Every fall, for the past couple of years, we’ve been
doing something to upgrade our little house. We’ve definitely outgrown the
starter home we bought almost fifteen years ago. Back then Little One was a
clump of cells in the Mrs.’s belly, and I, not allowing the merest scent of
paint fumes to waft her way, painted every room in the place that summer before
our family grew from two to three.
Four years later Patch came. A shared upstairs office
was transformed into a toddler bedroom for Little One and the basement was
refurnished (painted, drop ceiling installed, laundry corner walled off) for
our desks and PCs. Then, the clothes came. Since our tiny little starter home
was built in 1942, when people either didn’t use closets or only owned two sets
of clothing each, we had precious little space to put them. School clothes,
summer clothes, winter clothes. Jackets. Rain jackets. Boots, shoes, sneakers.
Toys, toys, toys. And, of course, my six hundred books.
Where was I going with this?
Oh, right. Though we’ve outgrown our starter home, New
Jersey economics has prohibitively forbidden us to move up to a larger one, at
least in this area. So we’ve made due over the years. And in addition to
regular maintenance and upkeep, we’ve done some improvements to the house. For
instance:
2014: Had a new roof installed.
2016: Replaced the rusted out furnace.
2017: Added siding instead of repainting the exterior,
saving us some serious energy $.
And every odd year I’ve painted a room a new color –
master bedroom, Patch’s room, Little One’s room, dining room.
Now, for 2018, we’re having our upstairs bathroom
redone. It’s a bathroom that could fit comfortably in a pre-World War II
submarine, but it’s ours. The floor tiles were coming undone. The light fixture
flickered. There was no outlet in there to use a hair dryer. The fan had
stopped working years ago; indeed, a vigorous coating of rust continually
mocked me with the taunt of potential mold damage. And the damn terlet
overflowed twice a week no matter what preventive maintenance I tried to do
(“Girls! Poop, then flush. Wipe three times, then flush. Wipe three times again
if necessary, then flush!!”)
Fortunately, my cousin’s husband is in the remodeling
business, and he’s taking good care of us. In less than four hours he and his
guys completely demolished the bathroom. Down to the wooden beams and nails.
It’s amazing. What would have honestly taken me a year took them a little over
three hours. He said that there were three layers underneath the tiles and
walls we saw. That meant, over the past three-quarters of a century, that
bathroom got smaller and smaller every time they renovated it. So now I might
get two, maybe three inches in every direction. Psychologically, I’m going to
feel I’m in the bathroom of the Taj Mahal. Going forward, two of us can be in
the bathroom at once if need be. What a luxury!
Unfortunately, that upstairs bathroom holds the only
shower in the house. Said shower currently does not exist. We have a bathroom
on the ground floor, but it’s a half-bath: toilet, no tub. So I cleaned out the
laundry room last Friday, brought down a stool, a pail, a basin, and a bunch of
beach towels and sorted them by the big sink next to the dryer. For the past
couple of days we’ve been washing up down there. It’s serviceable and
survivable; I don’t stink, but I don’t exactly feel spring fresh, either. Tonight I’m
going to shampoo and condition my hair in the kitchen to try to feel somewhat
human again. The girls have friends who will let them shower over at their
houses, and we have generous relatives a few towns over offering their
facilities. But we don’t want to impose.
This week my cousin’s husband is getting permits and
having the plumber and the electrician get over to do their part. The tile guy
is going to deliver our new toilet, vanity, and tub, and, uh, tiles. Classic
black-and-white checkerboard. A working fan is going in, and it will be moved over away
from the shower so it shouldn’t rust right away. The whole ETA on this thing is
another two weeks or so, especially playing the whole permit game with the town.
I’m expecting a new bathroom by Thanksgiving, so I’m hoping to be pleasantly
surprised.
So there’s that. Pics when it’s all done. Right now
I’m ready to get into a bathing suit and have the girls hose me down on the
deck, but it’s currently 55 degrees out. Oh well. Training for the zombie
apocalypse, I guess. When’s the last time you saw Rick Grimes take a shower on
that damn show?
1 comment:
It will be wonderful especially with your new tub pillow!
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