Nashville New Homes: The lights are on & somebody’s home!

Something is different about 882 South Curtiswood Lane.  Very different.   For the past nine years, no one has lived there.  It has been fun driving on Curtiswood without having to watch my speed, because no one was there to care.  There is now! 

The home that has served as the “Executive Residence” for all of Tennessee’s Governors, from 1949 -2002, was all lit up again!  There was even a State Trooper at the main gate flashing his lights for me to slow down!  Welcome to Nashville, Governor Bill Haslam and family!

Tennesseans, especially the family of our new Governor, are greatly indebted to the efforts of former Governor Phil Bredesen and his wife Andrea Conte.  They unselfishly took on the challenge of organizing and executing the first major renovation/restoration of this historic 80-year old home since the state purchased it in 1949.   Of the 18 million dollar project cost, 9 million was raised from private donations. **

(**Politicos – I have not fact-checked the accuracy of these exact figures and am only using those ascertained from media articles on the subject.  Go jump on someone else.)

Also added was an underground facility that will seat 160.  That addition was very controversial, but will prove to be an asset to the state.  As a child, I always knew when the Governor was having a party because there was a huge circus tent on the front lawn, connected to the residence.  Sometimes there were porta-johns too, if my memory serves correctly.   

If you do the math and compile the entire cost of the whole addition and restoration project, the taxpayers are not affected.  The cost of the underground “Conservation Hall” was fully funded by private sources, and the restoration funded by the state, which honestly had let the facility go far too long without performing desparately needed repairs and alterations.   Try letting your home go for 53 years and see how you come out!

Thank you Governor Bredesen and First Lady Andrea Conte for sacrificing your residency at such a cool place to live for the benefit of future leaders!

Enjoy this overview with former First Lady, Andrea Conte:

Since 1949, there have been a few changes to the Executive Residence over the years.   Perimeter fencing and entrance gates were added in the early 70’s, Lamar Alexander added a swimming pool during his term, at no cost to taxpayers.  (I cannot imagine an estate of that caliber not having a pool in the first place.) 

One Halloween many years ago, after a successful visit to Minnie Pearl’s house, a group of us decided we would head next-door to “Trick-or-Treat” at the Governor’s Mansion too.  As we approached the gates, they suddenly opened…without us saying a word.   A voice came over the intercom…. “BOO!  Come on up!”   And we did.

We arrived at the back door of the mansion to be greeted by First Lady Betty Dunn.  She invited us in, the whole time apologizing for not having any halloween candy on hand.  No one had ever “trick-or-treated” at the Governor’s Mansion before. 

She served us cookies and refreshments and then took time to show us around the place.  What a gracious and charming lady!   Then, and now.    And for those that may be asking….. No, we did not roll the yard when we left.  (Not that one anyway!)  

Here are some interesting links regarding this historic Tennessee home:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tennessee_Governor’s_Mansion

Here is an aerial view of the property.  http://wikimapia.org/4168812/Tennessee-Governor-039-s-Mansion

And here are a few scenes of the residence that all Tennesseans can now be very proud of:

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Trey Lewis is a licensed Real Estate Broker in the State of Tennessee with Ole South Realty, www.OleSouth.com, 615.896.0019  direct 615.593.6340.  Specializing in new home sales in the Greater Nashville area to include Nashville, Murfreesboro, Smyrna, and Spring Hill, Tennessee

Nashville New Homes: New Home or older home? You decide.

Which in the Nashville area is better to buy?   A brand new home, or an older home?   Thats a good question and the answer really depends on who you ask.   Better yet, just ask yourself!  

Let’s compare…

New Homes

  • Everything is new, clean and fresh. 
  • Everything that is man-made has a useful life.  In your new home, you get to start the useful life clock!  Before you need a new roof, your hair color will have probably changed and you will be well on your way to retirement.  You will not be replacing corroded water and sewer lines in your lifetime.  The list goes on.
  • In a new home, depending on the stage of construction, you have the flexibility to personalize your home with your own choices!
  • There are many life styles and floor plans to choose from, all in the same location.  Decide where you want to live and then decide what you want your new home to be, not the other way around.
  • Stay healthier and safer in a new home.   You don’t have to worry about lead-based paints.  You don’t have to worry about what may be looming in the HVAC ductwork.  You don’t have to think twice about what may be in that carpeting.  Your home meets all the latest building codes.
  • A new home is certainly more energy efficient, which leaves you more money to enjoy life with.   Remember, you just can’t beat fun!
  • A new home comes with a warranty.  Many of the mechanical systems carry long term warranties in addition to the builder’s warranty.
  • You are the “first link” in the equity chain.  You get first dibs!
  • Your new trees are not as tall as your new home, eliminating the chore of gutter cleaning for many years.  You will have great fun showing pictures from the cruise you took while your old-home friends were cleaning gutters.

