Saying Farewell To Our Family Home After 24 Years

I know this place. For 24 years we've lived here. I arrived, not quite 30-years-old with my one-year-old baby girl in my arms. I had fought moving to the suburbs for two years, but my husband was right -- it was a wonderful place to raise a family. So that's what we did. Now we're leaving.
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I know this place.

For 24 years we've lived here. I arrived, not quite 30-years-old with my one-year-old baby girl in my arms. I had fought moving to the suburbs for two years, but my husband was right -- it was a wonderful place to raise a family. So that's what we did. We bought our starter home. We raised our family.

Twenty-four years later, we're selling the starter home and looking for our next, and presumably forever home.

There isn't a surface in this house that hasn't been changed since we moved in. Every doorknob, every window, every closet and drawer and faucet and floor -- it's all been redone. We've added square footage, a pool, a front lawn and sliding glass doors. We've remodeled the kitchen, both bathrooms, smoothed the popcorn ceilings, painted, wallpapered, painted again. We've taken out trees and added new landscaping. We've hung photos and artwork, chandeliers and built-ins. We've bought furniture and sheets and towels and pots and pans and wooden spoons.

The exterior has been at least five different colors, perhaps more.

We brought our baby boy here -- home -- when he was born. We had uncountable family gatherings, grandparents and great-grandparents, aunts and uncles and cousins. My father lived here for a while. My brother-in-law came, every week for two nights, for six years, to stay in our grown daughter's room. My mother was here for five weeks after knee surgery. We welcomed anyone who needed a place to stay, including our son's half-dozen closest friends in high school, one or two or more nearly every weekend. We had birthday parties, team parties, pre-game dinners, pool parties, a wedding, a memorial service, all in 2100 square feet, over twenty-four years. We celebrated, we laughed so much, we sang, we danced, we drank, we ate -- bagels and danish and meatloaf and Greek chicken, matzo ball soup and brisket and turkey and noodle kugel, Caesar salad and cut up apples and carrots and dip. And brownies. Thousands of brownies, baked from scratch, devoured by hungry children and "I really shouldn't" adults.

There have been countless naps on sofas, on beds, in chairs.

We cried. We didn't make the team, or failed a test. Our friends were mean, our hearts got broken. We mourned people we loved, together and in solitude. We fought, we yelled, we demanded, criticized, hurt each other's feelings. We were deeply disappointed or infuriated. We were just sad.

All of this, every moment, is in these walls, in the view out the window, in the color of the bougainvillea, the big palm leaves that fall from the tree in the front yard when they die. It's deep in the closets, buried in a box or a drawer, waiting to surprise me as I sort and toss and prepare for eventually leaving this place. It's around the dining room table, which I've set and fussed about with crystal and china, flowers and tablecloths and linen napkins and my grandmother's sterling, for seders and Thanksgiving, dinner parties with friends when we sat for hours, talking and talking.

It was in the quiet of a weekday morning, the kids at school, a book in my lap, happy. This was what I always wanted, this place, these people, this life.

But now it's time to go. There are moments when I feel an overwhelming sadness here, surrounded by memories of days that made up the years of my life that are over now. I miss it all so much sometimes -- even as I enjoy this time, these quieter and calmer days, my husband and me and our dog, a different kind of wonderful.

It's time to go. But I could never leave this place behind. It's in me, in my bones, as much a part of me as my DNA. It is me ... or it was. But it's time.

Previously published on Empty House Full Mind

Earlier on Huff/Post50:

