One thing about being a real estate agent – you become very
comfortable looking into other people’s closets. It’s just part of the
job. Closet space is IMPORTANT – we have lots of stuff these days.
The homes built in the 1960s or earlier generally have very very small closets
compared to what we’re used to today. Lots of times, owners have
added on closets or expanded closets (one of my relatives even made a small
bedroom into a closet). In any event, closet space, and storage in
general, is an important aspect of a home for most buyers.
Now when I go to a friend’s home to socialize I sometimes
find myself automatically opening closet doors as I’m getting a tour of the
house. Not cool. I catch myself right away, and people laugh.
But now I try to remind myself when the house I’m viewing is not on the market
to NOT look in the closets unless prompted. Looking into closets has
become an automatic reflex.
When we put my now-husband’s home on the market, in one of
the closets we left a piece of artwork that consisted of a stylized hanging
skeleton, hoping that buyers would get a kick out of it and feel warmly towards
the home. Okay, it’s a stretch – but the more you can make buyers feelGOOD when they are in your house, the more likely they will buy it! The
house sold, but I have no clue whether or not the skeleton had anything to do
with it – I am pretty certain it didn’t hurt, however.
I got the idea for this blog from one of my favorite
columnists, Joel Stein, who writes “The Awesome Column” in Time Magazine.
Stein’s article is about “stuff” and “clutter” in general and was based on the
book “Life at Home in the Twenty-First Century”, about an 11 year UCLA project
studying the homes of 32 Southern California middle class families. I
can’t wait to read it. If you’re as fascinated as I am about homes, home
life, and what people use and keep, I also recommend Bill Bryson’s “At Home: a
Short History of Private Life”. Bryson goes room by room – including the
closets – to describe how the modern home got to where it is today. Happy
reading! Excuse me now, I’ve got to go clean out those closets…..