Older, Resale Homes

  • If you like to spend vast amounts of money on tools, an older home may be just for you. 
  • You can enjoy working on your house while your friends are playing golf, boating, fishing, hunting, watching ball games, or traveling.
  • You are not the “first link” in the equity chain.  Others have come before you. 
  • An older home may not comply with the latest codes, and may not be eligible for FHA financing.  That may not be a problem for you, but it could be a problem when you want to sell.  Not everyone has 20% to put down these days.
  • Buyers tend to have more negotiation power with resale homes than new homes.  Just like they do with used cars.  Remember, there are probably issues that you don’t even know about waiting to be fixed.
  • The older home may be in a neighborhood without protective covenants.  “Terrific!” you may say.  Until your neighbor parks a mobile home in the back yard for a brother-in-law to live in, who happens to work on old trucks.

 Those of you that prefer older homes, please do not take offense with this satirical comparison.  I know that a newer home is not for everybody… just the people that want more fun out of life and do not want their second job to be at home!

Trey Lewis is a licensed Real Estate Broker in the State of Tennessee with Ole South Realty, www.OleSouth.com, 615.896.0019  direct 615.593.6340.  Specializing in new home sales in the Greater Nashville area to include Nashville, Murfreesboro, Smyrna, and Spring Hill, Tennessee

Nashville New Homes: Assafartay is going to Honduras.

Don’t you just hate it when people call you by a name that you don’t like?   I certainly do. 

On my first mission trip to Honduras many years ago, we were introducing ourselves to a local family, one that has since  become very close to each of us.   Everyone was saying their names slowly and basically playing panamines to get the name across.   Being “Trey”, I picked up the closest food tray and pointed to it.  Little did I know that food tray was an “assafartay” in Choluteca, Honduras.  Damn.  I should have started with “uno, dos ….”

But I didn’t, and that name is used regularly for me in Honduras.  That’s okay, it is great to see the Hondurans get a good laugh!   They are wonderful people and a joy to be around.  I cannot wait to be there again!

About our involvement in the area…. Hurricane Mitch devastated Honduras in 1998.  Friend and fellow Rotarian, Ronnie Strickland, went there on a mission trip and saw where Rotary International could greatly help in the region’s recovery.  Through his Rotary Club in Franklin, TN, he solicited support of Rotary International along with other clubs in Middle Tennessee and Northern Alabama.  The primary focus has been to bring electricity and clean drinking water to remote villages. 

The project has grown every year, and is currently coordinated by the Lawrenceburg Rotary Club.  Each year, we focus on a new village consisting of 50-80 homes, or approximately 500 residents.   Hundreds of thousands of dollars have been spent on these projects, all through donations and matching grants from Rotary International.   Different clubs send volunteers for a week until the project is complete.  Our week is February 6th.

As the projects have grown, we have also expanded into dental clinics, opening school libraries, and clothing drives.  Although there is most definitely a language barrier, there is no message that cannot be communicated with a smile.  Allow me to ramble on another minute for a laugh…. The same word can mean many different things, and is differentiated only by the way you “roll your r’s.” 

One day, a woman asked me when we were leaving, in Spanish.  I pulled out the pocket dictionary, figured out what she was asking, and replied… with a best attempt in Spanish.  I didn’t roll my “r” just right.  Instead of saying “Airport on Saturday,” one of the bi-lingual guys told me I had just called her a “Saturday Whore.”  Everyone laughed.  Thank God.

Lets move on to some scenes of our past trips to Honduras.  If anyone would like to donate funds to a great cause, please send your donation to Spring Hill Rotary Club, PO Box 865, Spring Hill, TN 37174…attention Honduras mission.  Or, call me and we will make other arrangements.  I promise it will not be spent on beer.  :0)

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Trey Lewis is a licensed Real Estate Broker in the State of Tennessee with Ole South Realty, www.OleSouth.com, 615.896.0019  direct 615.593.6340.  Specializing in new home sales in the Greater Nashville area to include Nashville, Murfreesboro, Smyrna, and Spring Hill, Tennessee

Nashville New Homes: What goes up must come down.

No, this post is not about new home sales.  Its not about our economy either.  But if it was, I would be happy to tell you that new home sales are picking up and the economy shows signs of continued improvement.

In a few short weeks, many Rotarians from Middle Tennessee and Northern Alabama will gather at Nashville International Airport for a flight to somewhere much warmer.  Not only will we enjoy the break from winter, but we will also enjoy helping out less-fortunate folks across the globe. 

