My husband and I need to move out of our home for a few weeks, possibly for a month. Our insurance agent has enlisted the help of a corporate relocation company to find us a temporary rental. I was surprised to discover that there aren’t as many options in our area as I had expected. We’ve seen three places so far: one with a bad odor, another that is 20 miles away, and today, we visited one that felt quite sad. It’s this sad rental with its sad walls that has really caught my imagination.
The house is approximately 26 years old and is located in a typical middle-class neighborhood. I had high hopes that it would serve as a reasonable place to call home for a month. However, when I entered the house, I was overwhelmed by a deep sense of sadness.
My imaginings
I can imagine that when the house was first built in the 90s, a young family lived there. At that time, the house was shiny and new, filled with laughter and the inevitable sibling squabbles. Perhaps the mom and dad devoted time and effort to transforming that little house into a home, managing the usual chores while also ensuring that every detail of the house was kept neat, clean, and fresh.
Who knows what happened after that? Perhaps the children outgrew the small bedrooms, or the adults “moved up in the company” and sought a larger, better house.
The house shifted from a home to a commodity sometime along the way. The owners decided to rent it out, and in that process, they visited the house less frequently.
The details no longer mattered. Each group of occupants would stay in the house for only a month or two—there was no need to make it feel like home. There was no need to fix the little things: the stopper missing from the sink, the grime along the edges of the kitchen trash can, the crumbs in the toaster oven, the tiny dead roach on the floor, and the cracked and dirty wall plates (switch plates). The rooms of the house held no keepsakes—the walls so bare.
A melancholic atmosphere
This house had a melancholic atmosphere. It wasn’t due to a lack of potential but rather because it felt neglected—a place where dreams had never taken root. As I moved from room to room, I could almost hear the echoes of its history.
The house had become a waypoint, a temporary stop for weary travelers seeking promotions or relocating in hopes of a better life elsewhere. It was also a place for people like us, using it as a hotel while our own home was being repaired.
If the house could talk, what stories would it tell? Would it remember the young couple who first walked through its halls with hopeful eyes, dreaming of a nursery in the spare room and summer barbecues on the patio? Perhaps it would recall how they carefully selected curtains and painted the walls, only to move away when life took them in a different direction.
The lamp
It was the lamp that truly affected me. The living room had the usual couch, chair, and TV, but in the corner stood a skinny floor lamp, slumped and leaning, unable to support itself any longer. That lamp brought forth a deep and profound sense of sorrow regarding the state of the house.
Standing in the living room, I could sense the house’s longing as if it were my own. This house didn’t desire much; it didn’t aspire to be a mansion or a showpiece. It simply wanted to be a home—a sanctuary where life unfolds in all its messy, glorious imperfection. It yearned to be loved, with its flaws embraced and its cracks filled not just with spackle but with the kind of care that transforms a structure into a refuge.
We entered the house with such hope that this could potentially be our temporary getaway, but I left in tears. I felt a strange desire to weep for this house and for anyone who had to live in it.
Perhaps this once-sad house will again become a cherished home where owners take pride in every detail. Until then — I shall forever remember it as walls that grieve.
Also published on Substack.