As I drove through an upscale suburban Birmingham neighborhood Thursday afternoon, I couldn’t help thinking how much I hated the houses — and how stifling I found the oppressive designs.
I laughed at myself, though, because I knew I was one of the very few people in town who would think such a thing. This neighborhood is popular and desirable. The irony was that I was driving to a $250,000 home which my own realty clients were buying in just a few minutes.
The house is exactly what the couple wanted, particularly the wife. She loves a stately home that’s very traditional two-story in red brick — and this neighborhood has variations of that in abundance. And I was about to be paid a commission for helping them to find and buy a house which they loved — and which I would have considered oppressive and stifling.

After 50 years of being alone and disappointed, boy finally gets girl
Smart people will flee big cities before death, disease take over
Uh, oh: For first time since ’45, U.S. job growth was zero last month
Search for new partner leaves me wondering where she’s waiting
Ron Paul isn’t a racist, but the old newsletters need a credible response
If you allow anything to be priority over love and beauty, you’re a fool
‘Make no little plans. They have no magic to stir men’s blood… Make big plans’