unprecedented level of excitement for my new garage doors: We have a 3 car garage: a double and a single. The big ass van, GW, occupies the double side with a dozen bikes, two lawnmowers, scooters, coolers, and everything else known to man.
The small side often serves as storage for college kid mini fridges, couches, bedframes, etc. It's a struggle to reclaim that space, but with a ton of effort, we can usually park a car in there a few months of the year.
Our remote keypad doesn't work in cold weather. Here in Chicago - that's been fun.
Small garage door broke months ago, meaning the opener no longer functioned and since we rarely park there, we barely noticed.
Translation: One could lift that door without much effort and gain access to our home. Any time day or night.
When I returned home from the funeral in Tampa in early Nov., I made like a character on the 70s sitcom Happy Days, and lifted the garage door while Marie sat in her car, looking disgusted and judgy (her specialty). Coach had forgotten to leave the deck slider unlocked, and I was part horrified at how easy it was to enter our house (Coach initially assured me it still locked, oops), and part relieved that I could break into my own home.
We should have keys to our front door, but do we? Who even knows?
For ages, our double door has sounded like it might take the rest of the house down with it, killing us dead. Coach exits in the early am thru the deck slider for fear that the sound of the opener would wake me. (The garage is not under our bedroom - but it's not far from it). Majority of our cars live on our driveway anyway.
Tune in next time (or soon) for how our neighbors reacted in Jan. to our cars blocking the sidewalk.
Right before Thanksgiving, I ordered our Christmas gift to us - new garage doors through Costco in a color that'd match our newish siding, plus - next level openers include cameras, remote keypads, multiple openers, and an app to check the door status and manage it from anywhere.
Welcome to the 20th century, Shenanigans.
Enter Murphy's Law: The install was set for Friday, Feb. 6trh. I was giddy with excitement. Our garage would be warmer too, and in Chicago - that's not nothing.
On Thursday while I was talking to Reg's epilepsy specialist, the garage door people left me a message. "installer . . . family emergency. . . Friday cancelled."
*sob*
Saturday the opener on the big door broke. Yep. The day after it was supposed to be replaced.
The reschedule = Feb. 16th. (10 day wait?!)
Sunday night, Coach and I tested to see if I could lift it solo for my Monday baby/tot drop off. Coach pulled GW onto the driveway. It slammed down, louder than normal - the spring broke. Game over. Drop off peeps had to enter through the raised small door and weave through all our garage stuff. 
Come on in, tots. When GW is parked here, the other side of the garage cannot access the door to the house.
Monday: I called and requested an earlier install:
Wednesday. Let's go!
A delightful installer arrived yesterday. I moved the minivan to the street before tot drop. When the workers arrived, I realized I had to move GW off the driveway. I backed it off the driveway and then I remembered . . .
OH SHIT, GW LIKES TO DIE IN THE COLD AFTER IT REVERSES. PLEASE DON'T DIE, PLEASE . . . as soon as I put it in 'drive' it stalled in the middle of the street. C'mon.
I told the guys my car died. Could they push my car to the side of the street (thankfully we don't live on a busy street). First I put the crawling baby in the exersaucer, grabbed the minivan keys, moved the minivan further down the street, hopped in GW, and waved the guys over to push me to the curb where minivan had been. I'm going out on a limb, guessing the workers hadn't had to help a homeowner push a giant van to the side of the road before installing a door.
That marks the third time that GW has died after reversing in cold temps, and then being put into drive. It's a head scratcher, but par for the course.
All that to say - the doors are up. They look amazing. Whisper quiet. Match the siding nicely. The motion sensor light- I'd forgotten how nice that was.
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In other news: Curly won the 3 point contest in our (region?) area Tuesday night. I think there were 10 - 12 schools represented. Her first round score was 16, and the next closest was 10. My knees were shaking. So excited for her. Long time readers will recall Reg went downstate his soph year for the 3 pt contest. Then they stopped doing it.
We 'won' tickets to the musical Bernadette at a silent auction. We're taking Kay and Rae, and my folks on Sunday afternoon. I shared that info in the now-defunct family group chat. My sisters have stopped updating in the group chat imporatnt news about our folks' health/doc appts, etc. which had been the norm. My brother now sends me a separate text. I didn't want my sibs to show up to visit my folks Sunday and find an empty house. I'm the grown up here, is what I'm saying. But I think you already knew that.
I've discovered that my body requires more than 8 hours of sleep, and I'm working hard to make that happen. Is it an autoimmune issue? No clue, but prioritizing my sleep (usually) has been a treat.
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Your turn: Has Murphy's Law ruled your life lately? Do you live in a fortress that no one could break into? Do you have keys to fit your doors? Do you do anything that ticks off your neighbors? Have you felt unprecedented excitement about a home improvement? Do tell.
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