Tag: projects

  • I Thought I Wanted a Sectional

    I Thought I Wanted a Sectional

    Our backyard remodel is almost complete. We are waiting on the pergola to go up. Meanwhile, we have been doing the fun part of the remodel—furnishing.

    I will admit, this part is more fun for me than Robert.

    I dream it up. He supports my crazy ideas. I order. I get excited.

    I had my heart set on a sectional in front of the fireplace. I had dreams of a cool fall night, a cozy sweater, a glass of red wine snuggled up in front of the fire watching TV.

    But have you looked at the price of outdoor sectionals lately? They cost an arm and a leg… and a hand, too.

    I finally found a sectional to make my cozy night dreams come true for the reasonable price of $500 on Wayfair.

    When it arrived, it felt like someone switched my coffee cup.

    I could not like it.

    The backs of the seats were too short and not supportive. The cushions were thin and lightweight, causing them to shift as we sat down. Then once you plant yourself on them, they just… squish. That’s the best way I know how to describe it.

    I don’t know if it’s just me, but when Robert makes my coffee and uses the wrong coffee cup, I sort of have to choke it down. My lips don’t like coffee out of stainless steel. They like to hug the cup as I drink. My heart feels deflated when the cup is too small; there has to be either too much coffee or too much milk, but it can’t be just right in a small cup.

    Then I realized I might be the same way about seating.

    I have all sorts of outdoor seating around our house. I have egg chairs, an outdoor twin bed that I made with thick pillows all the way around it. I have a lounge rocker. I love chairs. If I am going to sit, it has to be comfortable.

    When I finally found the courage to tell Robert that I hated the outdoor sectional we bought, he was understanding. I decided to go to HomeGoods and find something to test in the store.

    But…..Right before I left, it occurred to me that if I wanted to really love it, I might have to make it.

    I loaded up Abby, and we got a couple of miles into our trip to Conway when I said, “I think we’re going to go home. I know that we are going to find something pretty at HomeGoods, most likely wicker, and the appeal will be more based on looks than comfort. I think I need to make what I want for the backyard.”

    I found some plans on Etsy for $5. I chose the sectional and table by Ana White Plans. I gave Robert my material list since he was already going to Lowe’s.

    It looked like a big job to start.

    Robert teased me, saying he thought it would take me three weeks to complete the sectional.

    That’s a great way to summon the competitive side of me.

    So that night, I got to work.

    First, I consolidated the material cut list for the couch and the separate sectional. I went to the garage and labeled and cut all my wood. I used my Ryobi Brushless Sliding Miter Saw and a bright green marker to label the pieces.

    Tip: I use a bright green marker because it’s easier to find the labels.

    The plans looked overwhelming at first, but they were actually built around one simple pattern. Every armrest was basically the same: two vertical posts, a couple of horizontal rails tying them together, and an apron underneath that gave me a solid place to attach the rest of the frame. Once I figured out that one assembly, I just repeated it.

    It was like building with life-sized LEGO pieces.

    Then came the framing.

    The seat frames were even simpler than the armrests. I started with two long boards running the full length of each seat and connected them with vertical supports. Most of the seats were built with the supports spaced about 17 inches apart, creating a series of sturdy rectangles that would eventually hold the seat slats and cushions.

    I used invisible joints thanks to my Kreg Pocket Hole Foreman.

    They are extra fancy and not necessary. In fact, the plans didn’t call for that.

    The corner sectional was the only piece that changed things up a bit. Instead of several evenly spaced supports, it used two 70½-inch rails with just three interior supports. The two outer openings measured 20½ inches wide, while the center opening stretched to 22 inches.

    Even though the dimensions changed slightly, the process didn’t.

    Measure.

    Mark.

    Clamp.

    Check for square.

    Drive the screws.

    Repeat.

    By then I wasn’t really following plans anymore—I was following a rhythm.

    Every completed frame looked a little more like the picture I’d had in my head, and every pile of leftover lumber got a little smaller. Somewhere in the middle of all those pocket holes, tape measure markings, and screws, the project stopped feeling intimidating and started feeling inevitable.

    Especially when Robert helped me attach the armrests.

    I attached the armrest to the sectional piece since it only required one armrest. I won’t do that alone again. It was not fun.

    Almost there…

    The coffee table ended up being a miniature version of the sectional. It started the same way—with a simple frame—and then we added the tabletop boards one by one. This is where Robert stepped in with his OCD.

    If you’ve ever built something with evenly spaced boards, you know that your eye can spot one that’s even an eighth of an inch off. Robert wasn’t about to let that happen. He measured every gap, adjusted each board, measured again, and only then drove the screws home.

    I probably would have looked at it, shrugged, and said, “Looks good enough.”

    Robert would have noticed it every time he walked by.

    That’s one of the reasons we make a good team. I’m usually thinking about the big picture—what the finished project is going to look like and how it’s going to feel to use it. Robert is the one making sure every board is straight, every gap is consistent, and everything is built to last.

    By the time we finished the table, it felt like we’d built it a dozen times already. The process was familiar, and every new piece went together a little faster than the last.

