Monday, November 5, 2012

The Deep End: Intermission

(Just a Commercial Break.)
You can click on each photo to get a better view.
 
 
I have peace. 
Yes, every inch has been filled with the things I love.  Finally, for the first time in my adult life, I have a respectable place where I can download all the things in my head.  And manage our lives. 
And write.
 
Mom Caves, unite.
 
 
Way Before:  
 
 
 
Then came the studs.
 
Then came the Arctic Circle. 
 
 
Wide open space, just waiting to be filled up.   


Then, the whole enchilada.

 
The reading nook.  My daughter breached the perimeter already and has found a place to hide her diaries.


And no one puts Baby in the corner, unless Baby's name is Sheri.


Part 4 of 4...this week. 
 

 

Friday, November 2, 2012

The Deep End: Part 3 of a 4 part series


"Come Out Here Where We Can See You."
 
 
 
In case you've just joined us: links to parts 1 and 2:
 
 
As my contractor hummed and worked, I was reminded of the second project that I had in mind for him. 
 
I’m talking about building my Mom Cave. I planned it to be carved into my unnaturally hot attic, accessed by a ship's ladder, with no ventilation and full exposure to natural predators like fleas and wolves.  Now that I see this in writing, I’m wondering if I was sniffing glue at the time I planned this.  But upon further thought, I realize it was the only unclaimed spot in our house and therefore made perfect sense.  
 
The added bonus: the ceiling would be low.  My 6’2” husband said, “No way would I go up there…it makes me claustrophobic." So it really was the ‘Carrie Bradshaw –A Place To Be NOT A Wife Or A Mother’ hideaway for two days a week.  The problem was, it would have cost $15,000 to build.  With our boy going to college soon…there was only so much I could steal from his funds, undetected.  

I prided myself on coming up with the idea of a Mom Cave.  However, I googled it and was disappointed to find I wasn’t such a trailblazer because others have already thought of it too.   But I was also shocked to find the condescending attitude in the remodel industry magazines: 

"Ladies, find a place in your house…under the porch, behind the washer, a cupboard in your bathroom, or even in a van down by the river and MAKE IT YOUR OWN SPACE!!  Call it Home.  You deserve it, little lady, a special place to do all your important work, or have your ‘me-time’, or whatever it is you do.  Do your girly work where no one will bother you!” 

Of course no one will bother you: you’re BEHIND THE WASHER! 

I fight for our sisters, women who need a space in their house to do their thang.  I submit to you a novel idea:
 
Don’t settle for being a porch dweller.  Live out loud right in front of your stinkin’ family or roommates or pets.  Come out, be proud, take as much space as you need.  You probably have important jobs like running the budget, driving the calendar, manning the holidays, being in charge of home repairs and medical visits, being the boss of the castle.  Or you have a hobby that needs a space.  All of those reasons entitle you to the noble, Mistress of the Realm status with full land-owner rights.    

As my contractor was gutting our front room, I scratched my head and wondered how to get my house to cough up a decent Mom Cave.  An hour later, I accidentally got invited to Pinterest and saw a photo that made me all sweaty, but not in a Hulk Hogan sort of way. 
 
THIS was it.  This was the Lady Cave idea I was looking for.  My rightful place in our family home.  I had spent all summer making sure my family unit could do homework, chat, interact, play, work, be entertained, eat and sleep better.  But what about My spot for My work?  What had I done for me? I am fighting the urge to not feel selfish as I look at that last sentence. 

The picture I saw was beautiful, and I sketched my evolved version to be this:
 
And yes, someone got chocolate or gravy on my dream paper.  I can just taste the respect!  But then again, maybe I did it.  
 

Somehow, the dream had to be birthed from this:
 
 

 
I stapled my sketch to the Wall of Dreams, and heard the second troll die.  This troll is the back-up troll who guards the bridge to my bank account. 
 


 

My eyes twinkled because I had just found a way to honor Woman-dom, and I invited my Lady Cave into our living quarters where it needed to be.   

It will be a 14’ long swath of floor, being a mere 33’’ wide, with its own lights, shelves, a window seat/reading nook combo, and a Norad desk for my writing.   

Flirting with danger, I also decided there would be no perimeter fencing or barrier to keep the family out.   The family has been warned…this will be MY area.  No sandwiches, shoes, sheep or teeth on my desk…nuthin.  By invitation only.  You may not trespass.  You are on the honor system.  And if you broach the perimeter, the hidden lasers...they’ll singe the little hairs on your arms. 
 
