Call off the dogs, the hunt’s over
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The call from Cay came in around 4 p.m. on Thursday, May 9. I
could tell by her voice that she had some very good news. “I found
it!” she said, “I found the house!
“Great,” I said, glad to see the light at the end of the real
estate tunnel we’d been in for months. “There’s only one catch,” she
continued. “It comes with a dog.”
I laughed at the joke and gave my wife my two cents on how much
over the asking price she should maker her offer. The house, it
seemed, has been on the market less than eight hours and the owners
had already received two offers, both more than the asking price.
Our house-hunting had a clear division of labor. Since I was
convinced that I was not going to find the house in which Cay would
live, that task was up t o her alone. I knew what she was looking for
because she had made it very clear. So when the time came to make the
offer, I did not insist on seeing it first.
That may sound very strange to most people, but it worked. For
this house on that day, we did not have the luxury of time, even a
couple of hours. My part of the job was to move the money around so
we could afford the new place.
“Go for it,” I said, once we’d agreed on the offer price. “And
tell them we’re not taking the house without the dog.”
I laughed at my own joke and we hung up.
Four hours later, I was sitting in Mario’s, a Mexican restaurant
in Huntington Beach. With me were three of my basketball buddies,
fresh from playing our 40-plus year-old bodies to the limit. A beer
is helping but I know that in the morning I’ll be wishing for a
chiropractor.
A few minutes after we arrived, my cell phone rang. It was Cay and
she was excited. “They accepted the offer!” she exclaimed. “And
you’re going to love the dog!”
Over the next two months of escrow I rode an emotional roller
coaster. Determined not to let myself celebrate the new house until
escrow had closed, I became tense. For a few days down the stretch,
my neck and shoulder stiffened and were painful. When I mentioned
this to friend Kathy Miller, she said, “Oh, you have escrow neck!’”
I don’t mind moving, having done it dozens of times over a period
of 40-plus years. I will now tell you the secret of a successful
move.
First, pack up the fragile and sentimental stuff and mark it as
such. Then, take one box and fill it with three days worth of clothes
and all your toiletries. This box never leaves your side.
Next, hire three trucks and driver/loaders. One truck will be
designated to take belongings to your new house. The second truck
will take stuff to Goodwill or some such charity, and the third truck
will take junk to the dump. That third truck should be the biggest.
Back up the three trucks to your garage. Get a reclining chair and
a cold beverage and instruct the driver/loaders to empty the garage.
While you sit in the chair, have the driver/loaders pass each item in
front of you. Examine each item and point to the appropriate truck.
Reminder, give the trash truck loader a good workout.
One of the rooms in our new house was supposed be my office. This
was the place where I would be able to think and write in complete
silence or with some Beethoven in the background. The office would
also prevent me from keeping Cay awake at midnight with the
click-click-click of my fingers against the keyboard of my computer
as they had for the past four years.
The office has yet to be organized but I can tell already that I
may have to take a tip from our new dog, Charlie, and start marking
my territory. The office already has the ironing board laid out as
well as many items that don’t fall into any other category in the
house.
Of course, my family thinks they are very clever and that I have
not noticed this “junk creep” in my office but I have. All I want to
do is keep the room from becoming a larger version of the junk drawer
that exists in our kitchen.
But with two growing kids, an active wife and a big, black, dog,
I’m afraid my fight may just give me “junk neck.”
* STEVE SMITH is a Costa Mesa resident and freelance writer.
Readers may leave a message for him on the Daily Pilot hotline at
(949) 642-6086.
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