We went on a house hunt in the fall of 2019. This was the criteria for the new home: small, one-level, move-in ready. It was time for something easy for the retirement years.
We looked at one house after another, and none of them were right; too big, too run-down, too poorly located. Whoever coined the term “Happy house-hunting” obviously never did such a search himself. It’s not a happy undertaking — it’s downright exhausting.
And then, we found the one for us! We smiled!
As soon as we stepped into the two-story, three garage house it felt perfect. This was the one. It didn’t meet any of the initial specifications we had listed — but when you fall in love, it can change everything.
My husband was excited about the expansive garage space and the potential of setting up his radio antenna on the side yard. I was equally taken with the large deck taking up most of the back yard and the possibility of an art room inside, just for me. I hadn’t had a room of my own since childhood.
The interior offered space, light and yes, an upstairs. That means two levels, not one. We suddenly didn’t mind that.
We looked at the pinkish rosebud wallpaper in the downstairs powder room and the wide floral wallpaper border decorating the front entry. They immediately signaled “project” to us.
The pale, flesh-colored wall paint all over did not do the house justice. The tint created a subdued, tired feeling. Again, the house called out “project.” We were okay with that.
Now, as far as projects go, the list was going to belong; wood rot along the side of the deck, chipped paint and holes on the walls. Outlets that had become so worn over time that anything plugged in simply fell out. And more.
This story is from the July 2020 edition of The Good Life.
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This story is from the July 2020 edition of The Good Life.
Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 9,000+ magazines and newspapers.
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