Thursday, March 22, 2012

The Great Unveiling!


In a little over a week we will be hosting our housewarming/unveiling party and invite our readers to come by a take a look. The transformation has been amazing! My favorites are the utter transformation of the kitchen and our sexy little bathroom!

Of course, we are still working on things. Recent events forced us to get a second vehicle so money is tight again. That and doing things by ourselves while we are living here makes progress very slow but we are so happy here in our cozy home.

Everyday we see our neighbors or folks bicycling, jogging or walking by and know that we are blessed. Sacramento has its warts, to be sure, but it has become so vibrant, diverse and alive! When I sit out front joggers will pause to talk to me out of the blue and everyone meets my eyes and smile. Everyone comes in all shapes and sizes yet they all seem so comfortable in their skins. The clothing choices are fascinating and daring. People seem to dress and act and talk their individuality and I feel reborn. The blossoming of Midtown is exciting (although I blame Rick's Dessert Diner for my recent weight gain!) and the parks are full of happy children with hip, interesting parents. My kids have big smiles on their faces and my youngest daughter has a posse of friends at her school.

We are happy here and without the help and support of our community, family and friends we would not have been able to make our home here. Please join us for our housewarming so we can welcome and thank each and everyone!

Saturday March 31
2 pm to 4 pm

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Who I Am Now

I'm precariously perched while replacing the glass in one of the windows.
When you take on a project like this you only think about how your home will change, not so much how the process will change you. I have always been relatively handy by necessity -my father always insisted that if there was any kind of work going on, I needed to be involved in some way- but nothing had prepared me for the massive magnitude of what we are currently involved in. This job is so big and with time and funds so limited, I have found myself doing things I had never imagined. I took a deep breath yesterday and sat for a while (sitting is so odd to me now) and took stock of how I felt about myself.
Nick and I work on the
frame for bathroom cabinet.
When this all started I was incredibly frightened, unsure and even paralyzed by what seemed like a Goliath of a project against our David resources. I was reluctant to step foot on the property, I felt powerless and over-powered. I spent hours skimming craigslist trying to find little apartments that would take a family with great references but no credit and almost no down. We were told early on that we would not get this place livable in time, by professionals (contractors, etc.)no less,  and I was panicked. My early efforts were with little heart as I felt we were doomed to fail.

Morgan watches Jax while we work.

Then friends, family and even strangers stepped up to donate time, money and materials. When my friend Flo showed up and jumped into the mire with her petite frame and incredible power I felt as if I were swept up in a stream of energy. As others entered the fray with us I felt wave upon wave sweeping me forward, empowering me. I knew I could not avoid the project while others worked on it, if they had faith for me I sure as heck better have some faith as well. I worked as I could but often had to be sidelined caring for the kids until my oldest daughter came to rescue after my concussion. She decided to stay and cared for the kids while I threw my heart, soul and body into the project.
Nick enlists TJ in the madness.
I gave myself over to trust and faith and the new family we had forged. In the two weeks before our move we were impossibly behind with setbacks that became unreal –surreal- in their frequency and devastating effects.  Even our volunteers told us it looked impossible but in the same breath would pick up a hammer and get back to work. Some people I had known for just days or weeks pulled all-nighters with us leaving the property at 3 am in the morning to go to work in a few hours. How could I not put in as many hours? I resolved to work alongside any volunteer who would show up, as soon as one project ended I would leap to the next. I ran to get them what they needed and threw myself into work with them if I suspected they had any need of me. I would not leave them, I refused to let anyone work on my home while I rested. As urgency grew I took on projects that I refused to touch just a day or so before thinking it was beyond my scope.
Justin became our flooring expert via
YouTube then trained us up.
I was particularly intimidated by the flooring. The bamboo planks were so ethereal in their beauty and the compressor driven nail guns were heavy and loud and required strength to use but as we grew desperate Chris decided to rent a second nail gun and we needed two teams to work to get it all done in time. I discarded my fear, grabbed a nail gun and became a fury. It got to the point where if someone dared touched my nail gun I would snarl and get back to work. Breaks became unheard of because I was afraid that if I walked away from my nail gun it would be taken over. I worked a 12 hour stretch without eating and one bathroom break, reluctantly taken, and I was just as sweaty as any of the other men on the job my hair in disarray and any concern for female propriety abandoned.

