If you’ve ever ______, you might be a Tiny House Dweller.

September 25, 2015

A little Tiny Life insight/humor.  : )

If you’ve never been to jail yet you call your previous residence “The Big House,” you might be a Tiny House Dweller.

If you’ve ever capitalized the T in tiny when you weren’t even typing about Tiny Houses. You might be a Tiny House Dweller.

If you’ve ever wondered if you should just.stop.capitalizing Tiny House, you might be a Tiny House Dweller. (We can stop now, right?)

If you’ve ever run back to the front desk immediately after stepping into your hotel room to ask how many square feet it is, you might be a Tiny House Dweller. (…just out of curiousity!)

If you’ve ever yelled “Hangers aren’t allowed in my house!” while whipping sneaky hangers out the front door, you might be a Tiny House Dweller. (I’m telling you, hangers are theworst!)

If you’ve ever filled your Costco shopping cart completely full and then freaked out just-a-little because the cart itself is actually bigger than your entire kitchen, you might be a Tiny House Dweller.

If you don’t know where you’re going to live next but you do know that you don’t have to pack your stuff, you might be a Tiny House Dweller.

If you’ve started wondering if you should just go ahead and wave at the people slooowly driving by, you might be a Tiny House Dweller.  (It’s awkward… either way.)

If you keep track of how often you stir the poop, you might be a Tiny House Dweller.

If you have bulk paper towels and toilet paper stashed in your trunk, you might be a Tiny House Dweller.  (I’m not going to stop buying in bulk!)

If while someone is generously offering you something you accidentally interupt-shout “NOthankyou!” before they finish their sentence, you might be a Tiny House Dweller.

If you’ve ever been asked if you “live in that,” if your home is an ice house, if you’re homeless, or if your house is just a fancy camper, you might be a Tiny House Dweller.

 :

 

Tiny House Life is Bliss!

September 7, 2015

A year ago was a whole different life.
One of my favorite things is the mega creative rush of wild ideas that flood my brain along with a drenching of espresso three minutes after my first sip of an uber-caffienated black coffee. Ryan knows the phone call that follows well. 🙂

A year ago. I think back to the wild ideas we had then. It’s a culmination of crazy dreams that now make up our reality.

I LOVE our life. The only way I can describe this strange feeling of just plain loving the life we’re living is like …ya know when you’re so mad that your blood is boiling?, well its sorta like that but the opposite. My blood is tingling with joy. All the time.

Yes, admittedly, if you drew my blood you’d probably find a staggaring level of caffeine. BUT STILL! The ideas, opportunities, and adventurous paths that can branch off of what this life is mind boggling to me!

And the Tiny House, yes, is a huge variable in that it has wheels. Wheels = opportunity and availability, new environments, new adventures.
But GOD is devine! He can do immeasurably more with our lives than we can ever even fathom. I could have pure espresso pumping through my veins and still not even come close!

This adventure didn’t start when we said Yes! to living in a Tiny House. It started when we realized our brokeness and incapability to continue of the path of debt, struggle, and insufficiency that we were on. God nudged us to give Him one piece of the puzzle, the house. Everything changed when we started praying for a house (ie. no mortgage). Yes, the mortgage is completely huge in our eyes but for God the puzzle piece was no different than any other.

God did amazing things with that puzzle piece! We started giving God control of more puzzle pieces and now I’m here telling you how my blood is tingling with joy! Yes, I know that is completely bizarro. Lol! But it is. Tingley, caffieney, Jesus-Praising, JOY!

Morph Speakers Rock!

September 7, 2015

A photo posted by Kim Kasl (@kimkasl) on

I love everything off-grid!
I also love everything small-footprint, minimalist, mindful, sustainable, crazy-creative, real, and pretty!

So, goodness, when I learned about Morph Speakers I (we, really) were so psyched!
Is it small? Check.
Will it use minimal electricity? Check (None, actually!)
Is it amazing!? Ha! Yes.
It is pretty? Yessir.
It meshes with everything Tiny House.

