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March/April 2007
By Linda Mason Hunter
©
2007 Linda Mason Hunter. May not be reprinted without
written permission of the author.

Dad and
Grandma Nelle building the living room, circa 1954 |
Before my dad
got his hands on it, the house I grew up in was a classic
Craftsman bungalow, a common cookie-cutter house found
throughout the Midwest--two bedrooms with wide front porch,
tiny kitchen, and small rear "grocer's porch." But Dad
changed all that. Through the sheer force of his will and
perseverance, the one-story structure became a laboratory
for nurturing his do-it-yourself skills. Before we knew what
was happening the house grew like Topsy, becoming an
eccentric one-of-a-kind fairytale house that shall remain in
my memory forever as the epitomy of home.

Linda and Skip, circa 1950 |
Back then we
were poor. My parents were one of those hastily-married
World War II couples with more style than money. Dad studied
law day and night while Mother painstakingly parceled their
meager savings on family necessities--food, shoes, and an
occasional trip to the dentist. We savored the rare luxury
like Dickens' urchins sampling chocolate. But I lived in a
rich constantly-evolving house--bright colors, fresh air,
worn quilts, and comfy down pillows stuffed by Grandma's
hand.
In my mind my
mother initiated the transformation one sultry July day in
1951 when I was a small child and Dad was away on his annual
weeklong fishing trip. I never knew what prompted Mother's
blue mood that summer's day. What I do remember is her
determination to perk herself up by painting the walls of
our kitchen jet black with big shocking pink polka dots. The
effect was startling, especially in a kitchen.
When Dad
first saw what Mother had done to the kitchen, he stared
slack jawed in disbelief, inhaled sharply, and seemed to
hold his breath forever while Mother matter-of-factly
explained the change made her feel better, brightened her
spirits. And it obviously had for she exuded good cheer.
After the initial shock passed Dad gathered her in his arms
and kissed her hard. Her bold style was, after all, what
attracted him to her in the first place. That single moment
widened the boundaries between them, permitting him to
realize his creativity, as well. And he proceeded to do so,
year in and year out razing walls at will to give our modest
bungalow more breathing room.
My brother
and I quickly adjusted to the gritty taste of sawdust in our
cereal, the sound of hammering late at night, and complete
metamorphoses taking place while we slept. Dad was born
under a lucky star, blessed with the vision to imagine
possibilities, what he called "green weenies" and Mother
called "your Father's little enthusiasms." Once he clearly
envisioned a new room, a better layout, a solution to a
frustrating problem, the walls came tumbling down. Nothing
could stand in his way.
One bright
spring morning I returned home from Sunday school to find
our humble bathroom exposed to the world, its exterior wall
lying in a heap in the driveway. We showered at our
neighbors house for a month.
The summer of
my eighth year the dining room wall disappeared, a thin
sheet of diaphanous plastic our only protection from the
elements. Dad worked weekends and evenings that summer,
often long past midnight. His mother visited from the
country on weekends, dressed in faded overalls and carrying
life's necessities in a brown paper bag. They built the
foundation together, Grandma Nelle mixing concrete, then
loading it wet and heavy into a wheelbarrow while Dad laid
up brick one by one.
Four months
later we officially moved into the new living room complete
with everything a middle-class Fifties family needed to gain
respectability--front foyer, hall closet, wall-to-wall
carpet, living room fireplace, and big picture window
overlooking the backyard patio--second-hand paving brick
laid in a sand circle around the lumpy old apple tree. The
tree added character, he claimed (he hadn't the heart to cut
it down). As the final coup de grace, he and Mother painted
the entire house barn red because that color was discounted
the day they bought the paint.
In the end it
was a marvelous house built just for us with sweat,
laughter, and DNA embedded in the mortar. Unlike the
predictable suburban houses my wealthier classmates lived
in, our house had style born of Dad's enthusiasm, economy,
and energy leavened with Mother's audacity. Because they did
it themselves our house had soul, a living, breathing spirit
evolving along with us, the stage upon which we acted out
the story our lives.
After I moved
into a house of my own, Mom and Dad sold the homeplace to
developers itching to build a state-of-the-art nursing home.
Houses on our side of the street fell like dominoes. One day
our house stood proudly on its hillock, next day it was a
heap of rubble. The chaotic pile of plaster, brick, and
splintered wood pierced my heart like a bullet, a clean hole
threatening to become a chasm. My very psyche seemed
disassembled. Havoc wrought. A beloved symbol rendered
invisible forever. It was inevitable.
I've spent a
lifetime recreating the comfort and delight I found in that
house. It's been a rich and satisfying journey. From the
first home "on my own" (a tin quonset hut at the state
university renting for $28 a month) to the century-old
farmhouse where I reared my children and now play with
grandchildren, I've fixed up and painted, torn down walls
and refinished floors, hand-stripped woodwork, lugged
furniture, replastered walls, hung new light fixtures, and
nurtured gardens. Along the way I discovered what my soul
looks like and how blessed I become when wrapped in its
essence. Working on my house has been an exhilarating and
satisfying journey, a constant evolution in which my
surroundings mirror my personal story.
It's a
journey anyone can take. Your home is a place where you can
work your magic and discover that, yes, you have magic
within you. The secret is to do much of the work yourself.
What you get in the end is more than a house anyone could
live in. What you get is a home, a place of nurture and
regeneration, a hiding place for your soul. There are few
things in life more fulfilling than that. |

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PROJECT:
Calculate Your Ecological Footprint |
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How much space does your lifestyle require? Find out.
Calculate your own ecological footprint by taking the quiz
at
www.myfootprint.org.
Then, you can compare your Ecological Footprint to what the
planet can sustain.
Adjusting your entries or playing with the Reduce Your
Footprint calculator will show how lifestyle changes affect
the Footprint size. Enter simple goals for your life on the
Action Calculator (such as a pledge to eat less meat) and
find out how many acres of land you could save just by
implementing that goal. Post your goals in a place where you
can see and review them every day. |
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