During our week in the Choluteca region of Honduras, remote villages will receive electricity in their homes, filtered drinking water, and eco-stoves that won’t fill the inside of their homes with smoke while meals are prepared.   Teeth will get pulled, and bare feet will get shoes.  Old clothing will become new again.  And life as they know it will get just a little bit better.

We’ll pack the maximum weightof supplies and other goodies the airlines will allow into plastic tubs.  We’ll take clothes for the week in a back pack that many of us will leave behind…clothes and all.  And most of us will have spent every dime we had with us on the needs of our new friends, holding back just enough to pay the “departure tax” at the airport for the flight home.  In Honduras, Customs lets you in free.  You must pay to leave!

This year, some in our group are going to stay in local homes.   Nope, not this fat boy.  I’m going to opt for the $15/night hotel that comes with breakfast.  Not that I feel above staying in a group setting with local families… its just too embarassing to fart only to hear others laughing…. in Spanish!

Many people have farted, or maybe worse, while landing in Tegucigalpa, the capital city of Honduras.  This is what we will look like from the ground as we arrive in Honduras.

Before we leave, I will post more information on our mission and pictures of previous trips and accomplishments.  If anyone would like to make a difference in the lives of Honduran families, I will make certain any donations will be put to good use…. not cold beer.  That is cheap down there too,  by the way!

These trips are very spiritually rewarding and I feel priviledged to participate.  We know we cannot change the world, but we can make a difference one life and one village at a time.

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Trey Lewis is a licensed Real Estate Broker in the State of Tennessee with Ole South Realty, www.OleSouth.com, 615.896.0019  direct 615.593.6340.  Specializing in new home sales in the Greater Nashville area to include Nashville, Murfreesboro, Smyrna, and Spring Hill, Tennessee

Live from Afghanistan.

The last topic posted on this blog was about one of our new home advertising programs receiving a Silver Award (second place) in National Competition.   Second Place is good…. but sometimes second place is simply not good enough.  Such is the case with our nation’s standing in the world.   Second place isn’t going to cut it.

For Veteran’s Day, I posted a letter from a friend and fellow Rotarian, Commander Neal Beard, who is still on assignment in Afghanistan.  If you haven’t read it, please do:

https://nashvillehomesblog.com/2010/11/14/everythings-gonna-be-all-right-another-veterans-day-tribute/

Yesterday, I received an email from Neal, who plans to be back in the US sometime in late February.  Although he will be greatly missed on this year’s Rotary mission trip to Honduras, what he and our troops are doing over there is far more important. 

With his email was a brief power-point presentation.  I relate to technology like Tiger Woods relates to a Monk, so I am unable to post the power-point here.  Pictures will have to do, followed by Neal’s most recent written update.

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Update from Afghanistan

29 December 2010

 In emails and letters from friends back home, I’m often asked, “What are you doing in Afghanistan and what is it like?”  Those questions are not easily answered in a brief email or even a letter.  So, to everyone who has asked me that and who I have not already given a good explanation, and to anyone who might be interested, let me try to explain.

I’m serving with the United States Navy Seabees.  The Seabee’s (Construction Battalions sometimes referred to as CB’s) were first organized during World War II and were an integral part of every land based operation in the Pacific Theater. 

 Seabees moved forward with the Marines providing contingency engineering support as they secured the littorals (a shore or coastal region) during the initial wave of invasion in the Pacific and continued to push forward as the Marines engaged the enemy and secured the beaches for further troop landings.  They were at places like Luzon, Okinawa, the Marshal Islands and Iwo Jima.  They pushed roadways inland, cleared jungle areas for base construction and built bridges, causeways and fuel depots. 

They were the construction men who also built the airstrips and camps for the troop surges that followed.  When the Soldiers and Marines pushed forward to engage the enemy, the Seabees were out front clearing the way.  They would often have to alternate from working the blade controls of a grader or dozer to grabbing their rifle, dismounting and returning enemy fire.  Thus the motto, “We build and fight for freedom.”

Seabees were there when American forces landed at Inchon during the Korean War.  We were there through all the years of the Vietnam War.  We were there during Operation Desert Shield and Desert Storm pushing inland with Generals Boomer and Schwarzkopf—at the time I was a Second Class Construction Mechanic assigned to Naval Mobile Construction Battalion 24 on the move in the Northern Desert of Saudi Arabia as American and Coalition Forces pushed the Iraqi Invaders out of Kuwait. 