Truly, it blends with the whole organic vibe in our house, its raw wood like all the wood in our home, and it serves a purpose. We don’t have a tv and the computers are usually stashed away. So Ryan just pulls up Pandora on his cell, I use the TuneIn Radio app, and sets it up on the Morph and we rock out!

The sound is pretty impressive. I really, really, really love that it’s repurposed wood and that it requires no power. We’re getting so close to reaching the point of unplugging from The Grid! and we celebrate every little victory that supports that! So, *HighFive!*

A photo posted by Kim Kasl (@kimkasl) on

Engraved. Delicious!
Bless This Tiny House… as it totally rocks out.
Amen!

Dear People Who Live in Fancy Giant Houses :)

July 12, 2015

This post is in response to Lauren Modery’s post, “Dear People Who Live in Fancy Tiny Houses” in which she reference a picture of our home. (It would make most sense to read hers before reading mine.) I thought it only polite to write back!

Dear People Who Live in Fancy Giant Houses,
Do you actually love living in a fancy giant house?
You look so freakin’ happy in that gated community with the pools in every back yard, but c’mon, you can’t tell me that you don’t lie awake at night, your bedroom four floors from your childrens’ for fear of them overhearing your incredibly loud boinking, and think, How am I going to pay my mortgage?

Oh, geez. Seriously, though! It’s all in fun. The questions you ask in your blog post are, in fact, the questions that everyone asks. Everyone!

As a Mom in a Family of Four living in a Tiny House, I can tell you from 10 months of experience that the Tiny Life is quite wonderful and freeing. It’s a mix between completely normal and a vacation.

We are normal people. Nnnnnnorrrrrmalll. We even have cell phones, real ones, with email, facebook, and instagram (a highschooler asked me that once, I think he thought maybe we were Amish?.) Living a real, live, life. Farts and everything. (Really, not a problem. We have 11 windows in under 300 square feet. The airflow is pretty breezy.) The equivalent annoyance would be the sound of chewing. I cannot tolerate it. But I can remember this irritating me in the “Big House,” too (we downsized from 2000 square feet), and like most “How do you _____ in a Tiny House?” questions the answer is tagged along by, “but you experience a very similar or identical scenario in any living arrangement. AmIright?”

My house is definitely not clean all the time. This place gets pretty messy fast. The photo you used in your post was of our house the day we first saw it, before we moved in. Here is a picture of our house the day you posted your questions, ten months after the original pic was taken:

2015-07-11 19.14.55

More stuff! More homey, though. We’ve rearranged things a few times, continued to downsize to needs and favorites. No “just in case” items, they just represent fear. Our home is fearless! It is filled with joy and welcome! Though it is definitely not tour-ready all the time. The average American can invite someone to step inside without the risk of sharing immediate view of the dirty laundry basket, a sink full of dishes, and whatever project is laying out. That’s real life! So I guess we’re just really real.

Right now our kids love the Tiny House. However they choose their dwellings in the future it’ll be shaped, like all children, by what we chose for their childhoods. We choose maximum life experiences over maximum storage for possessions. We choose financial freedom and gifting our time and resources to helping others rather than maintaining a large building and bills. We choose to use our home as a cozy place to relax and unwind after long days of playing outside, experiencing culture, and spending time out with family and friends rather than space to arrange electronics, collectibles, and decorations. Whatever form their homes take, this is their firm foundation.

Thank you for your well wishes of happiness! Years ago when we began planning for Tiny Living we only addressed the numbers. We didn’t realize it was so much more than that. God has a better! Bigger! plan for you than to have a big house and fill it with stuff! We’ve found that we’re really content with these contents. And I think that when you find contentment tiny things bring you Great Joy. 🙂

I must add, I wish happiness to all the Giant Housers of the world! I hope your mortgage is easy-peasy to pay off and your pool is often filled with joyful, swimming guests! Asking questions creates understanding and acceptance. Lets accept all kinds of safe, happy, joy-filled homes and pray that their dwellers achieve their goals and find their bliss.

Forever Home

April 23, 2015

The Tiny House is Our House.
This home will forever be ours. I love that.

