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As Their Family Grew, the Suburbs Beckoned

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As Their Family Grew, the Suburbs Beckoned

For Peter and Christy Tiboris, like so many others, the pandemic offered the push they wanted to do one thing they’d lengthy contemplated: go away Manhattan for the suburbs.

Since marrying in 2013, the couple had bounced round varied New York Metropolis leases, taking over extra space every time they’d a toddler. By 2020, they’d a three-bedroom residence in TriBeCa and three kids: Dessa, now 7, Ernie, 5, and Susana, 4. However even with three bedrooms, their dwelling felt able to burst on the seams because the couple contemplated having extra kids.

“And there was no approach we had been going to maneuver to a four-bedroom,” stated Ms. Tiboris, 41, a lawyer with the Securities and Alternate Fee (the place she makes use of her maiden title, Ely). “We had been caught.”

Though they hadn’t found out their subsequent transfer, the pandemic accelerated their decision-making. As Covid surged via town, the household relocated to their weekend home in Manasquan, N.J.

“We packed up our stuff, pondering we’d simply work from down there for a few weeks,” stated Mr. Tiboris, 43, a wealth administration adviser. “That ended up being a couple of months.”

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As September approached, they determined to remain put, enroll their kids in class in Manasquan and start searching for a brand new main dwelling nearer to Manhattan. In November, they discovered a three-story, 5,900-square-foot Colonial Revival home in Montclair in-built 1925, with an asking value of $1.3 million.

“We went, and there have been 20 individuals in line to see the home,” Mr. Tiboris stated. After dropping out on a earlier dwelling, they had been decided to not miss this one. Additionally they needed to maneuver shortly as a result of they hoped to shut, renovate and transfer into the brand new home by September 2021, in time to enroll their kids in a brand new faculty system.

Competing in opposition to different patrons, they struck a deal to purchase the house for $1.7 million and closed in February 2021. Through the interval between signing the contract and shutting, they assembled a design group and started engaged on renovation plans.

To deal with the structure, they selected Rosen Kelly Conway Structure and Design, a agency primarily based in Summit, N.J., after being impressed with the architects’ nuanced strategy to updating conventional and historic houses. For the interiors, they employed McGrath II, a New York agency whose work Ms. Tiboris had lengthy admired. And by the point they acquired the keys, they’d a builder, Brinton Brosius, prepared to start work.

Though it was a big home, the bottom ground was reduce up into small rooms, together with a decent galley kitchen, so the largest adjustments concerned reconfiguring that degree.

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“It was a very cool home to start with,” stated Tom Conway, a associate at Rosen Kelly Conway. “It had so much going for it, nevertheless it was a very dangerous use of area, which is typical of these classic homes, together with an undersized kitchen shoved within the again nook.”

His agency knocked down partitions, eliminated an unused hearth and added new supporting beams to create extra beneficiant areas, together with a big kitchen with a related household room on one aspect of the home. On the opposite aspect, the architects rearranged area to create a brand new front room, eating room, sunroom and an workplace for Mr. Tiboris with a related den. Within the lobby, the place there was no closet, they sectioned off an space simply contained in the entrance door with a brand new arched opening and added built-in cabinetry to carry coats and sneakers. Upstairs, they moved extra partitions to create a spacious main suite and 6 further bedrooms.

All of the whereas, Suzanne and Lauren McGrath, the mother-daughter companions of McGrath II, had been engaged on designing interiors that felt pure for a virtually 100-year-old home whereas including the conveniences the Tiborises wanted, with simply sufficient shade and sample to make issues attention-grabbing.

“We love historic homes — that’s our candy spot,” Suzanne McGrath stated. “The primary time I walked in, I used to be like, ‘Oh, we’ve acquired to convey this again.’ However we labored on particulars that may not solely convey it again, but additionally be fairly and really feel recent for a younger household.”