 Since that war, every armed conflict that America has engaged in has been a Joint Forces Operation and has included multiple coalition partners.  Our Marines now find themselves fighting far from the littorals and their Generals are often the Theater or Battle Space Commanders.  We are still there with them but now, more often than not, find ourselves supporting an Army Command as well as traditional Marine Expeditionary Forces. 

A Seabee Regiment (where I am currently assigned) will normally only deploy when it has two or more Navy Construction Battalions in the field to provide Command and Control (C2) over.  But the war in Iraq and Afghanistan has changed that.  Today, our Regiment has responsibility for all contingency construction in Regional Command South and Southwest Afghanistan and includes Air Force and Army engineers.  In Regional Command North in Mazare Sharif, we have one Seabee Battalion supporting that Battle Space Commander with engineering support.  So, technically, we cover all of Afghanistan.

We are currently garrisoned within a NATO compound at Kandahar Air Field (KAF) on the outskirts of Kandahar City.  Within the security fencing and barriers that surround KAF, are over 30,000 Coalition Forces (including Afghanis, Canadians, Brits, Australians, Bulgarians, and Czechoslovakians; troops from the Netherlands, Poland, Albania, Turkey, Arab Emirates, France, Italy, Germany, China, and probably some I haven’t met yet) and thousands of contractors from all over the world.

 Elevated cameras, unmanned aircraft and huge helium filled blimps provide an optical view of the base and surrounding area.  During the first few months that we were here, insurgents would sneak in as close as possible and lob in rockets—usually at night—setting off screaming sirens and multiple loudspeakers reverberating sounds of an English speaking Afghani or British soldier announcing “Wocket-ah-tack” as if his mouth were stuffed with cotton.  (We had two incoming rockets on Christmas night and another on the 26th.  Two Third Country National (TCN) casualties resulted.) 

 It is relatively safe here on KAF despite the occasional rocket attacks, though there is certainly danger all around us.  The real danger is outside the wire (safety of the camp) where our coalition forces are taking the war to the enemy and are constantly subjected to small arms fire, indirect fire and the ubiquitous Improvised Explosive Devices (IEDs) along roadways and foot paths. 

 The base is laid out in a helter-skelter fashion with a few paved straight streets and several meandering ones of gravel.  A skim of dust from vehicle traffic covers everything and often stays suspended in the air like an ever present fog.  Sometimes the dust is so thick in the air that the razorback mountain, less than two miles away cannot even be seen in the background during the day, (a jagged rock formation, much like a dorsal scale plate projecting upward on the back of a dinosaur—the mountain divides the southern suburbs of the city and lies just north of KAF). 

Kandahar City sprawls along both banks of the Arghandab River and was originally built by Alexander the Great in 330 BC.  As we move from KAF to our Forward Operating Bases (FOBs) and Combat Outpost (COPs) we pass along Highway 1 and pass through the city which is the capital of the Kandahar Province.  Kandahar city is the birthplace of the Taliban Insurgency. 

 Agriculture thrives along the narrow fertile valley that borders the Arghandab River.  As we travel along the roadways we pass fields in different stages of cultivation; some awaiting planting (usually poppies) and some teaming with melons, wheat, corn, beans and acres of dark green marijuana dwarfing the fields of corn on either side.  

The paved road leading out of Kandahar City, and through the barren desert landscape, is pock-marked with craters hastily filled-in with concrete, asphalt or gravel because of previous IED explosions.  All along the shoulders of the road are carcasses of burned out or twisted automobiles and abandoned Russian military vehicles.  Mud huts often line sections of roadway and an occasional hut will sit isolated in the distance of the desert sometimes surrounded by a short mud-brick wall.

We see herders with sheep or goats or camels grazing in the distance.  Along the roads are men and boys heading to market or back towards home.  People travel by foot, in open carts, or on the backs of donkeys, motor bikes or in cramped automobiles.  We have very little contact with them.

 There are few trees and very little vegetation—at least there is not much until the rainy season comes which will be soon.  When the rains do come, every swale or low place will become a raging river or lake—here they call these low places “Wadis”.  KAF floods in the winter. 

 Our days are now in the high 60’s and our nights are plummeting to the mid-twenties—no snow yet.  Thank goodness.

 Little seems to be changed from our understanding of life back during the days when Marco Polo, Alexander the Great, or Xerxes the Great passed through these regions.  Life is harsh, the people are poor and, for many, their entire life has been lived in the middle of this desolation while war wages all around them. 

Spitamenes (an educated son of a wealthy Persian, not a native to the country) and the leader of the Afghan resistance during another war back in 330 BC, once asked Alexander the Great, “Why are you here?  Why are you fighting us?  We are poor and have nothing of value.  We do not want anything you have to offer.”  Alexander could offer little in the way of an explanation other than that Afghanistan was on the Silk Road, a route between Greece and China, and Greece had to control that route.

