Saturday, March 23, 2013

The How? of Our Decision


The Emotional “How”

The conversation always begins, “What made you decide to do that?”  The topic in question being a move from suburbs to city. Truth be told, the move had yet to occur, but the financial commitment was complete, and the emotional vow in process.

My husband and I had been attending a cocktail party for a councilman running for re-election when we were asked THE question. We had introduced ourselves with the moniker, “moving from the outer ring to the city…”

Thus the question from the councilman, “What made you decide to do that?”

We glanced at each other, then Mark gestured to me, “It’s your turn.” This time, my words would shape the story.  I hit the highlights, sharing the sequence of events in bullet points, as opposed to my husband’s more verbose style:

  • ·      Blended marriage
  • ·      Bored one Saturday, snow cancelled kid’s events
  • ·      Read about new condos in Gateway Quarter
  • ·      Learned Gateway Quarter a rebranding of OTR
  • ·      Took condo tour, drank free coffee
  • ·      Realized we had four kids, extended families, condos wouldn’t work
  • ·      Read about a builder developing single family homes in OTR
  • ·      Walked about with said builder in OTR
  • ·      Builder revealed hidden gem on Race
  • ·      Toured home - no heat, electric, windows or walls, empty for 40 years.
  • ·      Discussed once on drive home
  • ·      Sold


I finished spouting off my list, but the story was incomplete. I had left out the emotional “How”. How does one make this decision, moreover, how do two?

How can one foresee two years into the future, amidst abandoned buildings that had yet to house anything but rats?

How does one make this decision to uproot a lifestyle, albeit for possibly a more active one, though our kids might disagree because the boy says we are never home?

How does one respond to a father who feels some sadness because he and his son might not lunch as often?

How does one tell current neighbors we are moving away, to initiate a new lifestyle? We want to live in the vibrancy of the city. We don’t want to age in place, that is grow old standing still.

How could anyone understand that this project has been our love child? I brought a boy, he brought three girls, we were two shy of a Brady Bunch marriage, but opted against procreating anymore. Four was enough. When the biological clock tick, tocked, we bought, instead of birthed.

How could one feel what excitement we would have selecting an Italian range hood and reliable refrigerator, imposing our genes on our selections? He liked blue, I liked the purple and orange.  He wanted new, I wanted to save everything.



How could one predict, over the many months of gestation, the home would become something we loved together?  We paid homage to its olds ghosts and made accommodations for future guests. Its shell of rafters and 2x4s became the empty slate on which we would write our experiences, overtop layers of plaster, drywall, brick and wood.

As we progressed through the process, the decisions became part smarts, part signs, again an imposition of our dispositions on the re-birthing of this home. 

I will never wholly grasp this decision and its future implications.  In the same way, we never fully know our children, but are willing to share them with the next generation.