Got it? 

Mine.

My work, my thoughts, my hobbies are all honorable and will not take place anywhere but here in front of you, so we can always be together for the rest of your natural lives.  It’s time you saw an example of a happy woman who is living her dream at the same time you get to live yours. 
 
I said this all to my family...in my head.  They haven't heard it yet.  I suppose next week, when the shrine dream of the xBox/Wii/Netflix/Entertainment Nook gets kicked aside for my fragrant mom-stuff, they'll finally know.   
 

Monday, October 29, 2012

The Deep End: Part 2 of a 4 part series

"The Walls Talked."


As our contractor took his hatchet to the walls, he peeled away 1976 like a bad sunburn.  I was a little sad, because I painted these words in 1998, the only thing that let me tolerate that paneling:


Note: the 'other' graffiti on that wall was a one-day-special only.  

I took a picture of it.  I also kept only the word “friends”, because I’m not a hoarder and therefore will only save one piece of garbage and not all eight pieces. 

I knew he was hauling this paneling to the dump, a place where he said people love to shop after they’ve bottomed out at Lowe's.  I pictured nice people looking through the paneling at the dump and reading it like archeologists at a dig.  “Little…..Houses….Have…..Lots of Room….For…....WHAT?  What is the last word?  Drugs?  Shoes? Cats?  I CAN'T SLEEP!  I MUST know the mystery word!!”  

Anyway, as I came back from my landfill hallucinogenic comedy, I joked with my contractor that maybe he’d find cash in those walls, from way back in the days when people hated banks.  Like back in 2008.  He winked, and said, “You’d be SURPRISED what we find in walls.”   

Holy tomato, I’ll bet he’s going to find porn in there.  Just my luck, he’ll think it’s ours.  And if I deny it, I’ll look like I doth protesteth too much. 

Please don’t find porn. 

Ten minutes later, he said, "Hey, lookie here!” as he walked over to me.  I tried to look calm as I saw a magazine page with skin.  Lots of it.  Slimy, tanned skin glistening with oil, lots of abs and muscles 

and 
     not
           very much 
                         c-c-c-c-c-c-clothing.

"Hey, that doesn’t look like cash!"  I chirped.  As my girlfriend Deb once said, I was ready to fold like a cheap chair. 

I barely know the guy, and now we’ve got to look at PORN together?  This is NOT how a remodel is supposed to go. 

He unfolded the centerfold for the big reveal. 

Oh, there was skin alright.  From the WWF…'Hulk Hogan and Andre the Giant' posing for a smackdown.  In their little wrestling panties.    

I FRICKING LOVE YOU!  I said to myself, because the 1987 date also cleared me from having anything whatsoever to do with hiding that stuff in the walls.  


It might even be worth something.  I’ll be danged…..there really was money in them there walls.

But I digress yet again.

As the walls were coming down, we looked at the electrical outlets.  There were only three in the entire room, so help me God.  Overworked for decades and on the brink of combustion.  Wired only for 1942, back when the little lady of the house just needed it for her vacuum OR her butter churn.   When we moved in, we unfairly asked these outlets to join the 21st century, hike up a leg and prepare to power nineteen computer peripherals and a mother of a tower. 

I saw him remove the outlet covers which had black singe marks on them from some unfortunate misfires, but I said those were not our fault and were probably put there the same year as the wrestling picture.  

He scratched his head, politely not asking how the hell we Hoffmanns have not burned in our beds.   

So, we were on track to upgrade that room.  The best upgrade, the baseboards, would seal us in like a hamster in a ball.
  
When the window was put in, I almost cried.  For the first time I could not hear the trash trucks, the neighbors arguing, nor the tugboat in San Francisco.  Which meant the neighbors could no longer hear any of my future F-bombs.  A win-win. 

Windows: Before and During

 
Bad window.  Bad window treatments.

Good window.  No window treatments.  No spiders.

Click here for Part 3: http://freddiesmom50x50.blogspot.com/2012/11/the-deep-end-part-3-of-4-part-series.html

Friday, October 26, 2012

The Deep End: Part 1 of a 4 part series


"Paneling, Popcorn and Glitter:
The glamour of it all."