    Once the frames were finished, all that was left was adding the seat slats.

    Suddenly, it wasn’t a stack of boards anymore.

    It was a sectional.

    When we carried everything out to the patio, I couldn’t stop smiling. The wood hadn’t even been sanded yet, and I already loved it more than the store-bought sectional I’d sent back. There was something about knowing every board, every screw, and every measurement because my own hands had put them there.

    Then the cushions arrived.

    I held my breath as we dropped them into place, wondering if all those hours in the garage had actually been worth it.

    They fit perfectly.

    Robert stretched out across the corner seat.

    Charlie claimed his spot beside him before I had a chance to.

    And just like that, the picture I’d been carrying around in my head for weeks was sitting right in front of me.

    I thought I wanted a sectional.

    What I really wanted was this.

    Not because we saved money—although we did. Not because I got exactly the dimensions I wanted—although I did. But because every time I look at it, I remember the green marker labels, the sawdust covering the garage floor, Robert making sure every board was perfectly spaced, and the moment something that started as a $5 set of Etsy plans became our favorite place to end the day.

    A few days later, our pergola contractor stopped by.

    He looked at the furniture for a minute and said, “That’s some nice furniture.”

    Robert smiled and said, “Thank you. Felecia built it.”

    The contractor looked confused.

    “Who’s Felecia?”

    “My wife.”

    He shook his head, looked back at the furniture, and laughed.

    “Man… you and her should’ve just built this pergola.”

    I couldn’t help but laugh because that’s exactly what I told Robert before we hired him.

    Maybe that’s what I love most about building.

    It isn’t about proving you can do something. It’s about looking at a project everyone assumes requires someone else and quietly asking,

    Why not us?

    Sometimes the answer is a pile of lumber, a garage full of sawdust, and a place where your family will drink morning coffee, watch football on cool fall evenings, gather with friends, celebrate birthdays, and, Lord willing, make years of memories together.

  • We Still Climb

    We Still Climb

    Today, I wake up with great pride in my husband and children.

    Robert and I spent one of our first dates climbing up Pinnacle Mountain with Subway in our backpacks. I had no idea then that he would be my husband, and those hikes we continued to take together were a foreshadowing of the future we were building in tandem.

    Recently, we decided to gut our entire backyard deck and pool area.

    Before picture

    It started because Robert said we needed a new pool liner. And if we were going to replace the liner, we needed to replace the skimmer. And if we were going to replace the skimmer, he would like to add another one to make maintaining the pool easier.

    That led to tearing out the gravel around the pool and putting in concrete.

    The pool before the make over.

    Then that idea expanded to the wooden deck.

    Eventually, we had a whole new slab of concrete designed.

    We got numerous quotes for an outdoor kitchen, but they were ridiculously high. Then we finally got one reasonable quote, and the contractor sent us a picture of what we would get for that price.

    It was so small that Robert and I laughed.

    We clearly could not afford what we were looking for.

    Eventually, Robert and I ran across a company called Cornerstone that sold backyard kitchen kits.

    They have many to choose from here.

    I was immediately thinking, This is going to be so easy. We can do this.

    Robert was immediately thinking, This is crazy. I don’t know if we should do this.

    We kind of have this thing in our marriage.

    When I first met Robert, as smart and skilled as he is, he wouldn’t even do little things for me, like build a recipe box or make small wooden projects. It wasn’t because he didn’t love me or because he didn’t feel like doing them.

    It was because he simply lacked the confidence to think he could do them.

    And do them well.

    But I was looking at these plans thinking, This looks just like sewing plans. We just stack these little bricks like they tell us.

    We can do this.

    Turns out, we were both wrong.

    It was not easy.

    But we could do it.

    The first surprise came when the owner of the company called and told us that the first of our two shipments was coming.

    Nine pallets of block.

    I think Robert’s anxiety immediately spiked because he was thinking, How am I going to fit all of those in the garage?

    I am pretty practical, and I also look for ways to cut corners, so I was immediately like, “These bricks are going toward an outdoor kitchen. They can literally live outdoors.”

    Problem solved.

    Except then the delivery people offered to use a forklift to take the pallets up to the garage. It took everything Robert—who is very strong—the delivery man, and our son had just to help get the forklift up our driveway.

    And that was when we began to understand exactly what we had gotten ourselves into.

    Those blocks now had to make it completely around our property and into the backyard, where the construction was going to take place. They also needed to get close enough to the concrete pad that building with them wouldn’t be entirely impossible.

    So we started moving them.

    Eventually, we moved all of them.

    About 25,000 pounds of concrete blocks.

    Each one weighed around 40 to 50 pounds.

    We moved them one at a time.

    I wrote about that here.

    And then we had to build with them.

    We wanted the whole kitchen finished by the Fourth of July, but we had a problem: our concrete needed time to cure.

    So on day 14, I suggested that we start with one row.

    Then another layer.

    Then another.

    Once we finished that, we moved on to the next thing.

    Robert did a lot of the first and second structures by himself, but then we got to the fireplace.

    It was much bigger.

