Curb Appeal Matters
In the community I live in, all of the yards are pristine — nicely edged, cut, bushes trimmed, no garage doors open. Every home has curb appeal. It’s a requirement here in this 55+ community.
I’ve been a R/E Estate Broker for 18 years and I know curb appeal and first impressions matter. A run-down looking property detracts buyers, but a property with a welcoming smile on its face aka fresh coat of paint, landscaping enhanced and tidy, and clean appearance causes buyers to want to know more about that property. Let’s face it, first impressions matter in homes and in us! We spend extra time in front of the mirror before a first date and we care about how we dress for a job interview.
For years, buyers have formed their first impressions of homes while standing in the street or sitting in the car, just beyond the curb. The initial drive-by would determine whether or not buyers would want to see the inside of the house. To get that buyer in the door, the seller spent hours, even days, seeding new grass, planting flowers, painting their front door, weeding and cleaning up the yard. If the home didn’t appeal from the curb, buyers moved on to the next house. Curb appeal was always the single most important piece of the home sale puzzle.
Maybe this post will help you market your home….if you’re wanting to, but foremost, this post is to express the importance of our own personal “curb appeal”. What is it about us that draws people to us or detracts people away from us? Is our disposition cranky, and dismal and is our attitude “cloudy” and “glass half empty”? Do we look exhausted and worried? Do we look like we could care less about what others think about us? Or, do we look act faith-filled, optimistic, “sunny” and “glass full of joy”?
What is that “first impression” others get of us? If we really want to convey the love of God, His peace that passes understanding, the graciousness and appeal of the Holy Spirit, then our “curb appeal” matters. We were created in the image of God, and God sure doesn’t make junk. God sees us as a masterpiece. Do others see us as God’s masterpiece?
Sure the world focuses on what people look like on the outside. God focuses on what people look like on the inside. When we focus on what’s beautiful on the inside, we will exude that beauty — that “curb appeal” on the outside.
Maybe, this post is two-fold — our home’s curb appeal and our curb appeal as the “home of the Holy Spirit” who dwells in us. “Don’t you realize that all of you together are the temple of God and that the Spirit of God lives in you?” 1 Corinthians 3:16. How’s that for realizing what our curb appeal should be. We are not just houses, but we are temples of Almighty God — how could our curb appeal be less than our BEST?