A quiet moment, in between stages 1 and 2. 


We’ve been busy with a project for the last two months, and again, it requires that I reveal it to you in a cluster. I’m snipping the twine and the bundle shall break loose, causing each post to steam-roll over you every other day this coming week.  So stay with me, and be ready to jump over them before they mow you down.

I regret posting these during the World Series, but maybe you can come at me in-between the innings and hot wings.  Think of these as nachos with extra pork. 

(Speaking of healthy food,  I have an update for you.  My weight loss has reached a staggering plateau, but I am still succeeding in walking my daughter to and from school each day; honoring my time boundaries by not over committing; and I kicked my daily Starbucks habit---gawd, I need Starbucks daily.  How could I be so cruel to myself?)

When last I left you, we had been pitching and tossing clutter for almost eight weeks.  We also re-arranged virtually every stick of furniture in our house, now no longer in their original spots.  Family living (and farm living) were finally happening in the right areas in our house and things appeared to make sense where they were.

I got as far as de-cluttering about 90% of our things, and then started to get a little bored with that phase, because it was so long.  And I knew there were more phases coming.  Like anyone who’s Not-Really-A-Hoarder, there are five phases to re-doing one’s home to get it ready to put on the market and then not really sell it. 

  • 1.  The ‘De-clutter’ phase (90% is an A-, right? Check mark here please!!!)
  • 2.  The 'Fix All The Broken Things In Your House’ phase.
  • 3.  The ‘Touch Up The Paint In Every Single Square Foot’ phase.
  • 4.  The ‘Clean The Hell Out Of Your House’ phase, even if you have to hire a lift team. 
Then, finally, when everything is absolutely perfect:  
  • 5.   'Resume Your Health and Fitness Routine.' 
So now, you’ve found me in the middle of phase 2, which has occupied me since October 1.  This 'Fix All The Broken Things In Your House' phase...it may sound like an easy thing if you’re talking about a toaster or a roof tile.  But how do you wrap your head around a broken room?
   
The first room one sees when they enter our house, is our little living room.  Let’s just say, somethin’ ain’t natural about this room.  There is a wicked bad feeling here. Always has been.  I have a theory…
  
One day, in 1976, (way before we moved in) a paneling salesman stumbled onto our street and made a killing as he sold fake walls to almost everyone.  This was followed by a sales team pushing the perfect pairing; a coating of Popcorn/Asbestos ceiling funk.  And then the sexy step-brother came and sold everyone Crappy Aluminum Picture Windows that allowed sunlight to stream in.  Along with spiders, grime, cold air in winter and hot air in summer.  This boosts your energy bills with their slow death leak. 

And there you have it…bad taste trapped in 200 square feet.  Which attracted buyers like us in 1991. 

A good friend said coming into my house is like being born.  You enter the front door, army crawl through the dark and scary birth canal, get spit out somewhere around the kitchen and finally caught by the doctor in the roomy Church Hall that is my great room.  It’s like a wild ride through a water tube.
  
Here’s how I, Sheri Hoffmann, being of sound mind, really feel about this room. 

As I mentioned, adding to the beauty of the front room was that ceiling, sprayed with popcorn, possible asbestos and definitely dirt.  Oh, and dare I mention the glitter?  Court documents point to a crafting day gone to hell in the summer of ‘76, as someone threw up and spewed shards of gold with such velocity, the popcorn swelled around each embedded piece, locking it in and thus ensuring the glitter’s place in history.  

As my good friend Kerry mentioned, “It has been said that glitter is the herpes of the craft world.”   It has captivated my guests for two decades, but I pissed them off when I’d threaten to scrape it off like a bad scab. The mounds of popcorn-glitter-asbestos hell literally sucked the light from the room and sometimes from as far away as the inside of my car.  I hated it. 
 
And, because the dodgy windows didn’t ever, ever fit right in their thin imperfectness and shoddy workmanship, for 20 years they have allowed many things into my home, including Kirby salesmen.   

