What is the Most Valuable Thing in Your House?

Orange armoire corey amaro photograph

When Sacha asked, "Mom what is the most valuable thing in our house?" I thought it a strange question and told him so. He gave me the sideways look one does when being sneaky and teasing all at once, "Because if you and dad die before Chelsea and I, I want to pick the good stuff, to resale it you know. I want to be one up on Chelsea." Then he laughed at his own clever thinking.

 

 

Orange armoire
 

Later I asked Chelsea, if she knew what the most valuable thing was in our house. She looked at me oddly, "No. Why?" So I gave her that sideways look that Sacha given me adding, "Because Sacha knows. And he doesn't even have a masters in business. He is calculating what to scoop on to resale if Daddy and I die before the two of you."

Chelsea laughed, then mumbled ding dong brother, then asked, "…And what should I scoop up first?"

Well considering most the stuff is our house is old, peeling, chipped, cracked, faded, worn… and only valuable to one person's eyes namely mine. I told Chelsea what I told Sacha earlier, "Take the orange armoire 'cause it has chocolate inside."

Both of them shook their heads, and had the same response, "Mom." Yet I could tell they are going to go for the chocolate, they always have.

 

   Inside-the-armoire 
(Photo: Inside the old cupboard that I painted grey.)

– Repainting old furniture doesn't necessarily devalue it. Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. But repainting certain antique furniture does. The orange armoire use to be green, and before that grey. When I bought the armoire it was peeling, faded and beyond hope of saving either of those colors that I adore. I painted it red terra which looks burnt orange.



Comments

8 responses to “What is the Most Valuable Thing in Your House?”

  1. I love this – and will unabashedly, unapologetically use ” ’cause it has chocolate inside” on my own children. 🙂

  2. Kathie B.

    My most valuable possession at home is my unfinished translating, stored on flash drives, on my computer hard drive and backed up elsewhere.

  3. The dog and cat of course. As for nonliving thing, it would be FoxyLoxy. He is a much worn and loved Steiff type stuffed fox and is the only thing I have from my Dad’s childhood.

  4. I love this armoire in your kitchen , it is part of the atmosphere .

  5. Oh that is too cute! The things kids come up with is amazing. It made me wonder what my kids would say.

  6. The thousands of slides I took of my children and family over the years. They are stored in acid-free notebooks, but need to be scanned and digitized. Is there time? Do I have time? Precious memories, value beyond measure.

  7. Oh I love this. It reminds me of a similar debate in our family a couple of years ago, our second youngest is absolutely passionate about food, not just any old food, but proper home grown food. So when she was asked by her eldest sister what was the one thing she wanted in the house more than anything else if Mama and Dada were to die, she replied, with the innocence of an 8 year old, “the fridge”!

  8. Rebecca from the pacific northwest

    Anything with chocolate inside it is valuable. Including me, at the moment.
    I watch Antiques Roadshow on TV and wonder what I have that would suddenly make me a millionaire. Pretty much nothing, I’m guessing. But it would surely be fun to spend a day standing in line with my sister and a few of our (not valuable but precious to sentimental sisters) family objects.
    Our poor heirs are going to have to contend with Lots of Stuff.

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