A Moving Story

It must be the gypsy in me. Why else would I be on the move again for the fifth time in as many years? Once more my belongings and my worldly goods will be packed up into cardboard boxes, loaded into the back of some old bloke's van and deposited at a new place, ready to be unpacked and start all over again.

I like moving, as you can tell! So long as it's to somewhere better, somewhere nicer. I even moved to Los Angeles once. And then I moved back. 3 years of earthquakes, riots, fires, storms and homesickness was more than I could take. When I lived in LA, I moved twice. The first time was to an apartment and the second time was to a house that the realtor assured us cheerfully was a "great fixer-upper" when she knew full well it was a complete "faller-downer-money-pit". But, fixer-it-upper we did. It had a new roof, new walls, new floors, new garden. In fact there wasn't much of the old place left when we'd finished with it. At the point when the roof was replaced, we spent one night under the stars with no roof. "No problem" said he who should have known better. "It never rains in Southern California". No, it doesn't rain. It pours. The heavens open and soaks you like you've known before. And it did so on this very evening when we didn't have a roof. We'd had months of drought and dry, cracked river beds but it came down like cats and dogs the only night we didn't have a roof on our house. I remember trying to cook the dinner with a pan of boiling pasta in one hand, and an umbrella in the other. I vowed then that I would never go through this building lark again.

When we moved back to England, our new house wasn't quite ready to move into. Oh, this time I made sure the roof was on and it was completely watertight. Problem was, we had no kitchen. Having moved out of our rented accommodation, we were forced into living in the partially finished house. Upstairs all was normal, everything was finished except carpeting. Downstairs was another matter. Chaos ruled. Workmen stomped about, hammering nails in and drinking tea. We had no way of cooking so spent most evenings in the local pub sampling the fayre, but you can only live on scampi and chips for so long. We were in there so often the landlord invited us to the staff Christmas party. When we did eat cold food in the house, our new bathroom suite was used as a makeshift kitchen sink. I vowed again I would never suffer this building lark.

And so, we're on the move again. Not as far as America this time. In fact, not very far at all. After an offer we couldn't refuse, we're moving the grand distance of 500 yards to build a new house on the same site as we live already. But, there's a problem. The new people want to be in our house in June. Our new house won't be ready until September. This time I've put my foot down. I'm not roughing it in a dusty half built house with wires hanging out of the walls, no plumbing, and bags of cement in the toilet. I wonder if my mother still has that spare bedroom......

Glenda Young is also the writer of the weekly Coronation Street Update on the net, and can be contacted at:

glenda@londonmall.co.uk

Previous experiences of a thirty-something...

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