That strategy is instantly obvious within the lobby, the place a copy wallpaper from Brunschwig & Fils units the stage with a graphic sample rendered in understated colours like aqua blue and burnt orange — a visually arresting contact.

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“That was the launching pad for the colour story of the home,” Lauren McGrath stated. “Quite a lot of the textiles all through the home reference the colours in that wallpaper.”

Within the new eating room, they went past wallpaper and added customized wooden trellis panels to the partitions, giving it the sensation of a backyard pavilion. Within the sunroom, they continued the indoor-outdoor vibe with rattan armchairs from Palecek and a sea-grass rug.

Within the den between the sunroom and Mr. Tiboris’s workplace, they painted the partitions in Farrow & Ball’s blue-gray Pigeon to create an area the place the mother and father can cozy up by the hearth after the kids fall asleep.

In fact, few renovations proceed precisely as deliberate. Regardless of the couple’s purpose to maneuver in by September 2021, the $400,000 challenge took an extra two months. Decided to get their two oldest kids began on the precise foot in a Montclair faculty, Mr. Tiboris negotiated a long-term keep on the George, a lodge within the township. With a view to meet residency necessities, the household lived there till they may transfer into their new home.

Residing in a lodge with kids was removed from perfect, however the wait to get a home they love within the location they needed was price it. “We’re actually fortunate to stay right here,” Mr. Tiboris stated. “There are, like, 18 youngsters below 10 inside a two-block radius.”

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And lately, the couple added one other little one to the combo: They welcomed Selene this previous December.

Managing a busy family might be difficult for 2 working mother and father, however the couple have found that assistance is at all times shut at hand. “There’s a unending checklist of playmates in all places,” Ms. Tiboris stated. “It’s a super-fun neighborhood, and all the children are wild collectively.”

As Mr. Tiboris put it, “It’s like parenting by committee.”

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J Lo and Ben Affleck Do Sunday Funday Together Despite Living Apart

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J Lo and Ben Affleck Do Sunday Funday Together Despite Living Apart

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Sean Combs apologizes for 'my actions in that video' that appeared to show an assault

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Sean Combs apologizes for 'my actions in that video' that appeared to show an assault

Sean “Diddy” Combs is pictured at the CBS Radford Studio Center in 2018 in Los Angeles. On Sunday, Combs apologized for his actions in a video that appears to show him beating his former singing protege and girlfriend Cassie Ventura in a Los Angeles hotel in 2016.

Willy Sanjuan/Invision/AP


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Willy Sanjuan/Invision/AP


Sean “Diddy” Combs is pictured at the CBS Radford Studio Center in 2018 in Los Angeles. On Sunday, Combs apologized for his actions in a video that appears to show him beating his former singing protege and girlfriend Cassie Ventura in a Los Angeles hotel in 2016.

Willy Sanjuan/Invision/AP

Hip-hop mogul Sean “Diddy” Combs issued an apology on Sunday, two days after the release of a video which appeared to show him beating then-girlfriend Cassie Ventura.

“It’s so difficult to reflect on the darkest times in your life, but sometimes you got to do that,” Combs says in a video posted to Instagram. “I was f—– up — I mean, I hit rock bottom — but I make no excuses.”

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The video, which was obtained and published by CNN on Friday, allegedly shows Combs grabbing, throwing, kicking and dragging Ventura in a hotel hallway, and throwing an object at her.

CNN reported that the video was recorded at the now-closed InterContinental Hotel in Century City on March 5, 2016. Elements of it appear to match accusations of physical and sexual assault that Ventura made in a civil lawsuit she filed against Combs last year.

While NPR has not been able to verify the authenticity of the video, in his apology, Combs appeared to do so.

“I take full responsibility for my actions in that video,” Combs said. “I was disgusted then when I did it. I’m disgusted now. I went and I sought out professional help. I got into going to therapy, going to rehab. I had to ask God for his mercy and grace. I’m so sorry. But I’m committed to be a better man each and every day. I’m not asking for forgiveness. I’m truly sorry.”