Sometimes we ask ourselves if what we are doing here will ever really make a difference.  I believe it will—I certainly hope it will.  But sometimes I wonder if we could give Spitamenes any better answer than Alexander did!

 Thank you Neal for the update and know that our thoughts and prayers for your continued safety, and safe return, are with you and all that are serving over there. 

Trey Lewis is a licensed Real Estate Broker in the State of Tennessee with Ole South Realty, www.OleSouth.com, 615.896.0019  direct 615.593.6340.  Specializing in new home sales in the Greater Nashville area to include Nashville, Murfreesboro, Smyrna, and Spring Hill, Tennessee

 

Nashville New Homes: The gift of freedom.

I know the primary focus of this blog is supposed to be about all the reasons to purchase a new home, but there are sometimes more important things to talk about.  One such topic is the dedication and commitment made to us by everyone that is serving, or has served in the US Armed Forces, as well as their families.   It is their sacrifices that preserve the freedoms we enjoy.

Last night, I was watching a special on wounded warriors on TV.  With a son-in-law, nephew, and numerous friends serving in the military, my thoughts quickly wandered into a series of “what if?” 

This morning, a favorite blog that I subscribe to, http://johnhealdsblog.com/2010/12/27/didja-have-a-happy-christmas/ also payed tribute to wounded warriors and referenced another blog to subscribe to, www.iraqandback.com.    

This afternoon I received the following email, forwarded to me by a fellow agent and friend.   Countless numbers of families and friends are just one phone call away from this experience.  Please read and reflect….

 MAY  GOD BLESS THIS AIRLINE CAPTAIN:
He  writes:
My lead flight attendant came to me and  said, “We  have an H.R. on this
flight.” (H.R.  stands for human remains.) “Are they military?”
I  asked.
‘Yes’,  she said.

‘Is  there an escort?’ I asked.

‘Yes,  I already assigned him a seat’.

‘Would  you please tell him to come to the flight deck.
You can board him early,” I said..

A short while later, a young army sergeant entered the  flight deck.
He was the image of the  perfectly  dressed soldier.
He introduced himself and I asked him about his soldier.
The escorts of  these fallen soldiers talk about  them as if they are  still
alive and still with us.

‘My  soldier is on his way back to Virginia ,’  he said.

He  proceeded to answer my questions, but offered no words.

I  asked him if there was anything I could do for him and  he said  no.
I told him that he had the toughest  job in  the  military and that I
appreciated the  work that he does for the  families of our fallen  soldiers.

The first officer and I got up out of our seats to shake his hand.
He left the flight deck to find his seat.

We  completed our preflight checks, pushed back and  performed an uneventful
departure.

About  30 minutes into our flight I  received a call from the lead flight
attendant in the cabin.

‘I  just found out the family of the soldier we are carrying, is also on board’, she
said.
She then proceeded to tell me  that the father, mother, wife and 2-year old
daughter were escorting their son, husband, and father home.
The family was upset because they were  unable to see the container that the
soldier was in before we left.
We were on our way to a major hub at which the family was going to wait four
hours for the connecting flight home to Virginia   .

The father of the soldier told the flight attendant that knowing his son was
below him in the cargo compartment  and being unable to see him was too much for
him and  the family to bear.  He had  asked the flight  attendant if there was
anything that could be done to allow them to see him upon our arrival. The
family wanted to be outside by the cargo door to watch the  soldier  being taken
off the airplane.. I could hear  the desperation in the  flight attendants voice
when she  asked me if there was anything I could do.. ‘I’m on it’, I said. I
told her that I would get back  to her.

Airborne communication with my company normally occurs in the  form of  e-mail
like messages. I decided to  bypass this system and  contact my flight dispatcher  directly on a secondary radio.

There  is a radio operator in the operations control center who connects you to
the telephone of the dispatcher.

I was  in direct contact with the dispatcher..  I  explained the situation I had
on board with the family  and what it was the family wanted
He said he understood and that he would get back to me.

Two hours went by and I had not heard from the dispatcher.  We  were going to
get busy soon and I needed to  know what to tell the  family.
I sent a text message asking for an update.
I  saved the return message from the dispatcher and the following is  the 
text:

‘Captain,  sorry it has taken so long to get back to you. There  is policy on 
this now and I had to check on a few  things.
Upon your arrival a dedicated escort team will meet the aircraft.
The team will escort the family to the ramp and plane side.  A van will be used
to load the remains with a secondary van for the family.  The family will be
taken to their departure area and escorted into the terminal where the remains
can be seen on the ramp. It is a private area for the family only.
When the connecting aircraft arrives, the family will be escorted onto the ramp
and plane side to watch the remains being loaded for the final leg home.
Captain,  most of us here in flight control are veterans.  Please pass our
condolences on to the family.  Thanks.’

