So to conclude this little series on my relocation to
Texas from New Jersey, let me describe the end point of our three-day, 1,550
mile journey. Ten days ago we closed on the house down here and moved in.
Now, I suppose some of you reading this may be
veterans of “moving.” I and my family are not. The last time I moved, in 2004,
was from an apartment to a starter home within the same state, about 30 miles
apart. My buddy and I rented a medium sized box truck and loaded up all the
possessions of the newly-married Mr. and Mrs. Hopper. This took two or three
hours. Then I drove the truck up the NJ Turnpike, met him at my new house, and
we unloaded in another three hours. (The Mrs. was pregnant with Little One and
primarily did the supervision.)
Simple.
I already documented the vast logistical acrobats
involved in our current move. But ten days ago there was light of a sorts at
the end of the tunnel.
We woke at the Marriott early, packed up the dog and
our bags, drove through a Starbucks and raced to the office of the title agency
where the closing would be held, just on the northern edge of Dallas. Our real
estate agents here, an older couple named Gary and Cathy, were excellent, accommodating
and knowledgeable. We chatted friendly until the banker came in, and she
explained the six thousand documents we had to sign one by one. For such a
momentous occasion, it was light-hearted and a fun welcome into Texas.
However, we were a little behind the eight ball time-wise, so we motored down the highway to get to the house. Which we had to find, never having been in its neighborhood or even inside it, save for a Zoom demo. The movers and the cleaning ladies were already there, waiting for us, and sure enough, as we pulled up a trio of maids were resting in the shade under a tree on our front lawn. We let them in first to get to work, the movers following along with our furniture and the six thousand boxes we brought down from NJ.
It was a steamy overcast day in the mid-90s, the doors
were open all afternoon as movers (three of them this time) were in and out
over the course of five hours. We also had an AT&T tech stop by to get our
WiFi and our TVs working. I made a run with the girls to the local Walgreens to
get about a dozen Gatorades for us and the moving guys (and nearly got us
killed racing down a one-way the wrong way – damn out-of-towners!) I also
bought us a bottle of that special Walgreens champagne for later. Actually, it
was Korbel Brut, but I thought it noteworthy that I bought it at a Walgreens.
We got back and the last thing on our list was the delivery of our
refrigerator.
The Mrs. decided to drive about to find some dinner
for us and returned with Panera salads. We had to open up boxes until we found
our plastic forks and knives. The house was finally beginning to cool off
around 9 when, amongst a maze of boxes in various stages of being unpacked, we
uncorked that champagne and drank a toast to the new homestead.
We’ve accomplished a tremendous amount in the past 10
days. The wife started her new job today. I’ve applied to three jobs already,
and I’d like to maintain a one-a-day par. To keep myself enthusiastic I walk
for a half-hour every morning when the temperature is in the frigid 80s
compared to the normal mid-90s to 100. After my walk I open the garage and do
six or seven exercises with my free weights. Patch has been active, too, biking
all over the neighborhood and trying to make friends with the girl next door.
Both of my little ones hang out at the park across the street.
Oh, the trusted Pilot died. Rather, it was put to sleep.
While the wife was car shopping for the new job (she has a $400 a month car
allowance) she had the dealer look at the undercarriage and it turns out it’s
completely rusted through – muffler and both catalytic converters. Rather than
spend the couple thousands to fix a nine-year-old vehicle, we just bought me a
used Accord. I pick it up in a day or two.
So as of today, ten days in, the house is about 90
percent unpacked with about 90 percent of everything in its rightful place. We
have a handyman and a landscaper. The girls have appointments for orientations
to their new schools a mile away. About the only issues I’ve discovered is that
our faucet cartridges in the master bath are shot and one lawn sprinkler seems
to be aimed directly at the house, but we’re addressing those. All in all, it
was about as painless a move as I could have hoped for.
Again, for those who’ve helped and supported us, a
hearty and heart-felt THANK YOU!
Now, look for some more Hopper-esque posts in the near
future, including one on the JFK assassination, a peak interest item of mine
from ten years back. Hey, I’m in Dallas now, so it had to happen!
No comments:
Post a Comment