10 Things to Look Forward To As An Empty Nester
Your House Is Clean(01 of10)
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Gone is the detritus of your children's lives scattered here and there, carelessly flung about and forgotten. Your bathroom towels will stay hung neatly on their bars, the dishes are placed in the dishwasher instead of left to sit next to the sink. Beds remain made, floors remain clean, clothes are neatly put away. Mystery spills vanish, and you never wake up to a mess. Who knew it could be like this? (credit:<a href="http://www.flickr.com/" role="link" rel="nofollow" class=" js-entry-link cet-external-link" data-vars-item-name="Flickr:" data-vars-item-type="text" data-vars-unit-name="5bb67363e4b05271530a38f9" data-vars-unit-type="buzz_body" data-vars-target-content-id="http://www.flickr.com/" data-vars-target-content-type="url" data-vars-type="web_external_link" data-vars-subunit-name="before_you_go_slideshow" data-vars-subunit-type="component" data-vars-position-in-subunit="0" data-vars-position-in-unit="4">Flickr:</a><a href="http://www.flickr.com/people/tachyondecay/" role="link" rel="nofollow" class=" js-entry-link cet-external-link" data-vars-item-name=" tachyondecay" data-vars-item-type="text" data-vars-unit-name="5bb67363e4b05271530a38f9" data-vars-unit-type="buzz_body" data-vars-target-content-id="http://www.flickr.com/people/tachyondecay/" data-vars-target-content-type="url" data-vars-type="web_external_link" data-vars-subunit-name="before_you_go_slideshow" data-vars-subunit-type="component" data-vars-position-in-subunit="1" data-vars-position-in-unit="5"> tachyondecay</a>)
You Discover You Still Like Your Partner...Or Make A Big Change(02 of10)
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Some couples decide that it's time to separate and move on, others remember why it was they fell in love in the first place -- or find new reasons and ways to connect to each other. Without your kids, you become each other's only companion when you're at home. It can't be overstated how much of a distraction our kids are while they are growing up. This is probably the most jolting part of the empty nest -- when you look at each other and think, "Oh wow, it's just us now." For better or worse, it will happen. (credit:Alamy)
You Can Sleep Through The Night(03 of10)
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No longer are you waiting for the sound of a key in the door, or the porch light to be turned off upon your children's safe return from another night out. No longer are you part of the day-to-day ups and downs of your children's lives ... no matter how often they may text/call/email/facebook message/tweet you. Their mental and physical well-being, though still hugely important to you, are their responsibilities now, and you no longer have the minutiae of their daily lives to think about like you did when they lived at home. (credit:Alamy)
You Food Bill Drops Significantly(04 of10)
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If your kids are in college, or even if they're not, you may still be paying for them to eat. But it's nice to go to the grocery store and come home with the things you want, and not have to buy all the things they want, things that you really don't want in your house. (credit:ShutterStock)
You Have A Lot More Free Time(05 of10)
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Initially, this may be disturbing or difficult for you to deal with. You may want to do things you've missed -- museums, movies, theater, travel or you may not want to do much of anything at all. Whatever your thing is, there's now time to do it ... a lot of time. (credit:Alamy)
You Can Spend Time With People You Like(06 of10)
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No longer do you have to socialize with other parents because of your children's connections. No more booster club barbecues or committee meetings, making small talk with people you most likely never would have crossed paths with if it weren't for the fact that your children were on the same team/in the same class/part of the same group of friends. (credit:Alamy)
You Begin To Experience Your Children As Young Adults(07 of10)
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Your children leave home and, for better or worse, they have to grow up, no matter how much help you may be giving them financially OR emotionally. There are just too many daily things to manage, too many random people to deal with, too many bumps and blips that they have to encounter on their own that leads to them, inevitably and sometimes painfully, growing up. It can be liberating when kids take over, driving or planning or explaining -- giving up some authority is in many ways a big relief. (credit:Alamy)
Your Kids Come To Visit...(08 of10)
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There's nothing quite as wonderful as seeing your kids after weeks or months apart, especially when they first go away to college. Their faces are familiar and beautiful, their smiles just for you, their laundry ready to be washed...it's such a thrill to have them home for holidays, or summers, or a weekend visit. Within minutes of their return, it's as though they never left. You love having them home for a while, but then... (credit:Alamy)
...Then They Go Back Where They Came From(09 of10)
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Enough said. (credit:Alamy)
Your Future Is Yours(10 of10)
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Remember before kids, when you would dream and plan for the rest of your life? Remember when it was wide open, and you had no idea what would happen next? Well, you can do that again, now that you're an empty-nester. No longer do you have to worry about childcare, or kids missing school, or whether they'll like the place you pick to go on vacation -- your time, your future, and your life is yours to create. Always wanted to travel? Now you can. Go back to school? Now's the time. Write a book? Get cracking. You have your life to live, just as they have theirs. Go do it! (credit:Alamy)

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