I  sent a message back telling flight control thanks for  a good job.
I printed out the message and gave  it to the lead flight  attendant to pass on
to the  father.
The lead flight  attendant was very  thankful and told me, ‘You  have no idea
how much this will mean to them.’

Things started getting busy for the descent, approach and  landing.
After landing, we cleared the runway  and taxied to the ramp area.
The ramp is huge with 15 gates on either side of the alleyway.
It  is always a busy area with aircraft maneuvering every which way to enter and
exit.
When we entered the ramp and checked in with the ramp controller,  we were told
that all traffic was being held for us.

‘There is a team in place to meet the  aircraft’, we were told.
It looked like it was all coming together, then I  realized that once we turned
the seat belt sign off,  everyone would stand up at once and delay the family
from getting off the airplane.
As we approached our gate, I asked the  co-pilot to tell the ramp controller we
were going to stop short of the gate to make an announcement to the passengers.
He did that and  the ramp controller said, ‘Take your time.’

I  stopped the aircraft and set the parking brake.
I pushed the  public address button and said,  ‘Ladies and gentleman, this is 
your Captain speaking I  have stopped short of our gate to make a  special 
announcement.
We have a passenger on board who deserves our honor and respect.
His name is  Private XXXXXX,  a soldier who recently lost his life.
Private XXXXXX is  under your feet in the cargo hold.  Escorting him today 

is 
Army Sergeant  XXXXXXX
Also, on board are his father,  mother,  wife, and daughter.
Your entire flight crew is  asking for all passengers to remain in their seats
to  allow the family to exit the aircraft first. Thank you.’
We continued the turn to the gate, came to a stop and started our shutdown
procedures.
A couple of  minutes later I opened the cockpit door.
I  found the two forward flight  attendants crying,  something you just do not
see. I was told  that  after we came to a stop, every passenger on the aircraft 
stayed in their seats, waiting for the family to exit the aircraft.

When the family got up and gathered their things, a  passenger slowly started
to clap his hands. Moments later more passengers joined in and soon the entire aircraft was clapping.
Words of ‘God  Bless You’, I’m sorry, thank you, be proud, and other kind 
words were uttered to the family as they made their  way down the aisle and out
of the airplane.  They  were escorted down to  the ramp to finally be with 
their loved one.

Many of the passengers disembarking thanked me for the  announcement I had
made. They were just words, I  told them,  I could  say them over and over again,  but
nothing I say will bring back that brave soldier.

I  respectfully ask that all of you reflect on this event  and the  sacrifices
that millions of our men and women  have made to ensure  our freedom and safety
in these United States of AMERICA.

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Trey Lewis is a licensed Real Estate Broker in the State of Tennessee with Ole South Realty, www.OleSouth.com, 615.896.0019  direct 615.593.6340.  Specializing in new home sales in the Greater Nashville area to include Nashville, Murfreesboro, Smyrna, and Spring Hill, Tennessee

 
 
 

 

Nashville New Homes: Merry Christmas!

I just cannot chance Christmas going by without putting out another plug for buying a new home. 

If Joseph and Mary had been in Middle Tennessee instead of Bethlehem, they wouldn’t have had to look any further than Ole South for a brand new, warm place to stay.  And as first time buyers, with THDA financing through Ole South Financial, they wouldn’t have needed any cash to put down.  The Three Wise Men, which might have been women, could have brought housewarming gifts instead of the herbs and ointments that were on sale that night at the local Walgreens.

 Being a church organist for most of the past 30 years, I’ve had the pleasure of serving Congregations of a variety of denominations –  Presbyterian, Baptist, United Methodist, Episcopal, and Lutheran.   I never have played at a Church of Christ.  They don’t have organs, remember?  Although each have differences, they all have one thing in common… the Christmas hymns.

I used to dislike the release of  new hymnals.  The ministers just could not wait to pick hymns that no one knew – including me.   Some in the congregation would bitch about the new hymns, and then the selections would be back to the more familiar hymns, except for one glitch…in the new hymnals, some of the words had been changed!  As the hymnals get newer, the verbage used  becomes more “inclusive.”   In other words, more liberal.   The Christmas hymns have fortunately escaped these revisions, for the most part.

