The ReStore. Gypsy Treasures.

Good will meets home improvement and treasure hunting. The ReStore. Here’s a nonprofit home improvement center selling furniture, building materials, appliances, office furniture, light fixtures, tools, tchotchkes–all at a fraction of retail pricing in a warehouse that’s a lot easier to walk through (and get out of before your life is over), than Ikea. The dollars earned support Habitat for Humanity. You can donate, or shop, or do both. We took a Saturday morning excursion to check it out. Gold Star Blvd. Worcester. (There are other locations throughout the land.) Check out the ReStore blog on their website to jumpstart your creative energy and get ideas on how to restore ReStore finds. IMG_2949

Let’s use and reuse what we already have. If container ships keep unloading stuff on America’s shorelines, and the stuff keeps getting distributed throughout the land,

America is going to SINK.

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The first easy-bake oven. But look! Old, sturdy file cabinets. I have an idea. Use them as walls, slap on a roof and line them up for dorm housing. Every student has five drawers. One drawer/per day of the week to organize what you will wear that day. Eliminates excessive clothing all over the floor, excessive clothes flowing out of closets, and excessive clothes overloading washing machines. Reduces student stress–just open the drawer marked, “Monday”, when it’s Monday, and proceed to get dressed. Return clothes to the drawer for the next Monday.For weekends, choose clothes at random from the five drawers.

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Impressive selection of tables. Great for art studios, restaurants, classrooms.

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More fun than the Big Apple. Buy this ensemble for a party, serve some kind of apple-themed dish, get a few oohs and ahhs and what funs from your guests, and then give it back to the ReStore to sell again! Ten bucks. Or, fill the big apple with some bling, like shiny beads. Let children scoop out some of the bling to put into their little apples and they can string together necklaces or bracelets. Or, make a big apple container of white buttercream frosting. Then use the little apple containers to make frostings in all different colors. Then decorate cut out cookies–shaped like apples! Or, fill the little apple containers with rainbow sprinkles, tiny chocolate chips, tiny m&m’s, teeny dots (whatever those are called). Put melted chocolate in the big apple. Have on deck, ready to dip, big marshmallows. Dip and swirl them in the chocolate, then swirl them through the decorations. Let set. I am already feeling buyer’s remorse because I left this great toy behind at the ReStore. IMG_2939

I wasn’t going to buy anything. But then I saw these bowls and I fell for the green color. Two for a dollar.

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I brought them home and liked them even more. I looked them up on the Internet. Fire-King Jade-ite Swirl Pattern Bowls. From the 1950’s. Some people were selling them for up to $50. Martha Stewart is hoarding them in all her houses.

I FOUND A TREASURE.

I have become captivated by my treasure.

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Early morning tea, looking at the exquisite curves of the horizon, the rising sun, my new bowl.

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I draped some of my rosaries over the side of the bowl.

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The next one is from the Sacre Coeur in Paris.

I bought it when I lit a candle there for my cousin Amy who was going to have a baby.

It looks like a perfect prayer for a little baby.

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I put my most favorite bowl, into the new bowl. My daughter painted this bowl for me.

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Another work of art, placed into the bowl. This is a clay sculpture by my son when he was little.

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The original set up for my son’s clay pot is on top of a rock painted by my daughter. I keep this sculpture on my desk.

With a newspaper clipping inside the clay pot:

“I have drawn things since I was 6.

All that I made before the age of 65 is not worth counting.

At 73, I began to understand the true construction of animals, plants, trees,

birds, fishes, and insects.

At 90, I will enter into the secret of things.

At 110, everything–every dot, every dash–will live.”  Hokusai

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The bowls make a nice trap for trolls, bad thoughts, wasteful grumblings. Errant ants, spiders, and ladybugs.

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MADE IN USA.

When you leave the ReStore, you check out near a nice display of clocks. Seattle, Denver, Chicago, and Worcester times. Why Dublin time for the big clock? Because the store manager loves Ireland.

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IT’S A GOOD LUCK STORE!

Habitat for Humanity. Building Soul.

First home. It’s a little house on the prairie or in the big woods. It’s a flower-laden cottage in the English countryside. With bunnies. It’s a Gilded Age grand slam on the coast of New England. It’s a tiki hut, well hidden, in a grove of bamboo along a river that runs to the sea, on the island of Kauai. (Three waterfalls crown the hanging valleys all around it.) It’s a castle in Scotland. A townhouse–in Paris, or Rome, or New York City.

It’s the first fort you built in the woods where you played all day without a helmet on, or a cell phone in your pocket, or a friend. You were all alone. It took you about three whistled and hummed versions of “Hey Jude” to ride your bike there. (The fat-tired junker from the town dump your dad fixed up. The bike had a fender, with a rack over it. You could stack and tie salvaged wood to the rack and haul it to your own building site in the forest. You took the wood from scattered piles of scrap around the construction sites of new homes that were popping up, like swarms of giddy grasshoppers, from the glacier-scraped flatlands of Indiana to form America’s newest suburban dreamvilles.)

Not yet ten years old–you staked out your fort’s foundation, leaned walls in on each other, and when you set the roof, your heart skipped a beat. You crawled inside and sat like a little buddha, all the world’s mysteries at rest inside the tranquil float of your newborn gypsy soul–the one you cleansed every Saturday morning in the confession stall at church. Where you told lies. Because you never kept track of your sins.

