actionable answer one day. At least when I thought it was the tooth, there was a clear course of action to take. Waiting to see if the new treatment would help was stressful because the pain wasn’t going away. Thankfully, I didn’t have to wait long.
We moved out of our old house shortly after this ER visit and all of my issues vanished within days. It turns out that there was black mold in our old walls. If you research the effects of black mold, it can cause a host of health issues that don’t always show up in tests. You look fine on paper but you feel like you’re dying inside. And, if you don’t eradicate it, it can absolutely kill you. It’s entirely possible that the derecho ultimately saved my life, and potentially the rest of my family too, by forcing us to move. (They showed no sign of illness but also weren’t in the house as much as I was.) I hate to think about what could have happened if we hadn’t gotten out of there. As it is, I’m so thankful that we survived the storm and are now in a much better living situation.