True, some critters were blocked by the fake window treatments that spoke of Hoffmann 1995: The Early Years. In those days, we couldn’t afford plantation shutters, but we COULD afford Walmart Levolors.  So we went to the cross-breeding aisle and found Plantation Levolors, or Plantelors

The levolors had an internal magnetic field which held on to all muck.  It allowed spiders to go condo, and build, build, BUILD all around the inside of my window.   Often, I’d hear the tell-tale zzzZZZZZTTT!!!!!!!! of flying insects who were snagged in the sticky web.  In the morning, we’d find their drained carcasses suspended between the levolors and the window--the netherworld of filth, murder and cold air.  With the awe and quiet beauty of Christmas morning presents.  Some beasts managed to make it past the barrier, and found better living uptown, in the popcorn of my ceiling because it offered better grip.  There they reproduced, among the secure dirt-web layer referred to as the Crudulicious Period.  
   
Yet the glitter proudly shone through like amber waves of grain.  ‘The filth shall not diminish her shine!’, it seemed to say.  It was impossible to clean.  We shall not touch it or speak of it nor look at it.  So, like my husband said, sometimes, it’s better to do nothing at all.  And ignore it we did! 
  
After we de-cluttered this summer and moved the right furniture into this room, its new role was “Home Office; Sheri’s Writing Nook; and my daughter’s Play Area.”  It was a tall order and this room could take it. 
 
But as I gazed upon the desolation in this room, I saw how many years of effort we had put into hiding the flaws, ignoring the stains, taping things together, painting words on it, back-lighting it, cursing it.  We did everything we could to make the best of bad taste. 

Finally, it became apparent that this room could no longer be saved by a comb-over.  It needed surgery, down to the studs.  

So, I started this project the same way I’ve started all projects in this home:  I sketched my dreams on a crumbled napkin.  This always makes my husband nervous, because I get ‘that look’ on my face.  Then, you know that troll who guards the bridge to our bank account? 

He dies.
   
Luckily for us, we know a skilled craftsman, a muscular Irishman who is easy on the eyes, and he agreed to take us on.  As we emptied the room the day before, I let my kids write on the walls, in a rare Octomom moment.  Then friends came over to add their art.  Tagging has been on my bucket list, and in my OWN HOME, nonetheless!  The convenience had me at ‘hello.’  How lucky am I?
  















The next day, our contractor showed up with ice picks.  Like the great Berlin Wall Moment, I revelled in every grunt and groan as he tore that room to smithereens.

Thursday, August 23, 2012

The Game Changer: Part 6 of a 6 part series


  “Renaissance”


I watched as clutter stole a summer from me and my family.  It stole from me during the years it lived here, it stole from me as I did away with it this month and it is stealing from me as I type these blog entries.   Thank goodness it’s been great fun to write about.  But at least this batch of clutter will steal from me for the last time.  

I have found that a home is your partner.  It is not just a place to keep your stuff.  It can make or break you. 

I see how a cluttered house causes a cluttered mind, and a cluttered mind causes a cluttered house.  See how beautifully they work in tandem to destroy each other?  It really is the perfect storm.

I have found that ‘house’ and ‘body’ are really one and the same.  I need to be happy with the body and home I’m in, but still fight like a dog to streamline it.  It was hard to maintain weight loss when surrounded by an excess of house items and outdated ways of doing things.  Conversely, it was hard to improve my home because I was busy feeling bad about my weight.  I see how my home and body were busy sabotaging each other.  

This month has been intense, painful, full of tears, poorly timed and yet perfectly timed.  This summer did not start out about weight loss, and yet it will completely lead to weight loss.  I’ve been forced to rethink my whole life.  I have discovered some interesting benefits of devoting this year to my health, because all of these other evolutions are happening as an unexpected side benefit. 

I’ve heard that at seven year intervals, we go through intense mental and physical rebirth. I’m 49.  Did you see that?  49 is the seventh group of seven year cycles.  It’s the Golden One.  The Big One.  It makes sense that I am going through the Mother of all upheavals. 

As for all the things that broke or malfunctioned in our house, I had to read my horoscope just for shits and giggles.  Apparently, two planets are in retrograde, which is famous for causing issues with technology.  ‘Retrogrades always push us toward the past, and they’re important times for revising, editing, perfecting and fixing design flaws.  Having the rug pulled out is really a secret opportunity.’

I don’t really go for Astrology much, but I thought it was interesting that even the AstroTwins totally nailed what we were going through.

I feel that rebirth already.  I have 80% decluttered our house.  I have gotten rid of what I don't need, what makes me unhappy,  what I would NOT take to a new house, or what would embarrass me if I died suddenly.  My life is losing old clutter and I have room to take on new and better things.  As my house loses weight, I know I will follow. 

