1 result for (book:tps3 AND heading:"delet session februari 19 1975" AND stemmed:one)
[... 20 paragraphs ...]
At this time of your lives it is important that you act. I am telling you that of the houses in your mind it really makes little difference which one you choose. Neither house is perfect. You would find yourselves quite hampered in such an idealistically perfect environment. You need some give-and-take (period).
Regardless of the money and your attitudes toward it, the residence would serve you as well as the other one, and money is far more than a commodity. Each house could well be made to suit your specific needs, and each reflects strong elements of your personalities.
[... 4 paragraphs ...]
(10:14.) Give us a moment.... There are also kinds of creative changes that you do not foresee, that you can make in both areas of the yard, at Foster. The one is dark, the other open, comparatively speaking.
[... 3 paragraphs ...]
Give us a moment.... The property also will rise, as I said the Foster property would. It is sunnier, obviously. You would definitely however end up tearing down a wall, and I believe that you might add another room, or want to possibly in the future, to one side. You would also end up enlarging some windows for your work areas. Ruburt would, incidentally, as he said, plop down at the largest window.
[... 10 paragraphs ...]
Give us time.... The hill house represents the future, and the contemporary qualities of it. I suggest, and only suggest, that that be your choice—because it is the most daring of the ventures for you—and because the hill will give you a view in many more ways than one. (And this when we haven’t been inside of hill house. Didn’t get inside until February 21, when we signed offer to purchase. See house file.)
[... 16 paragraphs ...]
The parking is all right, though in winter only one side particularly is permitted. But it is a dead-end street, so as long as driveways are honored you are all right.
[... 1 paragraph ...]
For your purposes the house is worth the price. In the market, in Frank’s terms, the house is worth perhaps $38,500, or $39,000. That price will also go up. Though the rooms are smaller there is in a strange way greater manipulability, psychically speaking. A definite change in living patterns will result, and of attitude, that would not happen in the Foster house. This also means that greater adaptability is required, but it will be to the good. The whole difference here is the quality of nature as it surrounds both houses. The one invites you to roam, the other to hide. Both houses have Sumari characteristics, but in different combinations. You both need the sun.
[... 4 paragraphs ...]
Venice comes to class, and Sam bought that house next to this one. The families do not exist in isolation.
[... 6 paragraphs ...]