Here We Go Again

My task this week is to ORGANIZE A SCAVENGER HUNT, and so I’ve been thinking.

When I was in middle school, participating in perhaps my first scavenger hunt, we went door to door asking for random items and people gave them to us.  That would be mind-blowing for kids today. We didn’t check them off a list, or take pictures, we took the actual items with us. Those folks had to know they’d never see any of it again. It’s kind of mind-blowing to me. I’ll never forget how fun it was.

Years later, when I was working at Barnes & Noble, a trio of teenaged girls scurried in, their heads on a swivel like meerkats on the lookout for danger. When I asked if I could help, they said they were looking for a fire extinguisher. My face must have registered confusion, concern, because before I could answer one of them giggled and said for a scavenger hunt!

Librarians love a scavenger hunt; interactive, informative, and just plain fun. I’ve been fortunate to work with so many talented library people, and have great memories of planning a lot of fun activities, too.

This particular scavenger hunt was at the Richard Byrd Community Library in Springfield, VA, organized by the exceptionally talented Ms. Vicki!

I could continue the scavenger hunt edition of This is My Life you are currently reading, as exciting as I’m sure it is, but I’d be remiss if I didn’t note that my finest work in scavenger hunts, arguably, has been in my own home.

A military move is called a permanent change of station, or PCS, for short. We’ve PCS’d so many times (18!) that I have to go back and count every time someone asks me. The more times we moved the more adept I became. It didn’t lessen the disruption or diminish the change, but it did help with the chaos. If you want to annoy a military spouse, go ahead and say, but they pack it for you, right? They do actually pack it for you, unless you decide to do it yourself, and I was always grateful, but that’s like saying, the doctor delivers the baby, right?

 If you’ve ever hired a house cleaner you know you have to prepare before they arrive. Clean for the cleaner. My kids hated it, but it works best that way. Clear the countertops, put your stuff away. It’s no different with moving. Sure, you can move without doing that. When my kids were little, and Lee was gone a lot, we definitely moved with less prep, but I’m here to tell you, the more prep you can do, the better. You want things as organized as they can be, and you don’t want to move anything you don’t have to.

Yes, these are actual boxes from our 18th move.

The pre-move scavenger hunt, a time-honored task of military families, is often just referred to as here we go again. Timing the pre-move scavenger hunt was key, if you started too early you might have to do it all over, start too late and you’d never get it all done. Items included paint, candles, wine, anything the packers wouldn’t move. Bonus challenge, you were never sure which items they wouldn’t move. Additional items included things we didn’t want them to move, like important papers, pet supplies. Along the way, you could get distracted and before you knew it, you’d be lost in memories. That was part of the game. While you searched, the ephemera you encountered would make you pause, remember, think. You’d spend time you didn’t have doing something you didn’t need to do, not unlike a kid cleaning their room rediscovering treasures under the bed.

I’m not moving but today’s scavenger hunt, in honor of many moves past, looked like this:

  1. Medication past the expiration date
Didn’t take long to find this.

2. Something you borrowed but never returned

Sorry, Liz, we’ll return it someday.

3. A moving sticker or price tag

Not one, but two moving stickers! You might not be familiar with moving stickers but some of us will be finding them forever.

4. Something that would make a temporary living situation feel like home

This is cheating, but it’s true.

5. Bathroom item you don’t really like but haven’t thrown out

Don’t know where or when I got this, it has never been used, and still here it is. Looks travel-sized.

6. A warranty or instruction manual

We got this for Christmas. Thank you, Butch & Ann.

7. Spice/seasoning past BEST BY date

Marjoram. No idea what I bought this for. Also, I’m not saying these dates mean anything, don’t come at me. You can keep yours forever if you want.

8. A gadget you bought but have never used

Bought two of these on Black Friday, listened to Lee describe using his and decided to pass.

