All in a day’s work.

Today we bought a house. Today we sold a house. It was a pretty good day.

The process of actually selling our house got more complicated than I could have ever imagined. After getting not one, but two offers in a 4-hour period, we ended up countering them both. Much to our surprise they both came back with a resounding, “We’ll take it!” This meant it was up to us to have to pick which offer to accept. Do you know how hard that is? Two great, enthusiastic buyers willing to do just about anything we ask of them just so they can become the future owners of the most high maintenance kitchen ever constructed. Little do they know of the floor, counter and appliance polishing that awaits them.

Our agent emailed us not only copies of their acceptances and counter offers (one actually nudged their bid $250 over asking price to sweeten the deal a bit), but she also attached their carefully crafted letters in which they laid out their case as to why they should be the new owners of this house. Seriously. So we did what any other red-blooded American would do – we sent it out to committee. We emailed the letters to friends, family and anyone who would read them and asked them all to vote for their favorite. The results came back unanimous. We had a winner.

As for our attempts at purchasing our little slice of heaven, we got the news that our latest counter offer had been accepted. Booyah!

We promptly scheduled another showing of our (almost) new home so that Steve could take an endless array of photos of boring things like window casings and eave overhangs. All things he will use in planning the infinite repairs and upgrades. A word to my father: consider yourself warned; you are about to be bombarded with remodeling questions.

And our new neighbors? Oh, just the most famous of all salad dressing dynasties!

Hidden Valley

(Yes, that actually says Hidden Valley Ranch. Try not to be too jealous.)

Friday the 13th, indeed.

Yes, our house is now on the market. Yes, we are a bag of mixed emotions about it. Yes, I know the magnitude of selling the house we have poured our heart and soul into fixing up. The house we have fine-tuned down to the last window treatment. The house where we brought home both of our children. The house that holds enough memories to fill every square inch of our 1100 square feet of high ceilings and light-filled rooms. The house where we realized the emotionally devastating blow of a burglary, juxtaposed against the generous humanity of neighbors who offered to help us pay to have a security system installed. Neighbors we hardly knew. Yes, I have complained endlessly about this house. Yes, I will miss it more than words can say.

On Wednesday we went to look at a house that Steve began affectionately referring to as “the one”. By Thursday we began getting calls requesting that strangers could begin touring our home. And, as Thursday, the 12th, became Friday, the 13th, life as we knew, it started to change.

As of Friday morning, we had one showing scheduled for 6:30 in the evening. As the day wore on, more calls; more showings. I had scheduled to work a full day, and so it was Steve who had to wrangle both kids in and out of the house – on 4 separate occasions. It finally got to the point where I called Dore to ask if, after I got off of work, we could all just park it at her house for the remainder of the evening.

One other small item from Friday: we made an offer. This is the part where I have to qualify that “the one” is not perfect. In fact, it is far from it. But this is where the trade-off game has begun in full earnest. We don’t have the financial resources to afford what we want, in totality. Instead, we are going to have to make accommodations. And when it comes to weighing in on location, lot size and structure, the only real thing we have control over to change is the structure…which leads us to this house. It straddles between two desirable school districts, pushes us further Northward, is tucked away enough to feel a bit remote – while also not being more than 2 minutes from 101. The lot is a healthy, but manageable 1/3 acre with good South-West exposure and mature fruit trees. Then there is the house. Ah, the house. I won’t go into a long litany of the details, but will point out that it is a bit bigger (roughly 1500 sq feet), two – yes TWO bathrooms and three bedrooms. And as for it’s aesthetic features, well – we have some work to do.

By Friday evening we already had a counter-offer from our offer. And two offers had come in on our house. By mid-day on Saturday I met with our agent to do paperwork on three counter-offers. We countered both offers on 2323 B Street and countered the counter offer on the house at 111 Hidden Valley Drive. And now we wait.