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Ventura reached a settlement with Combs for an undisclosed figure in November, one day after the lawsuit was filed.

After the settlement, one of Combs’ lawyers, Ben Brafman, issued a statement declaring Combs’ innocence. He told NPR: “Just so we’re clear, a decision to settle a lawsuit, especially in 2023, is in no way an admission of wrongdoing. Mr. Combs’ decision to settle the lawsuit does not in any way undermine his flat-out denial of the claims. He is happy they got to a mutual settlement and wishes Ms. Ventura the best.”

NPR’s request for comment from Combs’ attorney on Sunday was not immediately returned.

In a written statement provided to NPR on Friday afternoon, Ventura’s attorney, Douglas Wigdor, said: “The gut-wrenching video has only further confirmed the disturbing and predatory behavior of Mr. Combs. Words cannot express the courage and fortitude that Ms. Ventura has shown in coming forward to bring this to light.”

Wigdor did not immediately reply on Sunday to a request for comment on Combs’ Instagram post.

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Combs faces several lawsuits from named and unnamed plaintiffs alleging assault, rape and other misconduct. In March, federal agents raided homes associated with Combs in Los Angeles and Miami in what authorities at the time referred to as “an ongoing investigation.”

On Saturday, the Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office said it was aware of the video and while it found the images “extremely disturbing and difficult to watch,” if the incident occurred in 2016, “unfortunately we would be unable to charge as the conduct would have occurred beyond the timeline where a crime of assault can be prosecuted.”

The statement said that law enforcement has not presented a case against Combs for the attack depicted in the video, “but we encourage anyone who has been a victim or witness to a crime to report it to law enforcement or reach out to our office for support from our Bureau of Victims Services.”

NPR’s Anastasia Tsioulcas contributed to this report.

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Renting used to be a source of shame to this apartment manager’s daughter. Now it’s a knowing comfort

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Renting used to be a source of shame to this apartment manager’s daughter. Now it’s a knowing comfort

I can barely remember a time when we didn’t live where we worked. Our first property manager job was for a 30-unit apartment building between Beverly Hills and Pico-Robertson. My parents didn’t speak English but got the job anyway because they knew a guy who knew a guy who knew a guy. There was an elementary school at the end of our magnolia tree-lined street that I couldn’t go to because the Beverly Hills School District allowed only Beverly Hills addresses. I would walk down the block to visit my friend (another apartment manager’s daughter) or to buy a sleeve of blue raspberry sour straws at the Blockbuster around the corner and hear children playing in the well-manicured school yard, but I never once saw an actual child. This was how I learned to perceive wealth in Los Angeles: near, but just out of reach.

Even at the age of 6 or 7 or 8, I knew that this was all temporary. Renting is inherently provisional, especially when you’re not actually paying rent. I made the most of it. While my mother cobbled together a career as a bookkeeper and my father assumed the role of both the maintenance guy and the manager of the building, I stole CDs from the mailroom, Rollerbladed in the slick oil-stained subterranean parking garage and belted Spice Girls lyrics in the emergency stairwell with my cousin until a tenant would open the door and find us there alone in the dark. I still own contraband from that time: someone’s copy of the “City of Angels” soundtrack. Inside our apartment, I shared a room with my parents. Our beds were butted up against each other, as they had always been.

Before this job and this building we lived in a one-bedroom apartment in West Hollywood with brown shag carpet and a cardboard box as my toy chest. The apartment buildings on our block, once favored by up-and-coming movie stars and writer Eve Babitz, now were occupied by Eastern Europeans fleeing the collapse of the Soviet Union. “There comes a moment for the immigrant’s child when you realize that you and your parents are assimilating at the same time,” writes Hua Hsu in his memoir, “Stay True.” While I attended preschool at Plummer Park, my mother went to community college and my father painted houses for $5 an hour. Before the brown shag carpet, we slept on my aunt’s couch in Mid-City for six months. And before the couch, we lived in a brutalist Soviet government-issued apartment in Minsk, Belarus. From the beginning, my life was steeped in the impermanence of renting, which mirrored the impermanence of our immigrant experience.

