4.06.2007

Moon at Dusk



Last year, our income (before taxes were taken out) was under 16 thousand, and subtracting general bills and the amounts we mail each month toward my undergraduate debt and John's graduate debt doesn't leave many extra coppers for building our dream house. That's okay. Our dream isn't so much a house as a location, anyway. We desire a place where our children can explore and learn about God's creation, the land, and what lives in and on it; a place where we can have a larger garden, dig a root cellar, raise animals, and take small steps toward sustainable living; most importantly, a place where family and friends circle around. There are no prison libraries nearby, and there are no regular library jobs open, but all that comes with this land trumps the higher pay these jobs would bring. Even if John does take a library job in the future, it will likely be only for a time in order for us to live debt-free. God, in his inexplicable plan, has given John a vocation in which he works with people he loves, a place among overlooked souls who enlarge his humanity and give to him as much he gives to them. I am grateful for this and proud of him.

Family from my side clusters here in this area, sibling shoots who took root and grew families of their own. My oldest brother Andrew is brilliant. His mind sees the finished form of things and the steps one must take to get there, and his confident hands wield the tools necessary to shape. I celebrate what he's already done for us and the knowledge he's shared. "Just for fun" is the reason he spent some free time at work sketching up a house plan and compiling rough cost estimates of building materials for our home. Lord be willing, and with His help in this venture, we should be able to build our house (a half basement, first floor, unfinished second floor) in the next year and a half. In the last year, Andy has listened to our brainstorms and ideas, which ranged from old pipe dreams of John's (living in an r.v. or yurt) to serious plans to build a pole barn and live off the grid for a few years. I researched all manner of composting toilets and NYS rules and regulations in preparation for pursuing one of these choices, and after weighing positives and negatives of all the above, it seems most wise for us to do the following.

HOUSE DREAMS TO ALTER WHENEVER A KNOT FORMS:

1. As soon as this infernal, beautiful snow stops falling, get rid of asbestos, pronto.

2. Lug and haul and heave and sweat. Disassemble and sort the gutted house into mounds of burnables and metal and stone. Burn. Take to dump. Salvage.

3. Assuming we accomplish 1 and 2 without killing ourselves, we proceed to the basement, where my cousin's husband and his backhoe take center stage. We clean out the half of the basement that isn't solid earth, brace the original stone walls with an ingenious plan, and then pour cement. (Andy's explained the ingenious plan and shown paper sketches, but there's no way I can possibly transform what he said into plain English. It's enough to know that it's ingenious, and it cuts the originally estimated cost in half.)

4. Jeff and his earth mover form slopes, we cover the basement with plywood, and then we tarp it for the winter.

5. We take out a loan, if we're able. We're still not sure which route to take and trust that God will direct us to the proper place. Neither John nor I want to take out a large loan, and we're content to live bare-as-bones for a number of years, taking out a small loan and repaying it before taking out another. The cool thing is that Andy's estimates total under $30, 000 for the whole shebang. This is taking into account the fact that we'd be sweating onto the wood and nails under the direction of Andy and his father-in-law, a carpenter with whom Andy used to work. We also wouldn't finish the upstairs for several years, working on it as finances allowed.

6. After we have a loan, whatever size, Andy, along with Mr. Smith, my brother Joel (who doesn't yet know he's volunteered), John, and whomever else lends their hands will raise our house's frame and roof next spring. Then, we move in.

7. We live in our glorified tent for the summer, putting money we would be paying toward rent toward building materials: electric & plumbing, wood stove, etc. (We could skip electric, etc., but we won't be able to get a certificate of occupancy without them, and though the road has very little traffic, we live right next to it, and there's only so long we can live in the house without someone noticing.)

8. Next fall, we officially move in by getting a certificate of occupancy. Yes, I knock on wood.

9. We pinch our pennies to add flesh to our home (i.e. kitchen cabinets, paint, floor coverings other than plywood, baseboard, etc.) little by little, for a lifetime, if need be.

I've never thought about room placement, wall colors, or decor for our Someday. I was, and am, perfectly content with the bounty God has provided and does provide. When I recently read this post, though, I smiled in kinship as I read the last two paragraphs. She's absolutely right, and I look forward to what's to come.

Now begins the dreaming.

6 comments:

  1. abby, this is just so exciting. i have butterflies for you!

    all things are possible.

    we can't wait to lend our hands.

    ...and i hope you don't mean that ALL yurts are pipe-dreams! ;-)

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  2. Glad to hear things are starting to come together on paper...wish we could be here to see for the frame-raising! you'll have to make sure you take lots of pictures (but should i really even mention that to the ever-entertaining, diligent blogger abigail?). :)
    -michelle

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  3. It sounds very exciting. All those plans coming together! I hope it goes well. Keep us posted, please.

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  4. I love the picture you have with the moon. You should frame that one so that when your house is a warm place to lay your head...you will remember how it all began.

    What a WONDERFUL thing to have plans-to know the direction you are heading-and to have a timeframe to work by!

    Progress...you are that much closer to your slice of pie!!!

    We, on the other hand, are still looking for a sign as to where we belong...

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  5. Hoorah! What fun it is to begin the process of dreaming up a home in bits and pieces. I like your plans for joining old with new in a simple fashion. You're right that the dwelling itself has very little to do with "home", but to carve out your own spot in a beautiful bit of land, on which to nurture a family for years to come is a beautiful thing.

    Here's prayers for each step to unfurl with ease, and for the tough bits to be as joyful. What happy times.

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  6. Thanks for the well wishes. I'll definitely keep blogland posted, and a nickel to a donut, you'll all be entirely sick of my posts by the time the house rises up.

    Rebecca,
    Not that it eases your house-longing any, but one belongs right where one is. :)

    p.s. Heidi, of course not all yurts are pipe dreams, but I'm afraid our is for the time at least. We live through you, so live it up!

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