As a child, I always pictured God as an old man, similar to Santa Claus, with a Charlton Heston voice.  After all, it does say in Genesis that man was made in the image of God.    Now we have that “inclusion” thing that brings that image into question.  The modern translations say man AND woman are made in the image of God.  Does this mean the first woman looked like Santa?

Could God actually be a woman?   Yes, God could be a woman.  Women get great pleasure in saying “I told you so” when you don’t believe them and they are proven right.    But we have to be realistic here.  God is more likely a man.   A woman God simply wouldn’t keep putting up with everything that goes on down here on earth!    So lets not split hairs.  What about God being a Spirit that can only be seen and felt through others?   That works. 

This past year has been difficult for Beth and I, along with many of our friends.  We have lost dear friends, family, and loved ones.  Others have been diagnosed with not-so-good news.   But at the same time, it has been a good year.   New friendships have been created, old friendships have grown stronger, and we are much more thankful for the simple things in life that we had been taking for granted.  

To fully appreciate being happy, you have to experience being sad.  To fully appreciate comfort, you have to experience pain.  To fully appreciate life, you have to experience death.  Sometimes, we simply have to sacrifice for everything to work out in the grand scheme of things.   God proved that, with Jesus. 

In the early 80’s, The Presbyterian Church released a new hymnal that included a simple hymn that has become one of my favorites for Christmas Eve.   Here are the words to this beautiful hymn:

Born in the night, Mary’s Child, a long way from Your home:
Coming in need, Mary’s Child, Born in a borrowed room.

Clear shining light, Mary’s Child, Your face lights up our way:
Light of the world, Mary’s Child, Dawn on our darkened day.

Truth of our life, Mary’s Child, you tell us God is good:
Prove it is true, Mary’s Child, Go to your cross of wood.

Hope of the world, Mary’s Child, You’re coming soon to reign:
King of the earth, Mary’s Child, Walk in our streets again.
 

May this year be your best Christmas ever!

 

Trey Lewis is a licensed Real Estate Broker in the State of Tennessee with Ole South Realty, 615.896.0019  direct 615.593.6340.  Specializing in new home sales in the Greater Nashville area to include Nashville, Murfreesboro, Smyrna, and Spring Hill, Tennessee

Nashville New Homes: ‘Tis The Season.

My first real job after college was a National Accounts Representative for a furniture manufacturer…in other words, a furniture salesman that travelled around the country.  The year had been pretty good, and to show appreciation during the holidays,  I sent my customers sausage and country ham from Early’s Honey Stand.  I felt real good after the packages were sent until my Dad said…OH NO, YOU DIDN’T!   

So, most of these buyers were sent food they are not supposed to eat, for a holiday that they do not celebrate.  Call me a fool, but I never thought to ask what religion these furniture buyers were.   Well, guess what…no one got offended, no one got mad.  They all appreciated the gesture and probably remembered me as a dumbass!

As you know, we have delicious Otis Spunkmeyer cookies at our model homes and we offer them to everyone that visits.   I’ve made the cultural “faux pas” of offering these cookies to international home buyers during Ramadan.  No one got mad, no one got offended, and I learned more about that tradition.  And we are still friends.

One thing I think everyone can agree on is… ’tis the season!  Regardless of your religious preference or tradition, this is a season for kindness and being thoughtful to others.  Lets throw out political correctness and just be human.   Acts of kindness should not have cultural or religious boundaries.   And if myrhh and frankencense were suitable gifts for a king, a simple smile and kind word should suffice for all of us.

We all need a good laugh every now and then too!  Here is a cute parody on the modern day Nativity:

And what happened at this shopping mall in Canada is simply incredible.  The first time I watched it, I kept waiting to see mall security burst in and break it up.   I then remembered it didn’t happen in this country!   Take a look:

And now, everyone is glued to the local weather forecast!  Could it be that Nashville has the first “White Christmas” in 17 years?  Read more on this here:

http://www.tennessean.com/article/20101222/NEWS01/12220345/Will+Nashville+get+its+first+white+Christmas+in+17+years

Way cool!  I am excited about the possibility of snow for Christmas.  But there is another thing on my “bucket list.”  Spending the Christmas holidays somewhere warm….

And one year, we will.  Just not this year!

Merry Christmas!  (or Happy Holidays, if you prefer)

Trey Lewis is a licensed Real Estate Broker in the State of Tennessee with Ole South Realty, 615.896.0019  direct 615.593.6340.  Specializing in new home sales in the Greater Nashville area to include Nashville, Murfreesboro, Smyrna, and Spring Hill, Tennessee

Nashville New Homes: Its Friday.