Gardens, you soon thought. Now that I have a home in the woods, I ought to tidy up the land around it and make everything look really nice. And you arranged rocks into nice rows, raked out the dirt, made little seats with logs.

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I was displaced–always on the lam for a  new home–throughout my life. From the time I was a baby until after college, I lived in about 13 different houses, in three disparate regions of America–the midwest, the southwest, and the northeast. I attended seven different schools from fifth grade through 12th grade.  “Did all that moving and all of those schools have an effect on you?” Someone once asked me.

Here’s one story about it: My parents, who had seven children, (the last one was born in Arizona), scrambled through the economic classes in the blink of a childhood–mine. Mom and Dad’s first house looked like the houses in the picture below which stand across the street from where our house was–now there’s just a vacant expanse of grass near a warehouse in Ft. Wayne, Indiana, where the ideals of home started for my family. IMG_2955 IMG_2958

Mom and Dad bought a new house eventually. (But kept the first one as rental property–a key move for building wealth.) The new house wasn’t much bigger. Dad built a garage behind it. (Sweat equity.) They planted a little tree in the front yard. It’s the only big tree on the street growing in any front yard–still. That tree is the most regal thing we left behind. A good way to leave your mark!  “Even if I knew that tomorrow the world would go to pieces, I would still plant my apple tree.” Martin Luther.

 IMG_2952 Mom and Dad had more babies and bought another house. IMG_2950Mom began to design houses. She taught herself how to invest in real estate and the stock market. (Mom graduated from high school early, at 16, but never went to college.) Mom designed another house and they built it. IMG_2962 The post-war boom years were losing steam. So Dad accepted a job opportunity in Mexico, just over the border from Arizona. Mom got her driver’s license and we all headed west in two station wagons. I’d been dreaming of becoming a hippie and going to California. But I ended up in the desert in Arizona. We lived, at first, in a house on a highway near the truck stop in the picture below. Pretty depressing. Then we moved to two apartments in a resort area–Mom, Dad and the littlest kids bunked down in one apartment. The older kids (including me) partied in the other. Mexican border+young kids in their own apartment+Led Zeppelin+late-night TV and poker games.  Mom and Dad built a nice house for all of us eventually, but our family was like the rest of the country–as the Vietnam War faded and Watergate ushered in many more “gates” to come–we were kind of dazed and confused. After almost three years, Mom and Dad abandoned Arizona and we headed east. IMG_2954 We moved to a town on the Connecticut shoreline when I was sixteen. I got my own bedroom. I learned about LL Bean and bagels and jocks and college. I unraveled the experiences of loneliness, alienation, being uprooted–and I came to realize that it doesn’t matter if you’re a gypsy or if you came over on the Mayflower and established a compound where your family has lived forever–if you’re on the lam from yourself, and you never find a place to call home, life won’t ever be special.

Mom and Dad’s sweat equity helped all seven of their children end up in college. We were like every other family–the wars inside of each of us, got mixed up with the wars between each other, got mixed up with the wars from intruders and events beyond our household. But–no matter where we lived–Mom and Dad made our house a home. We kept our homes fixed up, we planted gardens, and we ate dinner together.

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A gypsy kid never forgets how cruddy it feels to be an outsider. When everything else is foreign to you, a home isn’t. It’s the one place where you can land and try to get it together and find someone to love. So, when I was approached, recently, by the Massachusetts Master Gardeners Outreach Coordinator and asked if I would consider volunteering as a garden designer for Habitat for Humanity, I didn’t even have to take a minute to think about it.

Habitat for Humanity was founded on, and remains devoted to, a non-denominational Christian housing ministry.  People with scant resources who desire to own their own home (such a sacred dream!) can apply for a home through Habitat for Humanity regardless of race, religion, or ethnicity.

Volunteers must support the organization’s mission statement: “Seeking to put God’s love into action, Habitat for Humanity brings people together to build homes, communities, and hope.”

Habitat for Humanity is not a give-away. Applicants agree to invest 500 hours of sweat equity into the building of their own homes and they agree to help build other homes or, if they are disabled, they agree to work in other, suitable capacities. They pay their own mortgage. And–this is where I get to be involved–the new homeowners need to learn how to keep their homes looking nice outside and how to take care of their property. If any of them would like to learn how to become gardeners, (and some have already expressed interest), we will coach them and encourage them to do that also.

The first garden I ever had was outside my apartment building in Boston. It was about the size of my childhood bed–where I passed many nights pretending that someday I would be rich and have a swimming pool. That dream ended when I became a camping girl and my dream house started to look like this lean-to in Vermont with a view to the Green Mountains: 51656099 elm If you look closely, the lean-to has a desk and a bookshelf in it.

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Habitat for Humanity believes sweat equity can build decent housing and dignity, it can create stability for families, it leads to health, safety, and security in communities, and–it opens up job and educational opportunities. I believe in sweat equity, too. It’s the one resource you have, when you begin with nothing, that will transform your life and enrich your soul.

“We have all known the long loneliness, and we have found that the answer is community.” Dorothy Day.

Everyone needs a place where they can set their soul afloat. And what a dream-come-true it would be, if you could call that place, home.