In the past few weeks I have done more than I ever thought I could: I have run power equipment that I never would have touched before this winter. I have installed sinks, lights, cabinets, flooring, a hood vent, replaced window glass, repaired walls, painted, put up trim and grown into someone so much less afraid, so much more capable than I ever thought possible. There is a long road ahead but knowing that I have some amazing people rooting for us, working side by side with us, I feel like almost anything is possible. If I die today I know that this project will speak to my life, not for what we accomplished but HOW we accomplished it. We gathered friends and families and strangers and together we have done what the experts told us was impossible. It is a legacy I know my children will remember, one that they will tell their children about and their awe and joy fills me with courage and hope and happiness.
Yesterday there was so much to do but I spent the day on the couch, unable to move. After our incredible push I have tried to leave our exhausted volunteers to their rest but with them absent it seems so too is that surge of energy that had carried me. My hands drop things now and I can barely work for 20 minutes at a time without needing to take a break. I have used myself up and at moments I do berate myself, ashamed that I accomplished nothing yesterday. There is urgency and so much more to do but the fear is gone and I am more prone to moments of gentleness with myself. I do have a certain amount of pride in what I have accomplished and I recognize that those two weeks of incredible energy were a gift. I have no physical strength left in my body, but a steel rod of strength has been forged in my heart and soul. No matter how battered I am by life I have that time to look on and know what I am. I am finally content with who I am. I am good enough. I have earned my place. Here… on 58th Street.
Robert, Leah, Ken, John and Flying Eagle were some of the volunteers during the Big Push week.

Saturday, January 14, 2012

Home Depot Hero

When we started this adventure of ours we had no idea of just how massive and overwhelming the project would become. We had no idea the amount of money we would have to invest, the number of setbacks –and subsequent tears shed- we would have to endure, the lack of sleep, the worry and we still have so much more to do! We also had no idea that there were so many giving, caring people in the world, people who had never met us before who have gone so far out of their way to help us. Georgio Herrera is one of those amazing people.
As the weeks and months have gone by we have made hundreds of stops at the Power Inn Home Depot. It got to the point where we were greeted by employees who knew us by sight and would ask us how our project was doing. It became a joke about how often we were seen. We would say good-bye to our cashier with a “See you in a few hours”. In all these weeks, we had yet to directly run into Georgio until last week.
Georgio pulls his weight.
We were finally at the point where we were trying to make our kitchen work with the cabinets that had been donated to us but we still needed several pieces. We searched wide and far for matching pieces and when we found a few cabinets up high on a shelf on the back wall at our local Home Depot my husband and I stood staring at them when Georgio walked up. He seemed genuinely interested in our needs and went out of his way to help us find what we were looking for. As he did so he managed to help several other customers by answering questions while he worked, always with a cheerful smile that never failed to infect the customers he talked to with his happiness. I was amazed at his knowledge of his store and in the several times I have seen him since he has never missed answering a query as other customers passed by. This guy knows Home Depot.
Flo watches Jax while we load her truck.
When Georgio asked us what we needed we told him that we had a very tiny budget so we were trying to figure out which cabinets we could get and which we would have to leave behind. The matching cabinets to ours were discontinued so we were hoping to get a deal, we explained. He asked us about our project and we ended up showing him our blog and explaining what our challenges were and what we were trying to accomplish. As soon as he heard about the kids he got a very determined look on his face, placed his hand on my shoulder and said, “Wait here. Let me see what I can do.”
Georgio talked to his manager and fellow Home Depot employees and through various feats of kindness and charity we were able to get all of the cabinets we needed within our modest budget. We have talked to Georgio often since and have seen him show just such concern and care for other customers as well. It’s not that WE were so special as to deserve his help, it was that Georgio is so special that he cares about everyone.  Before Georgio, it was just a store like any other but now we have such a strong sense of loyalty to our Home Depot store. I used to be a bit down on what I considered a “chain store” but have discovered that within those warehouse walls real people work to help us fulfill not just our material needs, but our hopes and dreams as well.
Nothing is free in life, nor should it be, but with people like Georgio in the world, the impossible can become obtainable. There is a real hero in Sacramento and he works down the street at Home Depot. Thanks Georgio, we will always consider you a part of our new and growing family.
Also thanks to Ralph at Home Depot for teaching me how to install cabinets, they went in perfectly! (P.S. Georgio, if you are reading this would you please send us the names of the other Home Depot folks who helped so we can give them a thank you as well? )
Curious to see what the cabinets look like? We will be hosting an Open House Unveiling party early spring (as soon as we can get a lot more of the essential work done) that is open to anyone interested in viewing our "finished" product. If you want an earlier sneak peek, we sure can use a lot more help so feel free to email us and let us know if you can help.

