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Growing more food

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One of the things I worried about the most was food. I do not qualify for food stamps. With just one minor child in the house, my income had to be below $1,900 to get SNAP assistance. I am making right around $2,000 per month with my one part time job. I knew we would be fine until Gymnast moved. Feeding him is priority so other bills will wait until then. (And he works at a grocery story so is getting pretty good at getting good deals.)

Preparing to grow my food

But after he has moved, I will cut that grocery money as much as possible. In preparation for that, we did a number of things…

    1. The twins helped me repurpose our raised garden beds into standing beds. This will prevent the dogs from fertilizing and harvesting my garden. Ick! And oh my goodness, why didn’t I do this before. Not having to bend down to week and care for my plants has been life changing!
    2. Beauty and I started a bunch of seeds inside to be ready for planting time. Seeds run around $2 per pack, where baby plants (not sure what to call them) run $6+ per plant. This saved us ALOT of money with all that we are growing.
    3. I got real creative and did lots of googling for space saving and efficient ways to grow all my fav veggies. We are growing squash and cucumbers in this self watering planters made from styrofoam coolers and large water bottles (all of which we collected from people’s cast offs). The plants are starting to flower and I’ve tied the first vines up. I expect we will start seeing veggies soon.
    4. I did a ton of research on fertilizing and using household “trash” in my garden beds. We used cardboard as weed barrier, Gymnast helped some neighbors with mulching their yards and they gave us their extra bags, saving all eggs shells and using them specifically around my tomato plants. And much more…

What we are growing

We’ve got 3 tomato plants going strong, two pepper plants going strong, two squash plants flowering now, two cucumber plants climbing the trellis, lots of radishes, carrots and salad mix at various stages of growth, cantaloupe vines sprouted, lots of herbs including basil, rosemary and cilantro.  Oh and a TON of strawberries…evidently they like where I planted last year because they have come back prolifically!

I am confident that by July I have will a very edible yard. Both the front and back yards are planted. And when I have some time, I’ve got one of the old raised beds on the side yard (outside of the dogs reach) and I think I’m going to make it a wildflower plot to attract pollinators. My initial thought was to make it a composting bed, but after researching and seeing all the work and rodents I might attract, decided against it.

Read more from Hope

Other than Rent…Food – August, 2020

Princess Starts her Job Hunt – October, 2019

Where’s Your Money Going – September, 2021

ADHD Consultation and Education Plans

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Education Plans

Last week I finally went for my ADHD consultation. Although I haven’t gotten the bill yet, the receptionist checked with my insurance provider when I booked the appointment and the copay should be affordable. Luckily I had much better mental health coverage than I thought – I was preparing myself for this to be a $1,000 experience.

After meeting with the psychologist, I think I’m going to have to treat the executive dysfunction I’m experiencing from a different angle. The psychologist I saw thought that I had many of the symptoms of ADHD, but probably didn’t qualify for a formal diagnosis because I didn’t struggle in school as a child or have hyperactivity. Most of my symptoms emerged in adulthood, which made him believe my symptoms may be connected to my chronic illness and not ADHD. Although I’m still waiting for his final report, it seems like I don’t have ADHD.

My therapist believes I should get a second opinion because I have many of the symptoms. However, I think I’m going to try to tackle my executive dysfunction a different way and find a new specialist for my POTS. I’ve heard that some POTS patients have improved on narcolepsy medication and had a big reduction in brain fog, fatigue, and cognitive dysfunction. I’ve also never had a sleep study done, and I know that sleep apnea runs in the family, so I may try to arrange one.

Education and Career Plans

A few months ago, I wrote about my desire to work toward a career change. I love writing and want to keep all of my current clients. However, I fear eventually AI will replace content writers, so I want to build other skills to stay competitive in the labor market.

After a lot of consideration, I think I want to go back to school to study photography and hopefully become a wedding or family photographer. I’m also open to product photography, but I think there’s a chance that could be outsourced to AI as well.

Wedding photography would be much harder to automate. Unless they develop a photography robot down the line, a human has to be there to document and capture the event. Becoming a photographer will still allow me to be creative and work for myself. I love being self-employed and don’t think I’d be happy in a traditional 9-5 job.

Handling the Cost of Education

Luckily I don’t think I’ll have to take on debt to go back to school. I plan to keep writing and work on my schoolwork part-time. This will allow me to take fewer credits and pay as I go instead of taking out loans. Plus, the online degree program I found is very affordable. It’s through a UK arts university that only charges international students around $15,000 for bachelor’s degrees.

Admission is on a rolling basis, so I’m working on my application now. Because the program is largely asynchronous, I can start whenever I want. If I get accepted, I’m planning to start in September so I can enjoy the summer.

I tried to go back to school once before and it didn’t work out. I wasn’t sure what I wanted to study and the timing wasn’t quite right. But I’m hopeful that I’ll get accepted and be able to enroll!

My dad may also help me out with my educational costs. He offered to pay for my college education back when I was 18, but I decided not to go. When he heard that I was planning to go back to school this September, he said he would like to contribute.

I’m definitely grateful for his generous offer, but I’m not sure if I should take him up on it. He’s getting close to retirement and I think he may need to focus on saving for his own future. What do you all think – would you take him up on it?

Read More 

The Cost of Education

The ABCs of ADHD & Money

Why My Son Will Not Have His College Education Paid in Full