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https://www.dailyherald.com/news/20220106/bartlett-couple-purge-for-adventure-as-digital-nomads
Some people started the New Year with a resolution to change one thing in their lives. Phyllis and Jerry Campagna ended 2021 by getting rid of almost all their stuff to focus on their NGA -- Next Great Adventure.
"There's a journey in there," Phyllis says of their purge.
"Possessions possess us." "Amen," Jerry says.
Married for 25 years,
the couple didn't just move to
a smaller place -- they hit the road in their car.
They joined TrustedHouse Sitters.com
(https://www.trustedhousesitters.com/) and already have taken care of homes
in McHenry and Lake counties
in exchange for living rent-free, gone to Stillwater,
Oklahoma, to visit relatives, and are back in Lake County.
Sometimes they take care of pets in the
home.
He likes to say that they are "digital nomads," while she uses the term "happily
homeless."
"There's a very big difference between
saying you are going to downsize and becoming a digital nomad," Jerry
says.
"We knew we wanted to move. We didn't know we wanted to let go of everything," Phyllis says.
Last year brought many changes for the Campagnas. Jerry, who was given an honorary degree from Harper College in 2004, made good on a promise to earn his bachelor's degree in 2021 from National Louis University. Phyllis, who defended her doctoral thesis in person just before the pandemic hit in 2020, earned her doctorate in business coaching from Middlesex University in London.
Phyllis, who says she
can now call herself "Dr. Phil with
a Y," has owned and operated
Excelsis Performance Strategies (https://www.excelsis-ps.com/) since 1989.
Jerry, a former
publisher of the Daily Herald Media Group's Reflejos, has a lifetime of
experience in public relations and marketing and is president of
The MOST Inc. (http://www.themostinc.com/) leadership and organizational development firm.
Together, they have clients they help navigate the world of business, with Phyllis
doing business coaching, and Jerry
working more with teams.
The pandemic
momentarily changed the way they conducted business, but, as they help their
clients to do, they adapted.
"We could
not have done this without
COVID," Jerry says, noting
how he and Phyllis embraced Zoom interactions and digital storage in a world without physical storage.
"I can no longer
carry around all these notebooks of all my clients," says Phyllis, who stores those notes online now. "COVID once
again created a shift we didn't anticipate."
But they adapted, and they are planning to
start a blog to monitor their travels. Those interested can reach
Jerry at JerryC@theMOSTinc.com.
"Just
look at what's happened to our world.
We are expanding our problem-solving,"
says Jerry, who no longer does annual plans. "I do 90-day plans now."
In her first marriage long ago,
Phyllis traveled by van for a year.
"I grew
up in a blue-collar home," says
Phyllis, the oldest of five kids in their
Villa Park house. "For reasons I
don't know, I always had massive curiosity about the world and wanted to see what was out
there."
Vacations by hotel are not what they want.
"You can't live locally in a hotel. We want to live locally," Phyllis says. "It's expanding our emotional base."
Living in other people's homes leads to
discoveries.
"You are
going to use what you've got in the
space you live," says Jerry, who discovered a flight attendant they
were housesitting for used Maldon sea
salt. "I'm 60 years
old and
I'll never have another salt."
Getting rid of
possessions had a plus side.
"We had
no idea housesitting is a global phenomenon," Phyllis says. "It led to all
this letting go. The giving creates a
great deal of gratitude. Gratitude is maybe the best emotion in the world."
The people in Bourbonnais who bought Phyllis' gorgeous cherry wood desk are so happy, they promise to send her photos
when they set it up.
"I decorate for every holiday," Phyllis says, and the people who
now own her collection tell her, "I can't believe you were so generous."
Same with the unused makeup that went to a woman in need.
"I have a job where I have to
dress up and I don't have the money," the woman told
her. "I can't tell you what this means to me."
The hundreds of letters from friends she had kept for decades got returned. "All these different people got boxes of
letters they saw their young selves in,"
Phyllis says.
"It carries the energy of what it meant to you," Jerry
says of the personal items he relinquished.
"I'm a 'Star Wars' fanatic. I have a life-size Yoda," Jerry
says of the limited-edition item he once displayed proudly. He found a man in Aurora
who was renovating his
basement into a "Star Wars" hangout during the pandemic.
"This is the man my stuff belongs to. There was so much joy," Jerry says.
They got rid of thousands of books, except a few they need for work. All the trophies, plaques and awards now exist only in photographs.
"Does it bring me joy? Does it fit
in my backpack?" Jerry
says. "You find out, I don't need all this stuff."
They kept some jewelry, one set of dishes, a couple of paintings and Phyllis' collection of
400 Christmas movies,
the oldest from 1908. "We
bought a couple of shelves and put them up in a family member's
garage," Phyllis says.
"We do miss our neighbors. We have fantastic neighbors. But we haven't lost those
relationships," she says.
Jerry says taking a step without exactly knowing where it will lead is "falling forward."
"Living with
uncertainty is a certainty. I trust me enough to know I'll work it out." Phyllis
says, adding, "When we stop
having fun, we'll buy a home."
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