goodbye 44 Waterloo, thanks for the memories!

Grammy and I moved into 44 Waterloo in February 2002.  Things were different back then, let me tell you why:

  • Josh and Nicole, aka Mommy and Daddy, aka Auntie Nicole and Uncle Josh weren’t married yet.  They tied the knot four months later, in June, 2002.
  • None of you Beaupre & Clickman grandchildren were born, can you imagine that?  It would be another 14 months before Ben, the first, came into our world.
  • Tim and Tarah, aka Mommy and Daddy, aka Uncle Tim and Auntie Tarah, were dating.  They wouldn’t marry for another 28 months.
  • The successful business Grammy and I started and successfully built – Beaupre & Co. Public Relations – was at its peak, three years after our company had been acquired (bought out ) by a big company in New York City.
  • I was 48 years old and Grammy was 46.

Fast-forward 12 years to Sunday, June 22, 2014:

  • All 7 of you, my beloved grandchildren, were together at 44 Waterloo for one final time.  The “big house” (8,000 square ft. across four floors) had been sold and Grammy and I were moving out in two days.
  • why are we moving?  It’s too big and way too expensive and we want something manageable.
  • Ben is 11 years old; Emma 8; Camden 8; Ainsley 6; Molly 6; Jack 3 and Madigan 2.  The big house was “Grammy and Papa’s house,” a place that will stay within your memory banks for most if not all of  your life (except Jack and Madigan).  Six of you literally went from tiny babies in diapers to self-functioning, independent spirits.

It’s impossible to remember everything we said and did together at 44 Waterloo.  Some of your memories will undoubtedly be shaped by the word “big” – after all it was a bit of a  monster with five bedrooms, four floors, seven bathrooms, a giant attic, a hot tub room, exercise room, massively gorgeous kitchen and a warm and inviting office (mine).  It had three decks and a big front porch.

The rooms you will probably remember best are the big “basement” (as you called it), aka family room aka Larry Bird room aka Man’s room.  And of course running across the beautiful kitchen and giant “Great Room” with the wood fireplace.

So many memories!

Sunday dinners, all together.  The sweeping views of the saltwater Piscataqua River from the kitchen and Great room.  ‘Hikes’ down to the “sitting rock” and ‘brook.’  Carefully walking down the 59 steps to go across the metal bridge to the big dock. Playing baseball, football, soccer on the front lawn.  Sitting on top of the pool table.  Me making “Papa Corn.” Playing baseball and football in the basement.  Playing “dogcatcher.” Playing “Smoke on the Water” (Loud) in the basement in between periods of our knee hockey games, strumming our fake guitars.

There are hundreds more.

It was a loud house that’s for sure – whenever we got together we noticed how the sound escalated because of the room size and high ceilings, especially the Great Room where the ceilings were over 20 feet high.

For our last get together, Grammy and I did four special things:

  1. we had a “burn party” in the fire pit, burning boxes upon boxes of old business papers. Everyone joined in.  Jack, I think you liked it best!

2. we had our last Sunday dinner together at 44 Waterloo and everyone actually looked at me and the camera!

 

3.  we got together – the seven of you and me, and then I gave you these instructions: “We’re going to run through every single room in this house, across all four floors.  And while we’re running we are going to scream and holler and make all kinds of noise.”  And that’s what we did – starting with the Great Room floor, then into the basement, then to the third story, then to the attic.  It was a crazy, wild, funny way to say goodbye to 44 Waterloo, to Grammy and Papa’s house, to YOUR grandparents house.

4.  we took an official photo in front of the house:

The big house may be gone from our lives, but each of us will remember something special about it.  That’s the best part, isn’t it?  The memories we create.  That’s all any of us ever leave behind in the end.  Remember this – always.   Make sure when  people think about you they will be filled with positive, inspirational, kind, fun, uplifting thoughts.  Those are the best kind of memories because they fill people’s souls with warmth, sunshine and smiles.

