The plan! Woefully, or serendipitously, inadequate, depending on your view! |
There is a small house in place now that was only a dream
even a few short months ago on land my son
He and Christy are living in a container. He has four, and
he’s already begun reconfiguring them into a functional and beautiful living
space, but that’s a whole ‘nother story. So, on his advice, I bought a one. Before it was delivered the slab for the little garden shed/garage
was poured, where last summer we had staked the yellow tape. And then it sat. I
needed to sell my house in order to have the cash to build the new one. Part of
what I wanted to accomplish with this project was to be completely debt free. I
put my condo on the market in December and closed on its sale in January. The
new owner leased the place back to me for 60 days, the amount of time we
guesstimated it would take to get the little house built. Hah! I can nearly
hear all of you out there laughing now.
First the frame went up, and it was completed very quickly
from Day 1 through Day 6 or so. I was encouraged, or fooled, depending on how
you look at it. (My brother who has been building one thing and another his
whole life said, “Congratulations, now comes the slow part.”) But I thought what
could go wrong? I packed like mad and chewed my nails. Where would all this
stuff, a lifetime’s accumulation, go? I had come into this condo from a 3,000
square feet house, and at that time, I had pared down as hard and far as I knew
how. Still, I had a lot, antiques, many of them family heirlooms, books, and art,
and it was harder to part with things this time around. Using graph paper, I measured the
necessary pieces of furniture and put the pieces in place. The plan worked on the
page, and I let myself be comforted. I
can do this were the four words that became my mantra. I labeled boxes
“Home” or “Store” according to the items inside. But I often paused, holding
something, a pie plate, say. Would I have room for it? Would I be able to even bake a pie?
Would I use a beautiful old Limoge bowl? A cut glass vase? Should I keep out
two plates or four? And clothes … they were something else. Because, you see,
my plan, such as it was, included no closets, nor does it have one cabinet. By
design. My thought was to use my furniture, much of it that is beautiful and
old, to hold everything, or that portion of everything I thought I couldn’t be
without for however long it is until I’m in my real home.
First bluebonnets. There are patches and fields of them ribboning the roadside all the windy way home. |
But I’m learning that building a house, never mind altering
your entire life, is like writing a story. It is so seldom that anything goes
according to plan. Not even the feelings you imagined having are the same,
and while any kind of change can be arduous and painful, for me it’s the very element of the unknown that lures me, that gives all the upheaval its beauty
and joy even as it scares me.
I think of the friends I left behind and my critique partners with whom I wrote for so many years. I think of the routine I
built that so suited me. I think of the convenience of having a mall (although
I seldom went there), a grocery store, and the library all within a ten-minute
drive, albeit one that was crammed with ever increasing traffic and constant construction.
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