All immigrants are opportunists. Or, at least all the ones I’ve encountered. They are keenly aware of how, at any moment, everything can change. “Immigration, exile, being uprooted and made a pariah may be the most effective way yet devised to impress on an individual the arbitrary nature of his or her own existence,” writes Serbian poet Charles Simic. With each move, I felt the arbitrary nature of our existence. And every time I translated a 30-day notice or drafted a memo and slipped it under a tenant’s door, I felt the pull of my parents’ ambition. “We came here for you.” They’d say it often. Lovingly piling on the pressure until I could no longer see a future where I didn’t have something to prove.

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My father found the second property manager job listing in a local newspaper. A 50-unit building in the affluent neighborhood of Westwood. He brought Mama and me along to the interview, although technically the managers were not supposed to have a child. I was told that if I was on my best behavior, I would go to the sought-after public elementary school down the street and finally get my own room. The front of the building was covered in a flash of fuchsia bougainvillea, and the surrounding brick towers glowed with inviting warm windows and hints of crystal chandeliers. The owners of the building were a wealthy elderly Germanic-Jewish couple who met us outside and assessed my potential with war-weary eyes. I looked up at them dutifully, every butterfly clip I owned fluttering on my head like a migration. “She’s a mini you,” the woman said, noticing the quiet stoicism I’d picked up from my father. She looked at us as if she were looking into her own immigrant past, her harrowing escape from Austria as a teenager during the Holocaust. She smiled. Bent down. And handed me the keys.

The temporary feeling of apartment living. Collages by Yasmine Nasser Diaz featuring photos by Diana Ruzova
2 of 2 in a seried. The temporary feeling of apartment living. Collages by Yasmine Nasser Diaz featuring photos Diana Ruzova

Los Angeles has been a haven for transplants and immigrants since the tail end of the Industrial Revolution and the introduction of the railroad. It was once advertised as a wellness paradise, the sanatorium capital of America, a temporary resort for turn-of-the-20th century tuberculosis patients eager to seek treatment in the form of sunshine and “fresh” air. Many of these patients got better and stayed. “Los Angeles, it should be understood, is not a mere city. On the contrary, it is, and has been since 1888, a commodity; something to be advertised and sold to the people of the United States like automobiles, cigarettes, and mouthwash,” writes Mike Davis in “City of Quartz.”

The commodification of Los Angeles and Hollywood, and the rising population, has made the city an expensive place to live. The majority of the population rents: According to a 2021 report, 63% of Los Angeles households are renter-occupied, while 37% are owner-occupied. And rent has more than doubled in the past decade, leading to an astonishing 57% of L.A. County residents being rent-burdened, meaning they spend a third or more of their income on rent. And yet people continue to move to Los Angeles, a place synonymous with liminal space — the space between who we are and who we want to become. Even if who you want to become is out of reach.

“If there is a predominant feeling in the city-state [Los Angeles], it is not loneliness or daze, but an uneasy temporariness, a sense of life’s impermanence: the tension of anticipation while so much quivers on the line,” writes Rosecrans Baldwin in “Everything Now: Lessons From the City-State of Los Angeles.”

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Los Angeles is a city always on the edge of disaster: gentrification, housing shortages, unlawful evictions, homelessness (second largest homeless population outside of New York), greed, wildfire, earthquakes, floods, landslides, the imminent death of the legendary palm trees, the intangible but plausible possibility of breaking off from the continental United States and slipping into the Pacific Ocean. The city, like its residents, is impermanent, always shape-shifting, always on the verge of becoming something else.