I guess I’m a bit superstitious, but I feel like I am jinxing all of this by writing about it – like every offer, both incoming and outgoing are going to fall apart if I start speaking this out loud and in writing. But after the dozen or so emails and phone calls, plus the handful of comments on these pages, I feel that I owe it to you to let you know the full story. So stay tuned. One way or the other, there will be more to come.

Lyma

This story is about a lemon. A store-bought, medium-sized lemon. A lemon that somehow, became Stella’s first iteration of an imaginary friend. And this lemon’s name: Lyma.

This past week Stella began her first official round of swim lessons. Although she has shown that when it comes to horsing around in the pool she has the ability to be fairly adventurous, she has also set some very clear boundaries: no face in the water, no activities that might force her to inadvertently put her face in the water. Simple as that. Enter, swim lessons.

As it turns out, the lessons have been insanely successful. And, in no small part because of her new bath-time swim buddy, Lyma. The best I can tell, she happened by the fruit bowl one night and decided she wanted to take a lemon in the bathtub with her to help her practice her new swim moves. So here I am, sitting at the dining room table balancing the checkbook, and I hear her in the bathtub, talking to Lyma as though she were a living, breathing human:

“Okay Lyma, now you go under. Then I’ll take another turn.”
“Oh Lyma, I love you.”
“Hey Daddy, look at how good Lyma is at swimming.”
“Now it’s Lyma’s turn to have her hair washed.”
“Mommy, can Lyma sleep with me tonight?”

A lemon. My child formed an emotional attachment to a lemon.

This went on for three days. We negotiated the sleeping arrangements such that Lyma slept in a clear acrylic cup on the nightstand next to her bed. You can imagine that after rigorous manhandling in hot soapy bathwater, along with daily tag-alongs at playtime, Lyma’s structural integrity began to erode at an increasingly rapid pace. She became softer and softer, and I was beginning to dread the inevitability that Lyma was going to explode and – to Stella’s horror – ooze her lemony innards all over the floor. This was a close friend, after all. Practically a member of the family.

This is where an odd situation became horribly difficult. It became one of those parenting crossroads that I was completely ill-equipped to handle. Death. Dying. The loss of a loved one. We had to break the news that Lyma, our daughter’s new pet lemon, had to go to that great compost bin in the sky.

I slipped it into conversation one night at dinner after I casually gave Lyma a physical and realized that I had never witnessed a piece of citrus that squishy soft without also being covered with a healthy coat of mold. We needed to get this show on the road – and there was no telling how it was going to play out.

As it turned out it was difficult, but Stella handled it with an amazing amount of grace. I gave her the option of putting Lyma in the compost bin herself, or offering one of us to do it for her. With a gentleness and sorrow that I rarely ever see in her, she said that no, she wanted to do it herself after dinner. She then proceeded to say some reassuring words to Lyma, leaving both Steve and I dumbfounded at how things had gone this far.

More and more lately, I have noticed that when Stella is sad – really, truly, honestly sad – she shows it by trying to control it – eventually succumbing to a quiet sob. It is when she is melting down or screaming hysterically that it is clear to me that she is frustrated and angry, but not really sad. So you can imagine her stoicism as we quietly finished our dinner that night. Once we were finished, she somberly marched out to the compost bin by herself and stood there talking reassuringly to Lyma as she laid her gingerly on a pile of grass clippings. Finally, I couldn’t take it anymore and I walked over to her and put my arms around her crouching shoulders as she stood there quietly crying, saying only, “Mommy, I miss Lyma.”

We stood there, hugging for a good couple of minutes while Stella cried into my shoulder. I was torn by the oddness of the situation. On one hand I was consoling my daughter about the loss of her friend. On the other hand, it was a lemon she had befriended three days earlier.

We haven’t talked about Lyma much since that fateful evening. I promptly went out and bought her a special mermaid doll to take in the bath with her – hoping it would smooth the transition a bit. And, I am secretly thankful that the recent pace of our lives, combined with the somewhat limited attention span of a 3 year old has meant that this chapter – the one lovingly titled Lyma the Lemon – may have come to a close. But not, I have realized, without a lesson or two.