I’ve learned lessons in contentment, about being happy with your home (body) while striving for better.  That the energy spent in longing, should be used for action instead.  

Like I said, I had no idea my weight loss journey would suddenly take a left turn and become a decluttering phase for a few months.  Thankfully, I surrendered to it. And thank YOU for reading about it and for all your emails and feedback. 

Oh, and Primrose Lane, I have a message for you.  Thank you for crashing into my life.  I’m sorry it has taken four times for me to finally get clarity.  Thank you for teaching me about never, ever, ever giving up.  About heading full throttle into any dream, no matter how trite, and stopping only when I had exhausted every option. I know I didn’t end up with you, but if I had given up too early in the game, I would not have gained the lessons of July during my desperate quest to have you.

This is the most peace I have felt in decades.  If we ever meet again, I’m taking you out for a beer.   

Next time: back to normal posts again.  I've got more stories.

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

The Game Changer: Part 5 of a 6 part series


If you're just joining us, here are the links to the first four parts:


“On A Roll”

Hmm, my bag of discards....it sort of looks like a human heart. 


It only took one morning’s work before I started to taste victory.  I got into a rhythm once I had done all the setup you saw in Part 4.  This surprised me because I thought I’d be distracted and overwhelmed.  But my husband said I had ‘that look’ in my eyes, and he knew enough to avoid being a boulder in my steaming river of progress.  A shower or a quick snack or a killer song on the iPod was all I needed to recharge and keep climbing out of the valley.  My husband was the perfect team mate as he’d do the detailed things (sorting, loading the car, looking up stuff on eBay, etc.)  

I looked at each thing, and asked it those four questions. 

I tried to picture it in my future.  If not, I sincerely thanked it for its past.

Those items went to the pile of Goodwill bags in my garage.  Some things were harder to send off, (things that had memories attached) and I found it easier if I took an extra moment to say goodbye to what it meant to me.

Need I say more? Martha Slept Here.

I knew I was digging deep when I delved into some treasured stuff from my kids.   And then the sacred pile of Martha Stewart magazines, 1997-2006.  Nicely organized, in matching black magazine holders, orderly on the shelves.  This was my prized cache of the encyclopedias of home keeping, symbolizing a goal that I’ve never achieved.   But I managed to cull 96 copies down to a precious 30.  Why did I keep ANY?  Because a pumpkin hasn’t changed much in 15 years, and the stuff you do to it is pretty much the same.  Plus, I have a dream that at least once, I can have a kick-ass holiday.

As for memorabilia from the kids, it seemed silly to keep things packed away, never to be seen again.  I found a way to bring some out during holidays (I have packed them with the holiday decorations,) and now have one shelf of ‘crap art’ that I just display in all its preciousness.  It was painful to toss many pieces of art, but for every ten items, I kept the best three.  I’d ‘kiss’ things as I tossed, saying, “Thanks, but you’re now getting in the way of my time with my kids.”  

See the 'art shelf' at the bottom?  It completely took away my stress to have things on display instead of in boxes under the house.

“Closet Day!”  Going through clothes was easy.  I did my hair and makeup (it had been a few weeks as you can imagine, and I needed to see Lady Sheri again.)  I had a mirror ready too, with bad lighting just like Victoria's Secret.  If a blouse was borderline, I tried it on with pants, shoes and a necklace as if I really was going out.  If I couldn’t make it work, it was gone. Many of my shirts had mysterious little holes near the pant zipper.  I had been good at tucking them in, but now, I was tossing anything with holes.  I deserve clothes that don’t have holes. 

Lonely plastic hangers.  Emptied of their deadbeat clothes that I should have tossed sooner.

I found something interesting.   I had every color, mood and weather covered with my clothes and jewelry.  It had taken years to achieve this. And then, much like the life cycle of an appliance, the first ones I bought were looking worn and tarnished.  I thought I was following the rules by taking care of my things so they’d last.  Well, it only extends their life to the point where they look really haggard.  So, I guess I shouldn’t be trying to get a decade out of clothes…maybe just 5 years or less. The only things worth longevity, are marriage and friendship and relationships with my kids.

These clothes are leaving the house in the bags they came in.

My closet feels so good and I can hear it breathe, but not in a creepy way. If you had told me you had shopped for me and bought four huge bags of clothes to put back in my closet, I’d throw up.  I’d panic, not knowing how to squeeze them in there.  And yet somehow, that much WAS there just twelve hours earlier. 

