Two Weeks of Progress, Tile Dreams, and a Much-Needed Mountain Exhale

The last two weeks brought a little bit of everything. Real construction progress, fun design decisions, a quiet RV while our daughter was away, and then a much-needed escape to our happy place in North Carolina.

And maybe most exciting of all…

We poured the stem wall. We officially have concrete.

After so many months of planning, waiting, permits, revisions, and all the invisible work that comes before anything actually looks like a house, it was such a thrill to stand there and watch concrete flow for the first time on our new build.

We even captured video of the beginning of the pour. There were workers lined up with the giant hose, two big concrete trucks taking over the corner, and all of us just waiting and watching for it to really get going. One thing I never expected? At the very start, the concrete seemed to get stuck in the hose, and the crew was literally beating on it with hammers to get things moving. It was fascinating to watch. Not exactly the graceful moment I had imagined, but very real and very memorable.

The first pour!

It may not look like much to everyone else yet, but to us, this was a huge moment. Concrete makes it feel real.

We also had a really fun milestone over the last couple of weeks: tile selection.

Honestly, it could have been completely overwhelming if not for Natalie from Dreamland Interiors and Lauren from D3 Construction. Instead of feeling stressed, I had so much fun. They brought such a great eye to the process and helped pull things together in a way I never could have on my own.

There was one tile I fell in love with immediately. To me, it looks like a beautiful blue sky with fluffy clouds catching the sunlight and glowing gold. I knew I wanted it somewhere in the house. At first, I thought it might go in the primary shower, but our designer had bigger plans.

What she pulled together for the primary bath absolutely stopped me in my tracks. The new his-and-hers shower layout, the dark high-gloss cabinetry, and the almost iridescent marble mosaic herringbone tile created something elegant, elevated, and spa-like. It is not a look I would have chosen on my own, but the second I saw it, I loved it. It was one of those moments where the house stopped feeling like just a construction project and started feeling personal again.

My “sunny sky” tile still found its perfect place in the in-law suite shower, and it is going to be stunning there.

And then there was one detail that completely made me grin: the dog shower. We are adding one to the laundry room, and the designer found a way to work paw prints into the tile floor. I laughed immediately and loved it. Even our owner’s rep was so charmed by it that she is now fully on board with the dog shower too. Reese and Ute clearly have no idea how spoiled they are.

We also had a small but exciting construction moment with the block delivery for the block portion of the stem wall. It was only a few stacks, not the actual house walls yet, but even seeing those blocks arrive made it feel like we are getting closer to the point where things really begin to rise.

In the middle of all of this, our daughter headed off on her 8th grade class trip to Washington, D.C. This trip used to be a parent-child trip, but this year the school decided to make it school-only. It was her first out-of-state trip without us. I was sad not to experience it with her, and at the same time, proud and excited for her to have that independence.

We missed her terribly.

The RV felt way too quiet while she was gone. Life slowed down in a way that felt strange. We are so used to the everyday rhythm of school runs, chats in the car, hugs, and all the coming and going that fills up family life. She would call us in the evenings with just enough time to tell us about the day and how exhausted she was. By the end, she was happy to be home and completely worn out.

Then, right after that, we had spring break, and we got to head back to our home in Maggie Valley, our happy place, Ridgeline Retreat.

After the 11-hour drive, the first thing we did was let the dogs out to run. Reese and Ute were absolutely thrilled. For the adults, we walked straight inside and out to the porch to take in the view before quickly unloading so we could start enjoying the week.

That first feeling was relief and gratitude.

Ridgeline Retreat has always been a place where we can exhale, even before the storm and the rebuild. But this time, it felt even sweeter. It was a break from the chaos of construction, the trucks, the parking challenges, the noise, and the constant motion of the build site. In Maggie Valley, everything felt calm and peaceful.

We spent the week there with another family and had such a great time. It was a little too cold for hiking most days, so we found other ways to enjoy the area. One of the most fun parts of the week was celebrating St. Patrick’s Day with lunch at The Scotsman with corned beef and cabbage, peanut butter whiskey, and live Irish and Scottish music. It was crowded, lively, and worth the 30-minute wait for a table for six. To make it even better, one person in our party unknowingly won a raw potato by walking through the door at just the right moment, which somehow felt exactly like the kind of random vacation memory that becomes family legend.

We also celebrated Troy’s birthday at Cataloochee Ranch with friends. The food was good, but what really made the night special was simply being together.

And as if the week hadn’t already given us enough, we even got a little snow. About two inches fell, with beautiful flurries and snow blowing sideways at times. The kids loved it, and the dogs ran wild with snow stuck all over their fur.

It was one of those weeks that reminded me how much home can mean in different ways.

Home is the one we are building, slowly and steadily, one concrete pour and one tile decision at a time.

Home is also the place that lets us breathe while we are getting there.

And more than anything, home is wherever my family is.

For now, I’m grateful for all of it.

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