KAREN WIGHT -- No Place Like Home
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We live on a very eclectic street. The houses run the gamut of size and
style.
There are modern, New England, California ranch, French, big, small and
everything in between. We moved into our house 11 years ago and our
mailbox was located in the front corner of our yard, just like many
others on our street.
Quite frankly, the location didn’t strike me as important at all. Some
people have mailboxes in the corner of their lots. These lone rangers
dutifully guard the property line. Other mailboxes are adjacent to the
neighbors’ yard, giving the owners some Gladys Kravitz-like
opportunities.
Some neighbors have mail slots in their garage doors. A few have
monuments of one sort or another that house their mailboxes in random
locations along the sidewalk. In other words, the mailboxes are as
eclectic as the houses to which they are attached (or unattached, as the
case may be).
As most things go in my house, it was only a matter of time until I
reached the mailbox as a remodeling opportunity. I realized that I could
have a closer encounter of the mailbox kind if I moved my post to the end
of the path that leads from my front door to the street. Made sense. I
could incorporate it into a planter, landscape the heck out of it, drive
my husband crazy along the way -- yep, it had all the desired
qualifications of a project I could take on.
So, one day, with a baby in my arms (this was my insurance that I would
not have to help dig a posthole or mix cement) I started pointing and
waving. My good-natured husband moved the mailbox from its lone ranger
status in the corner of the yard to its new home in a planter at the end
of our walkway. I followed his efforts by planting an impressive variety
of shrubs and flowers and -- voila! -- the project was complete.
I can’t remember how many days it took for me to realize that my new and
improved mailbox was not being fed by the mailman. How many government
holidays could we have in a row? Maybe it was the sleep deprivation
torture that my newborn was inflicting upon me. Maybe I was just wildly
unpopular, even to the bulk-raters.
Could it be that the mailman missed my new work of art? He would have had
to walk right by it on the way to the next mailbox. It took a few days,
lying in wait, to catch Mickey the Mailman. Finally, I was successful.
How could he possibly justify withholding my coveted catalogs?
Mickey told me that I would not receive any mail in the new location
until I filed a change permit with the post office. At first, I thought
he was kidding. Stopping in the middle of my lot instead of stopping at
the corner post didn’t seem like an inconvenience at all. The old mailbox
had not been next to the neighbors’, there was no two-for-one effort
being lost.
I argued that for some destinations, he walked up to the garage door to
put the mail in the slot. He was certainly losing more precious time
strolling to garage doors than by delivering my mail to a mailbox on the
sidewalk. No ma’am. No permit, no mail.
So off I went to the post office to file my permit, and a few more days
without mail just to seal my punishment. Mickey gave me the nod and also
my mail, finally. As I drive by the many “special” mailboxes that seem to
adorn my carpool circuit, I wonder if they went through the same thing I
did.
Is that barrel a regulation size? Is that killer whale in the right
place? Do the propellers on that biplane meet codes? Or do their owners
believe in creative expression at any cost, individualism over Big
Brother, and the freedom to flaunt their spirited manifestations of
originality and invention?
Maybe their mailmen just smile.
* KAREN WIGHT is a Newport Beach resident. Her column runs Saturdays.
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