Listen...you really can hear it breathe.

My laundry room deserves to be a part of the house and not treated like the stray cat.  It’s where we care for our clothes, and honor the time spent earning money for them, shopping for them and the work we do IN them.  Our time washing them should be done in a noble room for this worthy task.  It doesn’t have to be a pretty place: just a little cave that is like a work cubicle--functional, time-saving and one that doesn’t suck us dry or make us hate being in there.  Mine is in the garage with unfinished drywall and spiderwebs way up high, but at least the floor is clean and things are in straight lines, which appeals to my German-ness.

It's not much, but it's MY scullery.

My husband looked at our house after 15 solid days of this. 

It looked the worst it ever has, with its dirt and piles and Progress.  I was starting to look pretty used up too.  Some days, I can’t even remember if I showered. 

He said, “If you had told me this is what I’d be doing for most of my summer, I would have enjoyed the first part of it a lot more.”  

Well said.

The house became even dirtier.  We had to get used to it and it sucked.  Company came over often.  First time visitors somehow picked this month to get to know us.  I couldn’t even count the number of times I recited my own quote: “Hi…nice to meet you.  Pardon the mess. We’re decluttering.”  We grew to accept ‘camping dirt status’ in our house.  Every few days, I’d straighten the piles and vacuum around them because they were here to stay for a few weeks.  I had to lower my standards and treat the mounds like temporary guests.   You know, if they’re going to visit for a spell, might as well make it look real purty because company will keep showing up.  Cue the banjos.

Filling up the van to take to the Goodwill.  


I can’t believe it, but here are 55 bags and boxes in that van.  Most of it was really good stuff that would have made a killer garage sale. I looked at our Great Room and started to see order.  There was a bit more space, and things were now comfortably nested.  If you had bought 55 bags of things from Target and said, “Here!  Make this all fit in this room again!” it would be impossible, and yet, 55 bags of stuff came out of it.

I went through my historical clippings, which my husband calls my Tragedy Shelf.  It has books, newspapers and magazines about Princess Diana’s accident, The Titanic, Sept. 11th and JFK Jr.’s life and untimely death.  Without stopping to ask the appropriate question: do we need to explore why I even have this stuff?  I compromised by keeping only the things that measured TEN on the Poignancy Scale. 

We took over 200 books to the library.  I caught a glance at one bag of my books and saw it full of these hefty titles: Time Management; How To Declutter; Making Time For Important Things; Simplify Your Life.  Oh, the sour irony as I tossed them on the bulging donation cart.  It dragged and sparked as we pushed it up the ramp. 

I have looked at every bead, pencil, pair of dice, playing card, towel, soap, polish, nail, button, etc. in our home.  Did I stop there?  No.  I did blankets, books, buttons, crayons, leaves, pencils and movies.  I relooked at everything down to the studs. I went through more than one hundred areas (drawers, cupboards, shelves, baskets).  If you had told me this at the beginning, that I would have over one hundred areas to look at, I would have set fire to my house.  Ignorance is bliss when you start this process.

I'm salivating.


A jar of buttons. Every house needs one because they're so cool.





I am taking steps to make sure that even things in the dark of my closets and cupboards are as organized as my living spaces.  These behind-the-scenes storage areas deserve order and my goal is to be able to put my hands on anything I need at any time.  




Yes, our tiny linen closet. It has continued to stay this way for several weeks, which tells me we must have witches.  I wanted to paint 'To Elevator' over the closed door, just to freak people out.

My tea drawer.  The straight lines and order of a storage space make my anxiety go away as I reach for the Thunderbolt Turbo-Roast coffee.  Plus, if I can find the caffeine quickly in the morning, everyone wins.   




On a softer note, as I zoomed through all these areas, one of them brought me to my knees in its horrible beauty.  I found a drawer containing sympathy cards from friends who sent words after my first miscarriage a decade ago.  One friend, who so wanted children of her own, found the most perfect thing to say:

"I feel so very much for you and the potential of that being who was blessed to be a part of you…even if it was only for a brief journey.  I will certainly vouch for that----even a brief encounter with you and your family can fill a soul up for eternity."

After reading that one (which I am keeping), I was unable to continue on and so it was a good moment to call it a night.