Monday, November 3, 2014

Gracemont


Gracemont is a tree.  I named a tree because it is to remind me of something.  My husband and I were married in August of 98, by the fall of the next year we had bought a house in the Gracemont subdivision.  We loved that house.  We brought home our two babies from the hospital there, we started our lives there.  We lived there for 11 years.
Gracemont is the kind of neighborhood where you meet neighbors in the backyard to talk while your kids play outside untethered by electronics.  Gracemont is the kind of neighborhood where you hook a trailer to the back of your SUV and give "hayrides".  There are so many positive memories from Gracemont.
One day while I was working in the backyard at our Gracemont home I found a young silver maple sapling.  It wasn't very tall but it was big enough so I moved it over to where some day it would shade our deck.
Well, as we all know life happens and once the kids were in school we figured out that our Gracemont home was about 30 to 45 minutes away from everything we did and the commute was getting really old really fast.  So, we found a new home that is 5 minutes from work, school and church.  It is a nice home with lots of room.  We brought several of our plants from the old house mainly because I have this thing that I like to plant things to remind me of events that have happened in our lives.  I have plants from my parents, I have plants from my grandparents, plants to me mean life and growth and hope.
So, of course Gracemont came.  The only problem is that when I planted Gracemont I got the property line wrong and Gracemont was on the empty lot beside us by about 6 inches.  The empty lot was purchased a few months ago and the first time I understood that Gracemont was not on my property I felt sick to my stomach.  By this point, Gracemont had been growing for almost 5 years, we are not talking a tiny sapling anymore.  There was no budging the minds of the new homeowners they wanted it off of their property...GONE.  My husband looked into it and you could buy a new tree for less than what you could move this one and there really wasn't anywhere in our yard for a tree that was going to grow to the size that this one would so the future for my little tree was bleak.
The morning that I figured out that I had to pull all of my plants over to my side of the line (even though these plants were covering a very ugly power box and were contained in a professionally done stone surround flowerbed) my sweet neighbor came to help me move everything over, and then another neighbor came and another neighbor.  We were able to move all of the bulbs and plants and heavy stone over to my side and to be honest it looks better now than it did before.  The only thing that we weren't able to move was Gracemont.  At this point it was much to large for me to move and I had resigned myself to the fact that it was going to be chopped down.
Ok.  In your mind I want you to start playing some super hero music because to me that is what is about to happen.  The sweet neighbor that helped me move all that heavy stone?  Well, she talked to her husband and he talked to our other neighbor who owns a lot of heavy equipment and guess what?!  Yesterday our three families spent a beautiful fall afternoon moving my precious tree across the street to a new home where it will have much more room to grow and I can still see it very clearly if not better than I ever did before.
My mom has this saying, "It takes a heap of living in a house to make it a home."  Our Gracemont house had so many precious memories of life events and neighbors that sometimes I would question why we had moved.  Yesterday was such a beautiful reminder that I have excellent neighbors right here and the future is bright.

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