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Waiting to Exhale

Ken "Aquaman" Malinowski lived in our bathtub for three days.

BACK ONLINE!


The past couple of weeks have been full of mayhem, craziness, all-nighters and an incredible amount of bonding with family and friends who have become family. I have so much to tell you but I still don't have much time. I have spent hours with a nail gun, a little time piping in grout, installed cabinets, bathroom sinks, lighting and so much more. I am amazed at all I have learned and at all I can do now. Here is a brief update and I hope to start giving you much more information in the next couple of days.

Teaser. A brief glimpse of the living room as we enjoy a GroveTribe dinner provided by Leta Channell.
Phase One Ends, Phase Two Begins
WE ARE IN! Special thanks to Nick and his friend TJ for exhausting themselves to get us out of our former residence in time! We reached our goal and made the house livable in time for the move, but livable and finished are two very different beasts. There is lots more to do but you can see how beautiful the house is going to look so very soon. I will be posting progress pictures but I will not show you the finished look until after we have our unveiling party this spring. We have decided that we will have a public unveiling earlier in the day followed by a thank you party for our volunteers. We have had new donors and new volunteers showing up but we still need a lot of help so if you want a sneak peek and give us a hand feel free to give us a shout.

Not pretty.
FML
Yesterday was fun as we discovered that the basement was flooding from a backed up sewer line. Trouble is, over half of our belongings were stored in boxes stacked five high on the floor and I was home alone with the kids as Chris drove back to Folsom for his return to work after to weeks off to work on the house. While Morgan watched Jax I was ankle deep in freezing water, sobbing as I hurled our belongings to safety through either the large front window or the small back door of the basement. I think I had one of those adrenalin surges that folks use to pull cars off of people because I worked so fast that almost everything was saved.

Well, not everything...
Chris lost all of his yearbooks and most importantly some papers that documented his 200 mile bicycle trip with his father. I lost something I had not even realized that I had: a small old booklet that was filled out by my grandmother me telling me about my family and her life. I read the soaked pages and cried some more realizing there was no way to save it.

So we lost a day to renting rootering equipment and drained the last of our funds. We have $30 to last us until payday and we owe folks money.  Jeez....

Georgio at Power Inn Home Depot
Home Depot Hero
Georgio Herrera went to amazing lengths to help us. More on this later because what Georgio did for us deserves its own blog.

"NICK!!!"
This name has been shouted over and over again in the past couple of weeks, Nick and his father Ken have spent long days helping us with flooring and are solely responsible for the STUNNING tilework in our bathroom not to mention a hundred other ways they have been there for us. Guys, we owe you BIG TIME and we are amazed at your spirit, intelligence and work ethic. Ken is a landscaper by trade and I have spent a lot of time with him and watched him work. If you need any landscaping done by someone who will do an amazing job with honest integrity please contact Ken. He and his family deserve to be too busy to help us anymore (which is what happened to our wonderful painter Mike).

Ken Malinowski
Owner, Garden Grow Landscaping

http://www.gardengrowlandscape.com
(916) 730-4000
Justin and Nick tackling the bamboo flooring.
 We want to thank John Neil, Leta, Justin, Nick, Ken, Mike, TJ, Georgio, Flo, Paul, Ralph (Home Depot, taught me how to install cabinets all by myself) and so many others for their help this past week. So much more to share but we have so much to do! Come join the fun!