Hanging around home, sweet home
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JOSEPH N. BELL
We got three letters last week from local real estate agents, all
saying essentially the same thing.
The area in which we live is hot. They have a waiting list of
people who want to drop untold wealth on us just to live there. Our
house fits their clients’ needs admirably, and the agent will
cheerfully make the connection for us.
We’ll be rich, the buyers will be ecstatic, and the agents will
bask in the satisfaction of bringing all these good things to pass.
What followed then, in one of the letters, was a list of recent
sales with the amounts paid, mostly for houses on streets I can see
from my upstairs windows.
The prices were breathtaking -- almost grotesque.
I live in what was called Santa Ana Heights when we moved here 22
years ago. Somewhere along the line, it took up the tonier name of
Bayview Heights. And two years ago, we became part of Newport Beach.
The main reason most of my neighbors wanted to be annexed by Newport
Beach was their conviction it would increase our real estate values.
Man, were they right!
I had reasons to be dubious. Santa Ana Heights is a highly
eclectic neighborhood in a city of establishment wealth. Our homes
are a mix of the remnants of a middle-class housing development a
half-century ago, a sizeable number of creative remodels, and a
growing number of tear-downs that are being replaced by houses best
described as mini-mansions.
We still have horses walking our streets, mobile homes and trucks
parked in our driveways, open garage doors and aircraft from John
Wayne thundering over our patios at what seem 30-second intervals.
But we also have comfortable homes and spacious yards, and we
connect with our neighbors and feel a strong sense of community.
Except for the aircraft , those of us who live here embrace the
eccentricities, but I suspected they might turn away buyers at the
prices I saw listed on that real estate letter.
Man, was I wrong!
Real estate agents seem to be seeking properties to sell in my
neighborhood more aggressively than adding to their waiting list of
buyers.
That raises a critical question for those of us fortunate enough
to own such properties. Do we take the money and create a whole new
lifestyle somewhere else with considerably less financial stress? Or
do we see it as a pleasantly startling increase in our paper wealth
but certainly not a sufficient reason to upend a lifestyle that is
working?
During the same week I got those real estate letters, a number of
articles appeared in newspapers and magazines speculating on when and
how the real estate boom would self-destruct. A Los Angeles Times
headline summed it up this way: “It’s Not a Bubble Until It Bursts.”
Government figures show that while median home prices rose 15% in
the nation last year, they rose by 23% in Southern California, a
five-year trend that has certainly shown no sign of weakening in the
Newport-Mesa area.
But this hasn’t stopped the doom-sayers who have long been making
a cottage industry of predicting when and how this bubble will burst.
Typical was an article in Fortune magazine that three years ago
said: “U.S. housing prices are stretching the outer limits of what’s
reasonable and sustainable.... In a year or two, prices will fall
with a thud.”
So that’s what we’re looking at in Santa Ana Heights: housing
prices outrunning even the imagination, accompanied by multiple
predictions that they might cave in soon, played off against the
temptation to cash out at the peak and restructure our lives in a new
mode.
Against that backdrop, priorities have to come into sharp focus --
and in our case, it wasn’t much of a contest.
We have spent two decades caressing and fine tuning our home to
our needs and desires and dreams. It meets all of those expectations
and then some. Putting a price on this is like selling a child. There
may indeed come a day when changing needs dictate a new and different
lifestyle. But not now. So out of curiosity, we check out the houses
on the list of those that just sold and marvel at the prices -- and
then go home and settle in.
*
How many of you watching the 2005 Tony Awards from New York on
Sunday were aware that one of the big winners was a local boy?
Bill Irwin, who won as best actor in a play, grew up in Newport
Beach and graduated from Corona del Mar High School before taking off
in a career as notable for its creative diversity as its remarkable
humility.
His parents, Horace and Elizabeth Irwin, were close family
friends. Both of my daughters attended high school with Bill.
We enjoyed barbecues on the Irwins’ patio and shared vicariously
in Bill’s successes. He graduated in theater arts from Oberlin
College in Ohio, got his advanced degree at the Ringling Brothers and
Barnum and Bailey Clown College, and cultivated his mime skills on
the streets of San Francisco before he polished them in a small
circus that became his first performing family.
By that time, Bill’s parents had moved to Mendocino, and we were
invited to Bill’s wedding in their spacious back yard, a memorable
event that included the entire circus cast. Bill left the circus to
write and perform a play called “Regard of Flight” that helped win
him a MacArthur Genius Grant, a profile in the New Yorker magazine,
and that helped launch a career in the theater that has been
recognized with three previous Tony nominations -- as a writer, a
choreographer and an actor.
The last time we saw Bill perform in Los Angeles was in a delight
he wrote called “Fool Moon.” We attended with his parents, down from
Mendocino, and -- after the show -- Bill took our theatrical son,
Erik, for a backstage tour and talked shop with him. “Fool Moon” was
the capstone of Bill’s mime character of the gentle, downtrodden,
self-deprecating, well-meaning victim, which made Sunday’s Tony even
more remarkable because it was achieved in the role of an acerbic,
sarcastic college professor in a revival of Edward Albee’s “Who’s
Afraid of Virginia Woolf?”
I talked to his parents after the awards ceremony.
Because the telecast was delayed on the West Coast, a lot of their
friends in the east knew the results and phoned congratulations,
reducing their suspense, but not their excitement.
Health problems will keep his father at home, but Bill’s mother
will be flying to New York next week to see the play. And back home
where it all started, we’ll be wondering where his creative juices
will take him next.
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