 

funny ha-ha from the Jack Attack

you are quite the little conversationalist now Master Jack Attack.  You are talking a blue streak and are a non-stop questioning chatterbox.

Here are some quotable quotes captured over the past six months – including when you lived with us from November 2013 through February this year:

I like talking to big girls.

The Youk needs gas.

I like that boat, can we go on that boat?

is this your house? Am I sleeping here tonight?

don’t forget Papa, you have to call the plumber!

 

You were funny at Christmas when you lived with us. You were SO excited, bugging Grammy and I to decorate ASAP!  You kept saying:

Put up the decorations!  buy the Christmas tree!

upon seeing the Christmas tree lights (finally!) – all lit up at our house:

Holy Cow!

back to more quotes, not connected with Christmas:

Hey, you need to fix your clock!

I like your socks.

Our house isn’t gonna be there… it moved

I want to live here again!

Here’s one of my favorites:

Where are you going…  to work?  I don’t work Grammy, I’m just a boy.

your new hobby

Dirty sink?  Call Jack!

Over the past week, you’ve taken on a new hobby that keeps you busy, happy and fulfilled.

You grab the stool, drag it to either of the two kitchen sinks at our house, and go to town with paper towels and hand lotion.

Scrub. Scrub. Scrub.

Rub. Rub. Rub.

Clean. Clean. Clean

The combination of soap and warm water feels good, as must the feeling of accomplishment that you’ve made something better.  We’re going through a lot of hand soap lately, but it’s worth the price of admission.

When your brother and sisters go to school and you’re at home with just your Dad, you’ll soap the sinks.  Or sometimes it’s when everyone’s around.  It doesn’t matter.  A hobby is a hobby and whenever the mood strikes, the need to scrub takes over and you do your thing. It’s very cute to watch.

Now if we could only get you to wash our wood floors….

a list of “always” for the festival of trees

Every two years, we visit the Portsmouth “Festival of Trees” during the Christmas holidays.  Our experience always includes:

1. People, lots and lots of people!  It’s always packed; the lines to see the decorated trees are very long and the parking lot is jammed packed.

2.  C-C-C-C-old!  Its always bone-chilling cold!  This year was no exception, for the first time ever we skipped the first house trees because the wait outside was brutally, bone-numbingly freezing. The adults mind it more than the kids!

3. thirteen is a lucky number!   It’s always a good time being together, all 13 of us, your family, your cousins, aunt, uncle, grammy and me.  Everyone’s in a good mood, taking everything in…enjoying the lights and feeling the spirit of Christmas.

4. Yummy # 1!   the free chowder always warms us up, at just the right time.

5.  Making a decision!  It’s always fun to decide which tree – out of dozens and dozens of decorated trees –  is our personal favorite.  Once we decide, we take our wooden popsicle “voting stick,” drop it in the container by our chosen tree, and cast our vote.  It’s more fun than voting for the President of the United States!

6.  Yummy # 2!  After an hour or two of tree viewing and bearing the cold, it’s always wonderful to go to the Japanese Steakhouse.  The chef cooks our food in front of us, making volcanoes out of stacked onions, lighting surprisingly hot fires and flipping food into our mouths (we try to catch things, but usually don’t).

Hooray for the 2013 Festival of Trees, one of our favorite nights during the holidays!

 

play day with Papa

What a fun afternoon we had today!

You let me hang out with you and we kept busy doing all kinds of cool things including:

  • foosball
  • table hockey
  • pool
  • tricycle riding in the Larry Bird room
  • trucks and cars in my office

the only thing we didn’t do is your current favorite thing… playing with the wooden doll house.  You’ve got that covered on most days, often moving it from the edge of the living room to the center.  you’re a man on a mission Jack, there’s no stopping you.

one of the things I’ve been noticing lately is how much you look like your brother Ben when he was your age… here’s proof: