That could just be me.
For you soon-to-be-empty nesters, be warned: when your
baby moves out, you might do something crazy. Like redo the kitchen. Or
re-purpose her bedroom into an office. Or get new carpet.
Or sell your house and move into an apartment. Because why
just redo one room when you can sell them all?
When Rebecca moved into her apartment last fall, our
house just seemed too empty. Heck, it didn’t seem it – it was too empty. What did we need with all that space for just the
two of us? Besides, each time I’d go into the basement and see all that stuff
we’d accumulated over our 26 years of marriage, I’d have heart palpitations. It
seemed like this would be a good time to have a major purge.
Here’s something you should know about me: I am a major
procrastinator. Oh, I put up a good front, looking all responsible, but unless I
have a deadline, I am all kinds of distracted. That basement purge I was
thinking about was never going to happen without an outside force moving it/me
forward. So when I heard the real estate market was hot in DeWitt, I thought I’d
found my outside force! If we sold the house, I’d have to clean out the
basement.
I got all excited about selling and we started
thinking about where we’d go next. And this fun apartment building caught our
eye. And the thought of not doing yard work or dealing with snow gave me all
kinds of warm fuzzies. And it would give us some freedom to explore what to do
with our theater company.
We took the plunge and put the house on the market.
We took the plunge and put the house on the market.
And it sold the first weekend.
And the new owners wanted occupancy in three weeks.
Talk about a deadline.
Twenty-six years of accumulated stuff all over our house
had to be sorted. Decisions had to be made. Keep? Sell? Donate?
We cleared out our house in those three weeks like a bad
furniture salesman: Everything had to go, go, go! Sean was a rock star - he worked like crazy and gave this procrastinator the shorter deadlines she needed to really make things happen. We got a storage unit for what I couldn’t quite part with (like my beloved kitchen table with indents
of the Babe Ruth paper and multiplication facts) and some things the girls
might still need, but we went from a 3,000 square foot, 5 bedroom house to 900 square
foot, 2 bedroom apartment.
In. Three. Weeks.
And that, my friends, is the only way this procrastinator
could have moved.
The fact that the deal fell through two days before closing
but after we’d moved… well, more on
that later.
To all you soon-to-be empty nesters, remember this: you
may feel the need to do something major when the rooms of your house echo. You
may think of all kinds of things you can do now that you’re the only one in the
house. You may even think of moving.
And everyone's going to say, "Don't do anything rash. Take some time. Breathe."
And everyone's going to say, "Don't do anything rash. Take some time. Breathe."
But here's what I say: Make the plans to do whatever crazy thing
you’re thinking of. Because why the heck not? The kids might not be thrilled
that things are changing (sorry, Rebecca!) but this is no time to sit back and
rest on the memories. Time to make new ones. I say that even after our deal fell through. Talk about new memories...
Besides, you just might find the motivation you need to
clean out the basement.
This is what sold us - we love all the windows! Unfortunately, the girl didn't come with the apartment.
The kitchen, obviously before moving in.
The view right now.
I'm thankful for the engineer who drew this to scale so I could figure out where to put our furniture. He's a keeper.
Did you put bunk beds in that 2nd bedroom so they all have a place to sleep at Christmas?? WOW!! What a huge change! But also so freeing not to have to take care of that big house!! Congratulations!!
ReplyDeleteIt looks lovely! We need a visit, and I’m willing to drive your way!!
ReplyDelete