JOSEPH N. BELL -- The Bell Curve
When summer officially arrives in our Santa Ana Heights neighborhood
this year, it will bring mixed blessings. On the positive side, our
godfather, Jim Altobelli, and his Irish godmother, Pat, are polishing up
their big white table and the dozen or so lawn chairs that surround it.
This is a sign that very soon the late-afternoon cocktail lantern will be
lighted in their frontyard, and the chairs will be variously filled until
early October by those of us who are available and of a mind to
fraternize.
But the downside of the coming of summer this year is that the chairs
usually occupied by Ned and Sally Rose will be empty.
When my wife and I moved here 18 years ago, Ned and Sally were
long-established two doors down the street. They bought their Santa Ana
Heights home in 1975, and for almost three decades have watched a
generation of kids -- including their own -- grow up and go off while
their neighborhood struggled to find a new identity somewhere between the
old hands and the young families moving in and embracing a Newport Beach
address.
A neighborhood that had once been Midwestern stable turned mildly
schizophrenic. Million-dollar houses, expensive remodels and Back Bay
estates intermingled with the residue of the modest homes and sometimes
unkempt grounds that remind us of the way we were -- and sometimes still
are.
But change happens, even to old hands. The Roses’ youngest son is
about to graduate from UC Berkeley. Their work is neither as critical or
demanding as it once was. It was the right market in which to sell, and
the right time for an adventure. Everything came together, and so we will
be giving a farewell party for the Rose family on Memorial Day. And
they’ll be in a new home next week.
OK, so maybe they won’t miss the rock band practicing next door and
neighboring frontyards that resemble the Gobi desert or the jungles of
Brazil and the horse manure at the end of their driveway. But the other
side of this coin may well be a homeowners association that will tell
them they can’t leave their garage door open or mount a basket in their
driveway or have a pink front door.
If that happens, some nostalgia will be understandable. Living in our
neighborhood is rather like a narcotic that is extremely hard to kick.
It’s called freedom, and it carries a risk and a price that a lot of
people are not willing to pay. Those of us who have become accustomed to
it -- even warm ourselves in it -- sometimes get impatient at the price
and fight against it. But we wouldn’t trade such risks for our freedom
unless they became intolerable or there were important other
considerations suggesting a move. And because Ned and Sally Rose ran the
risks and paid the price for 26 years with the highest sense of unselfish
friendship and good neighborliness, they leave with both our blessing and
deep regret.
Admittedly, some of the regret is selfish. Just a few days ago, for
example, Ned hitched up his trailer and hauled some heavy plants from my
daughter’s condo to our backyard, where they will remind me daily of all
of the help he has offered cheerfully and with no sense of quid pro quo
over the years. A few weeks ago, he fixed our yearlong water heater leak
by simply tightening the overflow valve. Before that, he removed our
defective kitchen disposer and installed a new one. He and Ron Darling --
the lawyer across the street who would prefer to be a handyman -- put in
a ceiling fan in our bedroom and a garage door opener. And this only
scratches the surface of help offered without strings all those years.
Whenever Ned saw me wielding tools in my garage, he never failed to
poke his head in to see what was wrong and to make sure I wasn’t getting
into serious trouble. And Sally, who works at home, was forever running
one of us to the airport -- or picking us up.
This neighborhood has become a mosaic to those of us who have put down
roots here. When one tile is removed -- especially a critical tile such
as Ned and Sally Rose -- the mosaic changes. That requires an adjustment
those of us left behind don’t want to make, and so we resist change. But
at the same time, we hope that we will recognize the signs when the time
comes for change in our own lives.
A new young family will be moving into the Rose home next week. In the
short view, I’m hoping they won’t take the basket down over the garage so
I will still have a place to shoot hoops -- especially when we have
visitors who think I’m a soft touch and are willing to lose a few bucks
to find that I’m not.
In the long view, I’m hoping that the adults in the new family will
settle into Ned and Sally’s chairs around the Altobelli’s table -- or at
least try them out for comfort. We’ll see.
Meanwhile, we’ll have one hell of a party Monday, which the Roses
insist is just our regular Memorial Day bash and not a farewell party.
We’ll sit around the Roses’ pool and have drinks and stuff ourselves with
ribs and far too many accessories, and we may end up drowsing around a
fire pit. And in case we don’t get around to saying it, “Bon Voyage, Ned
and Sally. We’ll keep the light on for you.”
* JOSEPH N. BELL is a resident of Santa Ana Heights. His column
appears Thursdays.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.