| Though
my House is in need of a hundred things,
My Home is in need of none...
In
this issue we have highlighted a few worthy vendors of the varied
skills it takes to improve our houses, specialists who can ably
enhance the places we live. We show the fruits of talented artisans
who can literally build dreams, beautify views and add to your life
‘the comforts of Kings’.
But they can’t make it home.
Home means something different to each of
us. In one perspective America is our home, we are instilled with
pride in the land of the free, home of the brave and all that. We’re
proud to be Californians too, when we get right down to it. But
even here in little ol’ Orange County, a physical area that
rates only a small speck in the global view, there is a vast difference
in where or what we call home. To many, it remains a distant goal
or a fond memory. A recent article in the Orange County Register
estimated there were probably 34,000 people living on and off the
streets of our county-wide community. The next day, a feature promoted
a vacant house for sale at $50 million, the county’s highest
listing to date. Ironic, the same freedom that allows no barriers
to the heights we can attain, provide none to the depths we can
fall. I’ve never been homeless, but I’ve often found
myself so focused on the things that need to be done to my house,
I forget the importance of having one.
For this publication, San Clemente is home.
A southwestern American shore that covers only a few square miles
of the world’s most livable land, a land filled with beauty
and with passionate people who have each found their own personal
connections to her. For the last ten years, the San Clemente Journal
has celebrated the relationship of those who have made San Clemente
something more than just where they live, but have come to call
her home. Those who have not only enjoyed her resources, but have
become resources themselves. Those who have used their basic citizen-responsibilities
as only a starting point, who rise beyond their jobs and duties
and have committed themselves to making our collective home into
a better one.
A home doesn’t always come with an
address, and it doesn’t move in with the furniture, but it
always demands a piece of your heart, some investment from your
deepest feelings, some personal connection, something like love.
It doesn’t take much, for twenty years
I’ve felt that personal connection when I’m driving
down from some long and needless excursion to the hectic points
North, and I finally see the red and yellow glow of the old ragged
Denny’s sign, shining like a welcome beacon on a foggy night,
beaming like a happy ten-year-old missing teeth.
The pulse calms, and I know I’m home.
Don
R. Kindred
Publisher
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