Wednesday, February 6, 2013

Duties Now Assigned to Household Manager

It never fails, something goes wrong with the house every time Andi is out of town for work. There was that time our gigantic willow tree collapsed into our neighbor's yard and recently when our house was invaded by mice. (But not too recently ... they are GONE, thank goodness). Last week while Tory and I were eating lunch, there was a loud BOOM and the entire house shook. It scared me half to death and I searched everywhere to find the source of the sound, at the ready to grab out coats and head out the door if something was really wrong, but I couldn't find anything. Only after I called Andi in a panic and he talked me off the ledge did we conclude it must have been the house settling or ice shifting and cracking on the roof. I never know how to handle those housing crises when they arise and I'm not perceptive enough to notice when something's the matter until it's usually a big mess.

Yesterday, I picked up some of Andi's dirty clothes on the floor by the downstairs bathroom and squish... the carpet beneath my bare feet was wet. Hmmm? I shrugged it off and figured Tory probably dumped some water on the floor while I was doing laundry in the next room. About 20 minutes later, I walked by again to put away some bathroom towels and noticed the carpet was really wet. I investigated further. The carpet in the office nearby was drenched. CRAP.

I hate, hate, hate these situations because I never know what to do. I looked around for water spots on the ceiling and felt the walls and windows for wetness. I couldn't tell where the source of the water was coming from. I called Andi and he tried to talk me through some problem-solving measures over the phone. See, my problem is that I always underestimate the issue. "Do I need to run out and buy a dehumidifier?" I asked him. "Sounds like a bigger issue," he thought. And it was.

Andi called a clean-up company that handles water damage. The damage estimator immediately found the culprit of the water leakage. A pipe located on an exterior wall, attached to our backyard water spigot, cracked and water had been slowly leaking into the basement for some time. The inside of the walls were soaked and of course, the carpet. I unhappily cancelled my afternoon babysitter and with it, my only chance at some mommy alone-time this week, and gave permission for the clean-up team to descent upon my house. The crew went to work quickly in ripping up the carpet and cutting away the wet insulation and drywall.

The head clean-up crew guy told me he shut off the water and I needed to call a plumber right away to fix the leak. Ahem. I needed to call a plumber? Great. What do I even say? I despise interacting with men in this situation because as nice as they are (and these guys were very sweet), I have no idea what they're saying, do not understand a word of the report-out about the work they've accomplished and the entire time they're talking, I'm solely focused on remembering enough details to recite it all back to Andi.

Hoses everywhere and carpet ripped up from the floor downstairs

Tory watching the men work out the window
Tory, Chloe and I were quarantined to the playroom to avoid all the sharp objects and men working

Many dollars later, the pipe is fixed and the clean-up is underway. The crew will be back tomorrow to check the progress of the carpet-drying and moisture-removing.

Dryers airing out the water-soaked office

Now that I'm the "household manager," Andi is shifting responsibilities like this to me. I understand it, but I don't like it. He's obviously very busy at work and I'm here at home so it makes sense for me to handle issues like this, but GAHHHH.

On top of it all, our power went out this morning for AN ENTIRE HOUR during breakfast-time, which made slopping some food together for Tory a bit challenging. She was very displeased with the yogurt and banana I provided her (clearly a first world problem for Miss Tory Bean, the tantruming toddler) and did not enjoy eating her breakfast by the light of the window.

When the power returned and I was finally able to brew myself a cup of coffee from our Keurig, the dang thing had technical difficulties. I wanted to call Andi at work, I really did, but I went online instead and read through some troubleshooting suggestions on the Keurig website. I cleaned our machine, just as the website suggested, and BAM! the coffee maker is working again. I saved the day and I was able to have my morning coffee, finally. Maybe I am capable of the duties required as Household Manager.

6 comments:

  1. Ugggggh, so sorry about the pipe. That really sucks.

    My keurig acts up a lot, too, (it's two years old) and it drives me crazy. Our biggest problem is Thomas uses it with those hot chocolate k-cups and they clog the machine. Easy enough, but I don't want coffee after cleaning it, I want coffee now!

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  2. What a headache. I just want to commend you on being a way better wife than I am, lol! Even though I don't work outside the home, the hubby still has to take care of all that kind of stuff. I pester him all the time with little things that he has to look up and talk me through it rather than me just making the extra effort to look it up and learn myself. I just don't feel like I have the mental energy to expend on certain things, so I make him do it, haha.
    Oh, and about the Keurig, their customer service is pretty awesome. We are currently on our 3rd machine...every time we have an issue, we call them and they just send us a new one for free!

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  3. My husband works as you know but I find myself doing more of these tasks. I'm even furnace/air conditioner shopping for us so they can be replaced in my schedule not when I need them most :)

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  4. I feel like I am usually responsible for dealing with these sorts of things, but if I really think about it I usually call my dad before taking any real action. Yes, I call my dad before I call my husband... and I am 41. Shouldn't I be able to know the right thing to do by now? Darn my dad for appearing to always know what to do. In fact, earlier this week we had a water issue and it was dad to the rescue.

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  5. I'm in a different position in regards to home mechanics, but I still get confused at times. In my experience, most contractors are more than happy to explain things in layman's terms if you're not quite getting it. If they're not, hire someone else next time! You're paying for their help, both technical skills and their ability to be more general in their explanations.

    Also, a notepad! When something is beyond me that I need to relay to Dave, I jot notes as the contractor is talking. Ain't no shame in my game.

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  6. Ugh. Water everywhere is awful. What a gigantic and stressful and EXPENSIVE headache. Sorry you had to deal with that!

    We sort of split things like this. Actually, no. I think A. still takes over most of these. I try to help, but then he wants me to tell him VERBATIM what the repair person said and gets frustrated that I don't ask specific question (How, praytell, would I know to ask random things about random things?) and it becomes more drama in the end. So I often am the one to research the company, get the phone numbers, etc, but have my husband make the call or be there when something is fixed. But I can tell you it is not ideal and it's not easy now that his job requires more hours.

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