…I’m going to explode, or something. But, you know, in a good way, because change is good.
(Who said that? I want to bop them on the nose.)
I haven’t been posting because I’ve either been too busy or too hyped up or too, well, overwhelmed to proceed.
Last week—the week of getting rear-ended and of having a rock crack the windshield and of discovering we owed taxes and had no money in the bank with which to do so and Sophia was on spring break so I had to scramble to fill up the days—was also the week Darin was away. (You’ll pardon me if I don’t mention little things like his being away when it’s actually happening.) He was up in Northern California, at Apple, doing some business stuff. I don’t know what. That part: not interesting to me.
He also spent some time looking at houses. He didn’t want to; the trip we’d taken in March had been excruciating both in terms of time spent and quality of houses viewed. Before he went up for this business trip I finally gave in and said that we should look in an area that Darin had wanted to look in from the beginning but I hadn’t wanted to because it was too far away from Apple and would be too much of a commute. But the areas we’d looked in during that househunting trip were…how shall I put this…no fucking way. It was time to think outside the box a little.
The first day he was up there—Sunday the 13th—I called him on his cell phone to ask him about something or other. Then I asked about how the house hunting was going.
“Oh wow, really good,” he said, and I could tell from the sound of his voice that the house he’d just seen was It. He looked at a few more houses that week, but he was pretty certain that the house he’d just finished looking at the day I’d called was the one. He went to see it again and was absolutely sure.
So this past week has been spent faxing contracts all over California—
“But Diane,” I hear you say, “when did you get a chance to go up and look at the house?”
Short answer: I didn’t. Still haven’t. I said, “Okay, let’s do it.”
If you ever need an example of one spouse’s complete and total trust in the other spouse’s aesthetic taste, just tell them about my complete acceptance of a house 400 miles away. I know what I need in a house; I know that Darin is much pickier both about houses and locations. We had talked (and talked, and talked) quite a bit about must-haves and wants, and from the sound of it this house fulfills most of these needs and wants just fine. So undoubtedly the first time I will see the inside of the house is the day we get the keys, when escrow closes. And that’s okay by me. I guess the universe put out the net or something just in time.
—and picking end of escrow days and setting up inspections hither and yon.
I called my friend E., who’s buying our Los Angeles house, during her vacation to ask her about changing the end of escrow for our end of the deal…and accidentally woke her up. At a quarter to eleven in the morning. Well, she was on vacation, after all. And she doesn’t have kids (or, as we like to call them, the 6 A.M. Gang).
We only have a couple more weeks in LA. I can’t believe it. I keep making lists of things we have to do and things we might want to do and see before we go. And the lists just keep getting longer, as the time gets shorter.
K says
Good luck! It sounds like you’ve got your hands full-o-rama. Moving is hell. Moving with kids must be triple hell. Hope it goes smoothly (from now on). 🙂
Kat says
Congrats! You really are a trusting soul. And very lucky. We can’t even pick out bedding for the nursery without a stupid arguement about aesthetics. I hope you get lots of help in your move.
carolyn says
if you think you have problems you need to live my life i dont get to go anywhere i babysit so i always got kids . i have a husband that i left over a year ago and he still bugs me i got a car that needs a wheel bearing that nobody will fix for me and all i get to do for pleasure is play bingo on the internet so im open to suggestions