9. An item you only need one of (that you have more than one of)

During Andrew’s senior year in high school, Lee lived by himself in an apartment in California, and Andrew and I stayed in North Carolina. We have a lot of duplicate kitchen items from that time. Why do we still have them, almost ten years later? Good question.

10. A physical item that could be replaced by an app on your phone

Almost every picture used in this blog was taken with my iphone, but most of the beautiful bird pictures from IN MY EXPERT OPINION, were taken with this old favorite of mine.

11. Something on your refrigerator or bulletin board

We created this list of movies to watch in early in 2020 after Andrew’s trip home for spring break became one long COVID-19 shut in. I don’t remember what our criteria was but we never finished it. Still hanging there waiting, even after a move.

12. An item of clothing that you plan to donate, but haven’t

Bought this at Old Navy, never worn, but also never donated, given away, or actually even thought of again until now.

13. A kitchen tool that needs to be replaced

It’s a garlic press. We may actually have another one...

14. Something in your junk drawer that should be stored somewhere else

Rachel, is this your hairclip?

15. A ticket or program for an event you attended

Saw this with Rachel and it was fanstastic!

16. An item that’s in a room where it doesn’t belong

With only two of us in the house, there aren’t as many out of place items as there used to be but this cat belongs in another room anytime I start working on a puzzle. These cat snacks, which I found on the kitchen counter, belong down by the front door so he too can get a snack when the dog goes out to pee.

17. A game you will never play or a book you will never read

Why do we still have this game? Does anyone over the age of 10 enjoy this game?

18. A travel souvenir

I got this mug in 2007 when Lee was in Ramadi and my sister, Emilie, and her family joined the rest of us at Disney World for Christmas. She got a matching brown one. Fun fact: the original mug was broken in 2022 and this is the replacement I found and ordered from Ebay.

19. An item that you’ve had for over 20 years

I bought this basket in 1996 at the base exchange in 29 Palms right before we moved to Guantanamo Bay, Cuba. At the time and in that pay grade it felt like an extravagant purchase.

20. Something you wouldn’t trust anyone else to move

This plant (it was much smaller then!) was one of three I got when we moved to Virginia from California. They were my first plants after years and years of having no plants…because they are so hard to move. In 2022, when we moved here from Alexandria I moved all my plants (more than three!) in my car.

And now, your mission, should you choose to accept it, is to complete the scavenger hunt yourself. You don’t have to look for a fire extinguisher, or knock on your neighbor’s door, you don’t even have to leave your house. No need to send pics, this is just for you, just for fun, unless competition is more your style, then challenge someone, set a timer, and crown a winner. If so, I definitely want to hear about it. Thanks for reading and happy hunting!

  1. Medication past the expiration date
  2. Something you borrowed but never returned
  3. A moving sticker or price tag
  4. Something that would make a temporary living situation feel like home
  5. Bathroom item you don’t really like but haven’t thrown out
  6. A warranty or instruction manual
  7. Spice/seasoning past BEST BY date
  8. A gadget you bought but have never used
  9. An item you only need one of (that you have more than one of)
  10. A physical item that could be replaced by an app on your phone
  11. Something on your refrigerator or bulletin board
  12. An item of clothing that you plan to donate, but haven’t
  13. A kitchen tool that needs to be replaced
  14. Something in your junk drawer that should be stored somewhere else
  15. A ticket or program for an event you attended
  16. An item that’s in a room where it doesn’t belong
  17. A game you will never play or a book you will never read
  18. A travel souvenir
  19. An item that you’ve had for over 20 years
  20. Something you wouldn’t trust anyone else to move

Before you go…I feel compelled to say that we did not have a cleaner until we bought our first house. At that time I was in grad school, Lee was headed to a year long deployment to Iraq, and our kids were, well kids. We decided that if we ever wanted our floorboards to get cleaned or our ceiling fans to get dusted we were going to have to pay someone to do it, maybe I said that. Anyway, it was a good investment, we sold that house two and half years later when we moved again.

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