http://www.seniorhomes.com/p/the-family-transition-blog/

Friday, June 11, 2010

State of Maryland Green Registry Approval, Details and Photos of Property

MISSION:TRANSITION
256 South Carroll Street
Frederick, Maryland 21701-6523
301-332-5585

www.missiontransition.net, www.Zookdesign.com

Interior Design, Transitions and Estate Management

Member since May 2010

Management and Leadership
Environmentally Preferable Products and Services

My businesses, MISSION:TRANSITION and Zookdesign, are by nature green businesses in that I recycle, salvage and re-use materials and items. I have been providing transitions and estate management, downsizing, relocating, organizing, simplifying and the re-design and re-building of living and working environments for people and business since 1999.
Environmentally Preferable Purchasing
I purchase recycled content cardboard (for use in my business) and mulch and compost (about 150 lbs per year) from the county facility for use on the business property.
Environmental Restoration or Community Environmental Projects
I have created a natural, drought resistant, urban landscape by planting appropriate ornamental trees and plants that require very little water, providing increased habitat for birds and animals. I planted Leland Cyprus five years ago that are now 30 feet tall and are full of birds and nests. I have eight birdhouses around the property, full of chicks. All of this work has provided opportunity for pollinators, ) bees, hummingbirds, etc.) to thrive, and birds to find plenty of food, and roost in trees and  birdhouses installed on the hill. I also have frogs, dragonflys, bats.

Waste

Solid Waste Reduction and Reuse

My business is all about re-use. I remove as much material as possible from my jobs for recycling, re-sale and donation. The Great Estate Re-Cycle, for Estate Clearing, Sales, Donation and Salvage, and The $349 Interior RE-Vitalization, an interior design RE-USE Service, both facets of the MISSION:TRANSITION business.

 
Recycling
At my office, I recycle cardboard and white paper, compost organic materials, including some white paper, as experiment, and contribute residual organic materials to the county mulch and compost facility.
Energy Efficiency
I have a new radiant heat in the office floor, energy efficient windows, and Energy Star appliances. I use a clothes line for all of my personal laundry. Tenants on the property use an Energy Star Rated Washer/Dryer and Dishwasher.
Water
Water Conservation
I have 250 gallons of water stored in rain barrels, as well as 300 gallons of water in ponds, at all times. They all feed the organic garden and landscaping at my property. I can approximate, that I saved 6,000 gallons of city water last growing season and this year a quarter of that, so far. I also have low flow fixtures (shower heads and toilets) throughout my office facility.

Stormwater Management and Site Design

I have a complete storm water management system for my property. Water from the office roof is directed into the rain barrels, ponds and organic garden, for 6 to 8 months of the year. The organic garden is 1,350 square feet and it is located in the historic district of Frederick Maryland so it is an urban garden.

A permeable river pebble "patio" occupies another 400 square feet. I have also constructed a hill of drought resistant plantings, such as ornamental grasses, sedum, day lilies, Russian Sages, Echinacea, Bee Balm, Butterfly Bush, Curly Willow, zinnias, wildflowers, etc. It acts as a buffer zone from traffic on the front, south west corner, of the property at South Carroll Street and is 7,290 cubic feet. One of the 150 gallon ponds is integrated into this hill, fed from the rain spout on the front of the house and used minimally to water, if necessary. The ornamentals planted are drought-resistant.
In total, I have converted 2,890 square feet (including the hill and garden) to a non-mowing area. The grass that remains on the property is cut with a non-motorized rotary mower and electric weed whacker.
Other
Member US Green Building Council (USGBC), Office of Small and Disadvantaged Business Utilization (OSDBU), and Historically Underutilized Business Zone (HUBzone)





The $349 Interior RE-Vitalization Program. You CAN Afford an Interior Designer!





Your One-Day Interiors RE-Vitalization for your House or Apartment! You CAN Afford an Interior Designer!


I bring Practical, Creative (they are not oxy-morons!) Advice and Techniques to You and Your Personal Space.

 
Together We Create a Realistic Plan, Based on Your Objectives and Personal Style, And I Add My Influence of 30 Years of Real Design and Project Management Experience.


Your Day Includes: A Lifestyle/Interiors Assessment and Interview.


Re-Thinking Your House as a Whole, Considering All Existing Elements, Furnishings and Accessories.


Re-Selection and RE-Commendations of Paint Colors, Layout, Lighting, Window Treatments, Surfaces and Storage!



RE-Commendations and Creative RE-Use of Existing Furnishings and Accessories in a RE-Arrangement that will Optimize Your Space, Making it Comfortable, Beautiful and Very Functional!


A RE-Vitalization Notebook/Workbook is Provided in which we are actively Documenting Your Personalized Plan, Sketching, Noting, etc.
You then Use this to Refer To as You Accomplish the Goals We Set Together!


Kids Rooms, Den, Living Room, Master Suite, Home Office, Kitchen, Dining Room and Storage!



















TheSpaceFixer@gmail.com



$349 Your Space Re-Vitalized and Your Life RE-Energized!

Style is Fickle, Your Plan Keeps it RE-AL!
Zookdesign.com

Wednesday, May 26, 2010

MISSION:TRANSITION, Frederick MD, Relocation, Transitions, Estates, Short-Term Rentals: Letting Go Without Losing Touch

MISSION:TRANSITION, Frederick MD, Relocation, Transitions, Estates, Short-Term Rentals: Letting Go Without Losing Touch
Himself at 78At 30

Letting Go Without Losing Touch

Letting Go Without Losing Touch


My dad died July 16, 2008. Congestive Heart Failure. Over the last 5 years of his life he would comment that IT was "a slippery slope."