Are you tired of the recent cold snap?  I certainly am.  This week has been a struggle and its almost over…its Friday.

Update on our friends Kathey and Chuck Payne…. Chuck remains at his father’s bedside, where he has been since last Saturday.  Good news…Kathey’s father is now back at home and doing well from his recent hospital stay at St. Thomas.  Continued thoughts and prayers for this awesome family.

This morning, Beth and I said our final “good-byes” to our black lab, Bill.  He certainly brought much happiness into our world, and to everyone he ever met while here.    Why does “doing the right thing” feel so wrong?   To end an animal’s suffering is humane, but we must watch humans linger in suffering.  I know this is God’s world and yes, I do have many questions.  Enough of this for now.

A dear friend shared this poem with me this morning.  I would like to share it also, in tribute to Bill The Dog.

The Rainbow Bridge

inspired by a Norse legend

By the edge of a woods, at the foot of a hill,

Is a lush, green meadow where time stands still.

Where the friends of man and woman do run,

When their time on earth is over and done.

For here, between this world and the next,

Is a place where each beloved creature finds rest.

On this golden land, they wait and they play,

Till the Rainbow Bridge they cross over one day.

No more do they suffer, in pain or in sadness,

For here they are whole, their lives filled with gladness.

Their limbs are restored, their health renewed,

Their bodies have healed, with strength imbued.

They romp through the grass, without even a care,

Until one day they start, and sniff at the air.

All ears prick forward, eyes dart front and back,

Then all of a sudden, one breaks from the pack.

For just at that instant, their eyes have met;

Together again, both person and pet.

So they run to each other, these friends from long past,

The time of their parting is over at last.

The sadness they felt while they were apart,

Has turned into joy once more in each heart.

They embrace with a love that will last forever,

And then, side-by-side, they cross over… together.

© 1998 Steve and Diane Bodofsky. All Rights Reserved

Nashville New Homes: Tough times.

Many of you know our black lab, Bill.  For those that don’t, here is a picture of him in action:

Last week, the vet diagnosed Bill with terminal cancer.   Yesterday evening at the lake, reality set in.  Our Sunday evenings are almost always spent at the lake with a group of dear friends.  Many people think all of us are weird, but being at the lake has a calming effect – even in the most difficult of times.

And Bill loves being there too!  He knows his way around at the marina.  After a “business trip” to land, accompanied by our dear friend and animal lover Teresa, Bill trotted back to the boat and made his usual hop on the deck…but this time he missed – and fell between the boat and the dock into the icy water of Old Hickory Lake.  Thank goodness Teresa heard the splash, because the rest of us were inside doing what “boat people” do…eating.

We all run outside in panic and there is Bill, calmly swimming around behind the boat, almost like he really wanted to be there.  When we fished him out, he was calm, did the usual dog shake and proceeded to be wrapped up in towels inside.  It was almost like that swim was on his “bucket list.”  Since this incident, his appetite is better, and he doesn’t seem to be in pain.  He is watching TV right now as I am typing.  We do know that his condition has moved from “if” to “when” and I pray God gives us the ability to know when “when” is, for Bill’s sake.  I also hope God has a leather couch.

Also this weekend, our boating family mourns the passing of Grady DeVan.  When you think of boating on the Cumberland River, Grady and his wife Ann are among the first people that come to mind.   Deepest condolences to Ann and we wish Grady the best up there on the great river.

There is a special family that could certainly use our thoughts and prayers right now – Kathey and Chuck Payne, and their family.   For as many years as I can remember, they have cared for BOTH sets of parents in their home, which they joking refer to as the “Evergreen Nursing Home.”

Tonight, Chuck continues his bedside vigil with his father, under hospice care.  While I was talking with Chuck this evening, I was re-living the experience of my final time with my father 5 years ago.   After humming every song in the hymnal while holding his hand, he peacefully passed – and although sad, was comforting at the same time.  I pray for Chuck to feel the same comfort.

Meanwhile, Kathey’s father was admitted to St. Thomas Saturday with heart-attack symptoms and will be there a few more days.   Kathey is right there by his side too.   There are angels here on earth and their names are Kathey and Chuck.

Earlier today, today’s blog topic was going to be a satirical look at needs and wants.  It is going to have to wait. 

For right now, all I want is for everything to be all right and that I really need to say a prayer.  I hope you will too.

Goodnight.

Trey Lewis is a licensed Real Estate Broker in the State of Tennessee with Ole South Realty, 615.896.0019  direct 615.593.6340.  Specializing in new home sales in the Greater Nashville area to include Nashville, Murfreesboro, Smyrna, and Spring Hill, Tennessee