Notes To Prospective Buyers
Notes To Prospective Buyers
It is a big, old house with original features.
Two rooms are painted purple and one is green,
("Satyr green" to be precise)
The kitchen is orange.
Try to imagine it beige throughout.
In the front room there are rabbits-
The beloved pets-
(They have eaten the wallpaper- ain’t that cute?)
Try to imagine the room without them.
In the back room there are books (several thousand)
Because books do furnish a room.
And DVDs because they furnish it as well.
Why don’t you look at the fireplace instead.
(It’s marble)
In the hallway and up the stairs
Are amateur paintings on Wiccan themes,
Featuring women with challenging eyes.
Try to imagine the space without them.
There are two people dogging your steps.
They say the kitchen is a Moben and two years old.
They say the leak has been fixed (but do you believe them?)
They both want ever so much to be liked.
Try to imagine the world without them.
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Any self respecting realtor would tell you...
Re: Any self respecting realtor would tell you...
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As for the rest: would you really want your house to go to someone who could hardly wait to paint the place beige? Eventually someone will come along and be happy to buy the house at a reasonable price, keep some of your changes, and change others.
(Spoken as someone who absolutely refused to paint or move anything in the last house she sold and who still is living happily with the attar-of-roses paint in the living room of the house she bought ten years ago.)
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I tend to turn to verse when I'm feeling stressed.
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It's the fist piece of verse I've written in ages.
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I wasn't prepared for just how painful a process it would be to try to sell the house.
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Even if I thought your home was atrocious (which I don't) and wouldn't buy it for two pennies (which I certainly would) and hated bunnies (which is, in fact, the exacrt opposite of true), I'd still find things to compliment about it. I was taught to be kind AND honest, instead of turning up my nose like a spoiled child when things don't strike my fancy. Just because something isn't for me doesn't mean it's rubbish.
That said, it's still a good idea for you to scoot out of there while people are looking.
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But I think the process would hurt even if everyone was faultlessly polite.
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I've gone from feeling excited and hopeful to being scared to pieces that they'll find a deal-breaking, expensive problem...
This process is exhausting.
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Thanks. That expressed the feeling well.
Reminds me of the rental house we had looked at one time where the previous tenant had painted each room a different bright colour: pink, light blue, brilliant yellow. The owner was busily painting over everything in eggshell.
It was such a waste. :)
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I refuse. I'll tidy it up a bit and reduce the clutter, but I'm not turning it into an anodyne show home.
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moving on. leaving things behind. that's hard.
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It is hard; I'm not at all sure I really want to do it.
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I guess every poet's dream is to write a poem that "sticks"- that gets into people's heads and then stays there.
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Having sold our last house nine months ago (though we didn't move into the current one for two and a half months) I remember all this stuff, showing people around, and hoping they'd imagine all our personalities away. It's a weird feeling having people to view.
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