“Our dwellings were designed for transience,” writes Kate Braverman about the midcentury West Los Angeles of her childhood in Frantic Transmissions to and From Los Angeles: An Accidental Memoir.” “Apartments without dining rooms, as if anticipating a future where families disintegrated, compulsively dieted, or ate alone, in front of televisions.”

In Westwood, our living room was our dining room and our office. Leases were signed on the dinner table. At any moment, the phone or doorbell would ring with someone dropping off a rent check or complaining about a broken air conditioner or standing barefoot in a bathrobe locked out of their apartment. I would pretend to not care. I would eat my cheese puffs on the couch and stare attentively at the glowing TV, with the business of the building in my periphery. I would remind myself that this was temporary. Our liminal space. Maybe my parents would invest in an adult day care center like their friend Sasha? Maybe we would one day own a house? As I got older, I grew more ashamed. More aware of my own body and its presence. I would cower in my room or the hallway, shoveling Froot Loops into my mouth until the apartment was no longer an office but our home again. This shape-shifting was its own type of impermanence. One minute the apartment was a place where we lived and the next it was a place where we worked. The line was blurred and so was my idea of home. Of what is yours and what is mine.

The temporary feeling of apartment living. Collages by Yasmine Nasser Diaz featuring photos by Diana Ruzova

Some of the tenants were there before us and some were a rotating cast of characters. But all of them were strangers we shared walls with. Of course, we weren’t the only immigrant family. There were also Persian immigrants who fled Iran during the Islamic Revolution, but they mostly kept to themselves. Due to the nature of the job, we were always on display. My parents’ accents. My growing body. My father’s health. The mezuzah on our door frame. Our apartment, a collection of discarded furniture from vacated units. Early on, I was warned to not make friends with any of the tenants. I was told it was unprofessional. A trap. That they only wanted to be my friend so they could get special treatment. Sometimes, we broke the rules. I babysat the child star while his single mother “networked” (partied in the Hollywood Hills). I played Marco Polo in the pool with the Persian kids. I leafed through headshots with a Russian mail-order bride while my parents drank tea with her mother. They would all eventually move out and so would we.

I used to tell my friends that we owned the building. That I would one day inherit it. This was easier than saying that we lived there because we worked there. I’m not sure if anyone believed me anyway. Many of my friends lived in what I considered to be mansions with nannies and parents with six-figure dual incomes that afforded them trips to faraway destinations I couldn’t place on a map. When my friends were over and the landline would ring, I would rush them to my bedroom before they could hear my father answer the phone with, “Manager.”

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The only property my parents own is a shared plot at Hollywood Forever Cemetery. When my father was diagnosed with a chronic disease, my mother was left to manage the Westwood building on her own. Eventually, my parents retired after 21 years and moved out of the building during the first few months of the pandemic. They still rent, and so do I.

The temporary feeling of apartment living. Collages by Yasmine Nasser Diaz featuring photos by Diana Ruzova

What is truly ours?

I’ve spent my life grappling with the concept of ownership. How our identity often gets wrapped up in what we own and what we don’t own. How in the U.S., ownership is the pinnacle of success. How there was no such thing as ownership in the failed Soviet experiment. How you could pick apples off any tree because they were there for everybody to enjoy. How owning a home in Los Angeles may forever be out of reach. How impermanent we are in the arbitrary nature of existence.

After I graduated from college and landed an office job in Los Angeles, I began renting apartments on my own. The eggshell walls painted over and over and over again. The rotating neighbors I still feared to befriend. The flying cockroaches. The broken laundry machines. The unabiding footsteps. The eternal sounds of other people’s lives. The possibility of moving out and starting all over again. It all felt so familiar. The impermanence I witnessed so often as a child was no longer a source of shame but a knowing comfort that at any moment everything could change.

Diana Ruzova is a writer from Los Angeles. She holds an MFA in literature and creative nonfiction from the Bennington Writing Seminars. Her writing has appeared in the Cut, Oprah Daily, Flaunt, Hyperallergic, Los Angeles Review of Books and elsewhere.

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