I was grieving before he died and I'm still grieving, which might or might not be 'normal' by someone else's standards, but for me it is what it is. I'm dealing with it.



It creeps up on me several times a day. Today I was struggling to screw a hook into a sinker in a brick wall, to hold a bracket for a lamp, a "hickey" (dad word,) and in my frustration at the prospect of having yet one more thing to get done around here, I heard in my brain," I'll fik it", (dad term said in light-hearted determination when faced with a broken or 'not-right thing'.)



This is my grieving, and when it happens it makes me want to exhale, (vomit) my sadness. But I suck it up and keep on keeping on. Just like I've been taught to do. No time to sit and cry and feel bad. The "whim-whams" have to be overcome. Just go forward. Survive this recession. Go get business!



Dad was the one who had a "Never Give Up" poster on his office wall, years past, when life had become very tough for he and my mom. She credits herself with getting him out of bed many mornings, which I believe. That poster was just a backup.



With his illness, it annoyed him, to put it lightly, to feel himself becoming weak. He would exclaim "Well, Hell, there's nothing wrong with me!" when I'd stupidly insinuated he should put his feet up or ask if there was something I could do for him. Eventually, he came to terms with it.

What choice did he have...



My clients, many of them seniors, are suffering through the loss of a spouse or other VIP, and have been through what I am going through many times in the past, no doubt.

I can appreciate this more now. Death is harsh.



When I work with them to downsize their personal belongings and move them forward to their next home. I ask them to "let go" of their stuff, the things that are outdated, not useful any longer, worn out, and sometimes they leave behind the good things, which I take to charity or sell for them.



Letting go of belongings is also letting go of the emotional attachment to it. I have sat through stories and tears with more than one client. I cajole and do my best to keep them on track. Sometimes they rear up in resistance, get angry, blame me for their situation, but eventually we move on.



The death of my father is the precursor to my mother's downsizing. She decided for several reasons, including health, to move in with my sister and brother in law and my 13 year old nephew. There she can have her own suite and as close to a normal family life as is possible. She's in the midst of the downsizing and packing process, and seems to be managing it well, and has not asked me for my assistance, since, after all- she trained me...



I just came back from my parent's house, with, among several inherited treasures, my dad's special mid-century chair. He and mom purchased it in 1956 right after they married, with other special, very " hip" furnishings which they brought to their tiny town in central PA. Dad also purchased the first Chevrolet Corvette ever to grace the roads of that beautiful valley, in 1954.



(He was interested in innovation and progress, not willing to settle for Victorian" fluff"; the stuff of his mother and her sisters.)



This chair is an icon of that era and a symbol that I relate directly to him and my childhood. As a little kid, I would lie on my back on the ottoman and twirl around observing the geography of the ceiling, deep in thought, wondering what it would be like to walk on the ceiling and wondering why I couldn't.



That chair seems strange and foreign here in my home. I walk into the room and subconsciously ignore it, in denial that it is empty of him, I guess. An adjustment I'm going through, like squinting to see in the dark. Last night I sat in it, closed my eyes and observed being there. Quietly, for once.



Staying in touch with my history, my memories, while being present to my present is a challenge.

Friday, April 23, 2010

The "Great" Estate RE-Cycle! Sell, Salvage, Donate, RE-cycle. Trash is Last!

Check out the info on How Mission Transition runs our Estate Sales and Clean Outs.

http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs023/1102632010301/archive/1103138925399.html

April Newsletter: Reflections from Days Spent in "The Nest." Packrats and Hoarders...

Take Note...Mission:Transition is the Gunk and Junque Exterminator.
Since 1999, I've been rattling the cages of Packrats throughout the DC METRO!


http://archive.constantcontact.com/fs023/1102632010301/archive/1103333352633.html

ZEN and the Organizationally Deficient


Maybe it's about focus. Like taking that time to sit and stare at the wall and count to 10, and do it until your thoughts stop counting just IS.




1-2-3, did i take the bread out of the oven... 1-2, it WAS my turn! 1-2, if he doesn't save some money, 1-2-3-4, it's a nice day, what am i doing in here..., 1-2-3-4-5-hmmm, i got to 5, 1-2-3-4-, drat!, 1-2-3-4-5-6 what a waste of time... 1-2-3-4-5, so much to do...1-2-3-4-5-6-7-this is supposed to help me get organized?, 1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8, what tha! 1-2- oh god, 1-2-3, 3's a charm, 1-2-3-4, dog biscuits..., 1-2-3-4-5, this stinks..., 1-2-3-4-5-6-7, how could he treat me...1-2-3-4-5-6-7-8-, oh shit...and on, No right, no wrong. One day they say given enough time to clear the mental jibber-jabber you reach serenity.


Getting focused is a practice, too.  Striving for impeccability is just that: Striving. It is all in the Practice of it. Process. Keep working at it.


Here is a link that I like. The Simple Living Manifesto, 72 ideas to simplify your life.


Maybe making it simple, makes IT simpler.

http://zenhabits.net/2007/09/simple-living-manifesto-72-ideas-to-simplify-your-life

Popular Posts

My Blog List

Blog Archive