06/02/2026
Closing on this property tomorrow, and looking back over the last several months, I am overwhelmed with gratitude for my sellers, the buyers, and honestly, for the opportunity to be part of the journey.
My sellers had been trying to get moved out and ready to list for nearly a year. We met because I did something uncomfortable and started a conversation while hosting an open house next door.
They had no clear plan or path forward. Even though they had moved multiple times and owned rental properties, this was different. This was both their home and their business. The project felt overwhelming. Contractors weren’t showing up, progress was slow, and they were tackling what they could month after month.
Within a week of meeting, we had movers scheduled, painters lined up, and exterior cleanup underway. The home had been well maintained, but it still needed some attention before hitting the market.
Two weeks later, we were live.
Then the real work started.
Open houses. Showings. Online advertising. Marketing. Follow-up. We had strong activity early and thought it would be under contract within the first month.
It wasn’t.
The feedback was consistent: “The living room is too small.”
Unfortunately, that’s not something we could change.
So we adjusted when the market shifted, had honest conversations, stayed realistic, and kept moving forward.
After 169 days on the market, this home found the right buyer. Someone who could see and envision the future. A place for kids, grandkids, friends, family, and even five dogs.
Not every home sells quickly. Not every home is perfect.
The difference between a property that sells and one that sits is often persistence, visibility, and a willingness to adapt.
Real estate is more than putting a sign in the yard, writing a description, and sharing a post on social media.
Whether a home is new, old, unique, or luxury-priced, the process remains the same: show up, stay consistent, solve problems, and keep working until the goal is achieved.
Because at the end of the day, my job isn’t just to sell houses.
It’s to help people move forward.