Once we were finally settled back here in Michigan, we knew we had to make some changes. We decided we either needed to keep our current home and add onto it, as three bedrooms and seven people make living quite "entertaining", or find a new place to call home. We casually looked at houses with our ever-so-patient Realtor, and perused building plans for a possible addition. Jason and I ultimately decided that if we hadn't found a new home by the time the school year ended, we would stop searching and break ground on the new addition.
Although we have lived in many homes over the years, this time we became professional house hunters. We searched all of the popular websites, we had our friends sending us potential houses, we had friends of friends sending us potential houses, we searched down back roads and through towns we had never really blinked at before. We looked at newly-built homes and old, falling down homes. We knew when a house sold or a new one came on the market, and nothing was right. Every house I walked into felt like someone else's home, not mine. And then, in early June, Jason sent me a link to a house listed on Craigslist. By this time, the links we sent each other throughout the day became something of a joke: "Wanna live in a two bedroom home and put on an epic addition?" or "How about this one without a driveway? I mean, do we really need a driveway?" or "Never mind the house, with all that land we could BUILD a dream home!" With only a couple of weeks left in the school year, I had basically ruled out the idea of moving. But I opened the link, read the short description, and scrolled through the pictures. The home didn't jump off the screen at me. In fact, with the square footage and the fact that it had only one bathroom, wouldn't this be a step backwards?
We decided to go see the house anyway. Jason and I were both feeling pretty desperate at this point, and going to look at houses is always an adventure, right? So, we loaded the kids into the car and headed across town. And kept driving. Where were we? Cows, horses, sheep? I didn't know our little town stretched this far! Finally, we arrived. And there it was: The old house with an even older barn, and acres of corn and room to breathe.
When the kids started to get unruly, which never takes that long, we all went outside. They peeked inside two little sheds, attempted to go into the barn, (which I was certain would fall over if the wind caught it just right) and sampled apples from the apple tree in the backyard. Eventually, we said our goodbyes and piled back into the car. We always voted after we looked at a house, which usually ended in mostly no's with one or two of us declaring that they "really liked that one!" This time, the vote ended differently. This time, the vote was unanimous: seven votes for YES, THIS IS THE HOUSE!
I had an out of town race that weekend, so we decided to think on it for a few days. And let me tell you: I thought about it. In fact, I couldn't stop thinking about it. We had always looked at older homes and ended up buying the houses that just needed minor face lifts. But I had always dreamed of restoring an old home-to make it how it once was. To live in a house with that much history would be amazing! And the kids hadn't stopped thinking about it either. There was talk of horses and barn cats and bunnies and, "Mom, THERE'S SO MUCH ROOM TO RIDE DIRT BIKES!"
We had a discussion with Mr. and Mrs. K, letting them know that we were interested in the property but we had a house to sell. Finally, it was decided that they would give us sixty days to obtain a purchase agreement on our house. Sixty days. PRESSURE.
Words cannot begin to describe how stressful those days were. I think in the first thirty days we had twenty showings. Twenty people who said they loved the house and loved the location and not a single offer. Twenty times I had to have my house show-ready with five kids off on summer vacation. We had reduced our asking price twice in that thirty day period and we didn't want to go any lower. When it was proposed that we try a third reduction, we were ready to call it quits. Jason and I were not willing to take a loss on our current house in order to sell it and move on. Our Realtor urged us to consider one last drop in price and stick it out for another couple of weeks. By this point, we were frustrated and angry and feeling hopeless. We had made several more requested visits to the farm house, and every time we went, we heard more stories about its past. Stories of the seven children born to Mr. and Mrs. G. Stories of the family who had lived there with twenty children. (And here we were worried about our family of seven fitting in!) A story of the first family who had built the house and how when the husband passed away had willed to his wife a portion of the property along with a cow of her choosing every year, and had left the remaining land to be split between his daughters. A story of the family trading labor and cows in exchange for the beautiful cabinetry that was built in the kitchen. A story of when Mr. G gathered stones from the corn field to build the amazing fireplace in the family room. A story of Mrs. G directing the choir at their little church and all of the sheet music that was still upstairs and where she kept her piano in the home.
Sometimes, I'd really want to go see the house again but it hadn't even been a week since the last time and I didn't want to bother Mr. and Mrs. K, so I'd take the kids and we'd drive by and if no one was there we'd pull in the driveway and just dream. Dream about it being ours and where we'd put a swing and what our horses would look like and what we'd name our barn cats, and who would sleep in which bedroom, and what delicious desserts we'd bake with the apples from our tree.
We set up a time to meet Mr. and Mrs. K at the farm house; we wanted to tell them the news in person. I think as our agreement got closer and closer to that sixty day mark, they were also feeling a little hopeless. When Jason and I told them that we had an official purchase agreement on our house and we were ready to move ahead with the purchase of the farm, they had to have been relieved. After all, they had been entrusted to make sure that they not only sold their family home, but also that it would be in good hands. I think we all needed the summer it took to make the sale happen. We needed to hear the stories of the house and the land, and they needed to know that this part of them would be taken care of. I am sure their emotions were very mixed, but I can tell you one thing for sure: they were unimaginably happy that a family full of children would once again be living-really living-in this home.
The month of August was a whirlwind. We not only had to pack, but we had to decide what would go to the new house and what would go into storage. We were planning an immediate addition of a laundry room, master bedroom, bathroom and closet, but in the meantime, our new house had just two closets, and no garage or basement for storage. There was also an elementary school change, and bus schedules to change, along with all of the regular back to school goings on. And, of course, there were more visits to the farm before it was officially ours.
In the middle of August, we lost Jason's Grandma Lois at the age of 100. Grandpa Ro and Grandma Lo had 40 acres here in our town where they raised five children and built their own little compound which is split between farm land and the homes of some of their children and grandchildren. Ro and Lo were all about family and keeping family together. On the day we said our final goodbyes to Grandma Lo, we received word from the bank that the farm would officially be ours. Could it have been more perfect? After the funeral, several (many) of Jason's family members just had to sneak a peak of our new endeavor and might have bombarded the farmhouse to check it out. Yes, we knew we had our hands full with this house, but we felt excited and privileged to have this opportunity. Ro and Lo certainly were smiling down on us, watching us take our young family on our own path, much like they did 67 years ago.
When we went in search of a new home for our family, we didn't really know what we were looking for. But when we found what we needed, it seemed like maybe this place needed us, too.
Thanks for taking me on your journey. You have a gift for making me feel like I am right there with you.
ReplyDeleteWhat a wonderful blog.....you should have been a writer/author. Hugs
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