    And I knew I needed to jump in.

    So we did it together.

    And we worked.

    Night after night, we would start when Robert got home from work and keep going until 10:00 or 11:00 at night. Then we would feed our family whatever restaurant was still open.

    And then we would get up and do it again.

    We were exhausted.

    We were sore.

    We were working in 100-degree heat.

    We both lost weight during the process.

    Then one night, I woke up around 3:00 in the morning and realized Robert wasn’t beside me.

    I thought for sure he had gone to check on the pool. He had been having anxiety about it, so I figured he had gone to check the liner and would be right back.

    I waited for him to come back.

    I tried to fall asleep, but I couldn’t.

    Before I knew it, it was 5:00 in the morning, and Robert came through our bedroom door to get ready for work.

    He had been on the couch the whole time.

    He was in so much muscle pain that his arms were going numb.

    Mine were too.

    We did eventually discover that if you prop yourself up on a cushion instead of lying flat, it helps with some of the numbness. A helpful tip, I suppose, if you ever decide to move and stack 25,000 pounds of concrete blocks.

    Anyway, Robert crawled into bed just to sit with me.

    We were both thinking about how much work we had already done.

    How much work we still had left.

    How sore we were.

    Then Robert pulled up his fitness ring app.

    He had slept for 29 minutes.

    Twenty-nine minutes.

    And I just started sobbing.

    How much could we put on each other?

    How much could we put on him?

    He still had to go to work.

    I’ve learned recently that I have an anxious attachment, and I don’t like rupture. I don’t like unpredictability. And this felt unpredictable to me because my husband was about to go to work on 29 minutes of sleep.

    I immediately started feeling all the things I knew he was going to feel—the queasiness I get when I don’t sleep, the irritability, the exhaustion.

    I think that is just the empath in me. I hurt deeply when I love somebody, and I can feel almost anyone’s pain.

    It’s the weirdest thing.

    Robert told me not to cry.

    He told me he was going to be fine.

    And then he went to work.

    I cried for about 30 minutes after he left until I finally cried myself back to sleep.

    When I woke up, I felt okay.

    But I was determined to get us to bed early that night.

    Those were some of the hard moments we went through to make this happen.

    But through the whole thing, I learned how ridiculously strong Robert is.

    I don’t think I ever fully realized his strength.

    He continues to amaze me every day, and one thing is for sure: I will never again be surprised when he surprises me with something new he can do.

    We worked.

    We stacked block after block after block.

    We built a ten-foot-tall fireplace.

    An island.

    A kitchen and grill area.

    It was one of the hardest and most rewarding things I have ever done.

    And while we built it together, Robert was the backbone of the whole thing.

    He made sure everything was level. He had to learn how to use mortar because the adhesive that came with the kit was only useful if you already had a level surface.

    Our concrete, as concrete almost always is, was slightly unlevel.

    So Robert had to mortar it.

    He was nervous about that because, like I said, he doesn’t like to do anything unless he can do it with perfection and precision.

    Then he learned that he was skilled at that too.

    And we just kept working.

    Night after night.

    Round after round.

    Block after block.

    And it reminded me of the first time we climbed Pinnacle Mountain together.

    We climbed because we wanted to get to the top.

    That is what this was too.

    We were climbing because we wanted an outdoor kitchen that was affordable to us.

    We climbed through 25,000 pounds of blocks.

    Through 100-degree heat.

    Through sore muscles and numb arms.

    Through 29 minutes of sleep.

    Through mortar and measurements and making sure everything was level.

    We kept climbing.

    And somewhere along the way, our children started climbing with us.

    They carried blocks.

    They worked beside us.

    They watched their dad learn how to do something he had never done before.

    They watched their mom look at something enormous and say, We can do this.

    And then they watched us do it.

    Robert and I spent one of our first dates climbing a mountain together with Subway in our backpacks.

    I had no idea then that I would marry him.

    I had no idea that we would build a life together.

    I had no idea that, years later, we would stand in our backyard with four children, surrounded by thousands of pounds of concrete blocks, building something that once seemed completely beyond us.

    But I think those early hikes were a foreshadowing of the future we were building in tandem.

    Because we like doing hard things together.

    And I think that is what marriage is.

    Every day, doing hard things.

    Sometimes carrying more than you think you can carry.

    Sometimes looking at the person beside you and realizing you never fully understood how strong they were.

    Sometimes climbing when you are tired.

    Sometimes climbing when you are sore.

    Sometimes climbing when you have no idea how much farther you have to go.

    Robert is putting the final cap on the fireplace.

    But continuing to climb because you want to see what is waiting at the top.

    And today, when I look at what we built, I am ridiculously proud.

    Not just of the fireplace.

    Not just of the kitchen.

    Not just of the 25,000 pounds of concrete blocks that somehow made their way from our driveway, around our property, and into something that will probably outlive us.

    I am proud of my husband.

    I am proud of my children.

    I am proud of us.

    All these years later, we still climb.

    And now our children climb with us.

    And probably the most daunting idea is that what we’ve built in our backyard will outlive us, just like what we built in marriage.