


I was ready to give up. I had a very strict price range and a college Visa spending rampage credit rating, so my options were limited. I had shared a wall with my neighbor for 5 years, and I longed for a space in which I could not hear the guy next door peeing while I got ready for work every morning. And then I stumbled upon a little neighborhood hidden on the edge of the city limits. It was perfect: tiny cottage houses surrounded by mature trees on private cul-de-sacs, all a mere mile from one of the city’s main thoroughfares.
The house I went to look at initially was a disappointment. It was out of my price range, and it needed work I wasn’t prepared to do. There was another house for sale in the neighborhood, but it needed twice the work, and it smelled funny. I was on my way home, frustrated and defeated, but as I turned my car around in the cul-de-sac at the end of the street my hopes were lifted. A third house was for sale, a little yellow ” for sale by owner,” and I scribbled the number on a deposit slip and called my realtor. For the next two weeks my realtor tried to contact the owners, but to no avail. She never got a live person on the phone, and none of her messages were returned. Once again defeated, I gave up on finding my own four walls and resigned myself to spending the next several years separated from my neighbors by a few inches of plywood and sheetrock.
It was two weeks after I discovered the FSBO that I found a decent townhouse and was preparing to make an offer on it. I was in the car with my realtor, having just looked at the townhouse a second time, and we were on our way back to her office to draft a contract when her phone rang. It was the owner of the little yellow house. She had just gotten married a few weeks before, and she and her new husband had been on their honeymoon. She returned to a voice mailbox full of messages from my realtor, and she called immediately with an invitation to look at her house. We were less than a mile away and asked if we could come right away. She obliged, and minutes later I walked through the front door of my house.
I knew it was my house the moment I crossed the threshold. I have no further explanation; I just knew. I looked around the rooms and saw my life unfolding there. I went back to my realtor’s office and made an offer, and one month later I was moving my things into those rooms. My rooms.
I would spend the next seven years in those rooms. My beloved dog would play and nap and grow old there, and I eventually I would cradle her in my arms on the floor of my garage as she breathed her last. My tiny kitten would morph into a 20 pound beast of a cat there. I would celebrate holidays and accomplishments there, converse with friends and family over food prepared in my little kitchen, usher in my 30th year on the deck I helped build. I would decide to become a parent there, and after months of heartache and anxiety and joy, my daughter would spend her first days on earth in the tiny spare room-turned-nursery, and I would watch her grow into a little person under the roof of our little house. And one day, seven years later, I would finally decide that the little yellow house had grown too small for my life, and I would watch with thinly veiled sadness as another realtor hammered a “For Sale” sign into the ground next to my herb garden.
I am one of those people who fears that once something is, it can never be again. I will leave this home I have created, yes, okay, but there will never be another home like it. Home will never be the same. And yet. A few weeks ago I followed my realtor into a house, a house in an old neighborhood with tree-lined streets and a community park crawling with rosy little children, mere blocks from one of my city’s major thoroughfares. And I knew it was my house the moment I crossed the threshold.
This story doesn’t yet have an ending, but I think you know how I’d like it to turn out. Cross your fingers, and word to St. Joseph.
| getaclewis | :)
Posted Mon, 11/17/2008 - 17:01
Dunno why, but this one brought tears to my eyes. I loved hearing about how your life unfolded in what seemed to be destined, sacred walls. (Yeah, even with baby projectiles and doggie deliverance.) Prayers that your next chapter will bring that same amazing fit. "Trust Life's unfolding..."
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