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the newly listed home was vacant, which i expected. What i didn't expect,however, was that it was empty. All the places i'd been to look at were vacant, emptied of furniture,utilities,people;atmosphere...etc.
But that was the first place that was empty, and i felt it and knew it immediately. What i didn't know 'immediately' was what made it empty, or anyway what gave me such a powerful and weird impression.
as far as i could tell nothing about the environment inside or out had anything to do with its emptiness. i mean really, vacant houses are by definition 'empty,' aren't they? how much stranger would it be to enter a vacant house that wasn't empty? now that would be something worthy of note [and lots of carefully constructed sentences "using the following words....].
on the way in the neighbor on the left smiled at me. It wasn't an unusual smile full of some mysterious hidden meaning that set-off an instinctive alarm within me warning danger! danger! ...like a line in a novel. it was just a "we are strangers who made eye contact and the polite response is to smile" kind of a thing. that was all.
the worst part of the whole thing? i loved the house! it was in my budget, in the neighborhood where i'd wanted to live, it had working solar panels (solar panels! how green/cool would i be?). It was partially "water supplied' with well water and had a compost thing-a-ma-gig in the back yard.
there was even a chicken coop shed the realitor assured me could be converted to something more practical. My family had Road Island Red chickens when i was a kid. What could be more practical than fresh brown eggs to eat and share with [inundate LOL!] my friends,family,neighbors, unsuspecting strangers too nice to decline (hey, chickens lay eggs every day, including during holidays and in bad weather, when the coop is further away from the house) (oh, and even when you've accrued more eggs than you have friends or appetite) than my very own mini egg factory?
yet...the house was ...empty.
i still don't know what that meant. i gave a list of trumped-up reasons why i passed on that house. until now i've never spoken of the 'empty' thing. how could i? even now i don't understand it. every so often, though, i still think about that house. with regret.
and i wonder if it's still empty.
all t
12 years ago. Rating: 1 | |