When The Ceiling Hits The Floor


The Hope-in-the-Mail house got torn down this week. 





I admit it--I cried.




Which was surprising to me. For most of the time we rented it, I just wanted to move. Mark has always said that we'd look back on the place as our honeymoon cottage, but after being crammed inside 400 sq. ft. with two kids and two dogs, after too many gunshots in the neighborhood and drug addicts on our porch, after recurring mold on the walls and leaks in the roof, I disagreed.  




When we finally moved out, other tenants lived there for a while, and then the house went vacant. Got boarded up. Sat for years, crumbling.




Somewhere along the line I started calling it the Hope-in-the-Mail house because it's the place we came up with that saying. It's the place we learned to let the manuscripts we'd mail off to New York buoy us through our workday. It's the first home our kids knew, and the place I wrote the first six Sammy Keyes. 






Shortly before demolition. That's the ceiling on the floor.

Mark and I went to witness the demolition. I don't know why. Maybe to say goodbye?




What I know for sure is, I would rather work from dawn to dusk building something than watch someone else's work be torn down. There's something terribly sad about seeing anything--even a crumbling house--destroyed. It brings into sharp focus how temporary our efforts, our accomplishments, our lives are.




The guy operating a skip loader recognized me. He's done work at the house we now live in. A house much different than the one he was tearing down.



I was already kinda weepy from watching the crew work. "You're probably wondering what my fascination with this house is," I sniffed."People who know where we live now usually jump to wrong conclusions. This is where we started."





He was surprised, but got it right away. "Did you live here with the kids?" he asked.




I nodded. "Until they were six and eight."




He smiled. "I may own my own business now, but when I was eight, I was a Chicklets boy."




"No kidding?" I asked, because if you've ever been just south of the California border you know exactly what that means. He's come a long way from that life--I'm imagining a real hope-in-the-mail story, one I plan to follow up on.



Mark and I left shortly after that. Neither of us wanted to watch any more. But after we got home I started kicking myself about the mailbox. 




Why didn't I take the mailbox? 




It was right there, bolted to the stucco wall of the porch. Ugly. Old. Metal. Full of spiders.






I wanted that mailbox!




I tried to track it down by phone but it was already gone, which is probably for the best. It's had a good life. A useful life. 




And really, in the end, it's not the stuff that matters. It's the intangible things we bring to a situation, and what we learn and take away. I learned a lot in that little house. About who I am and what I believe and what kind of person I want to be.



It's not the mailbox that's important.



It's the hope that flowed through it. 

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Published on October 15, 2016 20:09
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message 1: by Donna (new)

Donna We lived in a perfectly fine house for 10 years - but had it torn down to build a new one - it was sad. It only took 32 minutes to get the whole house down. Amazing considering how long it takes to build a new one. We saved a piece of the kid's bedroom wall.


message 2: by Wendelin (new)

Wendelin Draanen Amazing how quickly something that takes commitment and effort can be torn down by someone with heavy equipment. That applies to many areas, not just construction! It's sweet that you saved a piece of a wall, Donna.


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