Moving is stress. It can be deemed good stress or bad, but it is stress nonetheless. Having a relocation company assist with your move is supposed to alleviate some of that in theory. In practice? Let's just say if you believe in their sunshine and lollipops description of your assisted move, I've got a bridge to sell you in Death Valley.
Eric and I are relatively low maintenance clients. We are diligent in our research and thorough in our preparation. We knew approximately how much our San Leandro property was worth. We knew exactly what we wanted in Houston. Our realtors love working with us because we ask smart questions and thoroughly evaluate our options before acting but do not drag our feet. There is no indecisiveness or wishy washy-ness.
While we were in Houston house hunting, our California realtor, Lori, listed our place and then held an open house over the weekend. Within 24 hours of posting, there was an offer from Bob the Buyer. Bob the Buyer was out of state but had spent a lot of time in our building. His kids and grandkids lived in the Bay Area and he wanted to purchase a second home there. He and his wife had been watching for units in our building. His friends in the building showed up to the open house first thing in the morning. Then they came back in the afternoon to look again. Whatever they saw, Bob must have liked because he asked Lori what we were looking for and what he needed to do to get it off the market rightthisveryminute. Lori gave him a range and told him we'd need proof of funds to remove the listing. He offered us the top end and promised to get us the information we needed on Monday. Before he could even send it, there was another offer significantly higher than his. Bob the Buyer matched the deal and we were done that Monday. No contingencies. No assessments. As is. Go us!
The next step was the relocation company buying it from us so we could have our funds to purchase our new home. That should be simple...right? Except they required all the inspections and assessments Bob the Buyer waived plus a termite inspection (for our fourth floor condo...). Sighs. Fine, fine. We get it. I mean even though they are acting as an intermediary, they still will own it. And should anything go wrong...it's theirs. Plus really it shouldn't take long to do these and fix whatever minor things they find.
Except whoever they hired to do our general inspection didn't seem to have a sense of urgency. It took two weeks to get him in here and then his inspection "recommendations" left a lot to be desired. A smoke detector that was missing a battery (it had died recently) was written down as non-existent rather than non-functional. He recommended a contractor be hired to fix a door that just needed WD-40. A few things definitely needed to be addressed and by a professional. But over all...he came across as an idiot. An idiot who was holding our sale hostage.
Meanwhile, in Houston, we decided to make an offer on a really amazing loft downtown. It met all of our criteria - close to where Eric would be working, in an interesting building, and in a truly walkable neighborhood with restaurants, stores, and a grocery store. Two story loft in a great old building (built around 1911; converted to homes in 2000 approximately). There were some things we would want to change but we had the cushion to do so based on our sale in San Leandro. An offer was placed.
There were a couple of things I wanted checked by the inspector. Things I knew could be a problem. One of them was the ceiling height for the bottom floor bedroom. I could tell by looking at it that it was not to current code (too much HGTV). If we renovated, would we be on the hook to fix that? We didn't have to renovate...but we really wanted the master suite to be downstairs. Turned out that not only would we be if we chose to renovate, we would be if we needed to relocate through Eric's company again. The property would not qualify unless it met current codes. We had to back out and we despaired of finding something until we moved to Houston. It looked like we would be in temporary housing for a couple of months.
Fortunately, a couple new properties suddenly became available as we removed our offer. In the morning Eric booked my flight and I left that afternoon for Houston. In a whirlwind 24 hour trip, I looked at three different properties and optioned one. Once again, the relocation company was there to make things more difficult unwilling/unable to give us proof of funds. After much fighting and gnashing of teeth, they finally produced the paperwork we needed. If all continues to go well, we close on the 16th of October! Just in time for our arrival! Instead of months in temporary housing, it looks like it may only be two weeks if all goes well.
Tomorrow the movers show up, the electrician arrives to fix some of the minor stuff found in the inspection, specialists come to pack up the televisions (the relocation company insisted), and St. Vincent de Paul will take our furniture donations. (Because Catholic nuns housed me on Guam when I was pregnant with Avery, I try to donate to local Catholic charities whenever I can.) When all the chaos settles, Eric and I begin our drive to Houston!
Showing posts with label stress. Show all posts
Showing posts with label stress. Show all posts
Sunday, October 6, 2013
Sunday, August 25, 2013
The Theory of Moving in Practice
Weeks of planning, discussing, and cussing, we had a moving plan. In theory anyway. Half our stuff would go into storage. Homejoy would come in and clean after the movers leave. Our home would be staged for photography and then for the open houses - all while we were on one of our trips out of town. Home would be sold by the time we got back from Houston.
Of course, what's nice in theory doesn't always work in practice.
The moving company charges nearly a $1000 for the additional move/storage. A smaller company could do our move but the items in that storage won't be insured by the other moving company during the official move. After some hemming and hawing and multiple discussions with our realtor, we decided to go ahead with the cheaper mover since the stuff going is covered by our own insurance and is not anything we can't live without.
Next obstacle. Bay Bridge will be closed during some of this so Homejoy has to show up an hour or so after the movers. And all of this is happening the day before we go to Atlanta for Dragon*Con. It's okay...we'll sort our stuff to make it easier for the movers and have the cleaners focus on the rooms that are done or won't be touched by the movers.
Next obstacle. Pam had our spare keys. We thought she had dropped them off with us the other weekend but it turns out...wrong keys. She's mailing them to us. In the meantime, the realtor has Eric's set.
I won't have a panic attack...I won't have a panic attack.
Eric had some stressy moments this weekend. Hard to blame him, his travel schedule is insane. Much of this will fall to me. Still...I must admit I come super close to throttling him when he suggests delaying anything. I have to remind him that the further we delay...the closer we get to the holidays. "Rip the bandaid off, Eric. You're making it worse," I tell him.
Today we took down personal items and I almost started to cry. Without our artwork, without our personal pieces, this place is no longer home. Moving is suddenly more real. Why can't we just load up our condo onto a truck and ship it to Houston??
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