I will never worry about resale value.
I can paint the walls and leave visible brush strokes, accidentally chip the sink and appreciate the new patina, enjoy the color variations of the wooden wine barrel bathtub that occur with more and more use, track our kids’ heights on the trim of the bathroom door, carve a blessing over the door with a wood burner, let Story take a crayon to her favorite stair on the steps, leave Sullivan’s blueberry fingerprint stains on the ceiling and call it art.
We can live here. And feel completely welcome and accepted in our own home.

When Ryan and I bought our first home all I could talk about was getting paint on the walls. I was so tired of renting white rooms. Seriously, signing the papers was exciting because I was finally going to paint my own house.

But once were moved in my reality quickly changed. Now all I could think about now was how much the paint would cost, how challenging it would be to do it right with little kids, and then after all that time, money, and love (I KNEW I would love it!), I would have to paint it white again (more expense!) in only 2-3 years when Ryan’s career would be changing and we would move.

Now our house moves with us. No more painting over what we leave behind.
The choices we make here will only effect us. Our ever-changing art project. We can screw hooks into the wall to dangle a small aquarium of goldfish, hang shelves in weird places, leave the wood raw and let it absorb a little history, Sullivan can stick a thousand stickers on his wall, I can write bible verses over my kids’ beds, Story can write in ‘cursive’ on her window sill.

We can make art, mistakes, and memories in our home and it will always be forgiven and never hidden.
Our Tiny House doesn’t have to look perfect for anyone else because it’s just perfect for us.

Lovely Article in “Life in Minnesota!”

April 23, 2015

My newfound friend, Kelly, wrote a very lovely article about our Tiny House experience thus far and you can find it here: http://www.lifeinminnesota.com/a-blessed-life-inside-a-tiny-house-kasl-mn/

A-Blessed-Life-Inside-A-Tiny-House-Kim-Kasl-MN

We spent a lot of time chatting and I hope to visit with Kelly again, soon! Our entire Tiny House journey has been about God and I love that that’s what we talked about and that’s what she wrote about!

Thank you Kelly, you are such a kind soul and I appreciate your kindness and realness! <3

Tiny House Skirting

April 12, 2015

It’s spring! And we removed our skirting. So while we were at it we thought we’d answer a few questions about skirting for the winter.
A little skirting lesson in reverse!  By Ryan  🙂

We took the skirting off because we’re moving! Otherwise it can stay on during the summer (although the campground we’re at requires it off in the open season).

We think we remember the cost for the supplies being $200+. $13/sheet of insulation (we used 5 sheets for our 24 foot long trailer), plus electric heat tape at $34/roll (we used 4, 20 foot long rolls), duct tape, tin tape, and two heat lamps.

There’s a more permanant option, Duraskirt, which we had on for the show (something they supplied). It’s cost is over $1,000 and is not meant to be used and re-used. We kept it to try to use once we’re in a more permanent location but it was measured for the ground we were on before… maybe it’ll work? It’s very heavy (when considering moving it from place to place), and is cement -which requires a cement cutting saw or something for fitting. But it looks really nice! It has a pretty permanent/settled look.  (I think I might prefer to leave the fancy wheels exposed!)

So if you’re wondering about living in a Tiny House in the winter I hope you found this helpful! We made it our first winter in Minnesota’s extreme cold temps! If you have further questions throw ’em down in a comment and we’ll do our best!

Tiny Kasl Open House

April 11, 2015

We’re opening our door!
We’d love for you to step inside the Tiny House, get a feel for the space, ask a few questions, and visit, WELCOME!

April 18th and 19th
Saturday 10am – 7pm
Sunday Noon – 5pm

Sully and Story might be hosting a lemonade stand! We’ll see. 🙂
Bring the fam! Kids love exploring the loft and there’s a playground right outside our door.

Edit!
The Open House was a huge success! Thank you to everyone who helped and everyone who visited!
Every person who came brought so much kindness!
75 people toured the Tiny Kasl! I hope we were able to answer all of your questions!
If you were unable to make it watch for the next tour date. 🙂 I will also be posting a virtual tour video as soon as I can.

Thank you!

New Blog!

March 20, 2015

I’ve been wading through sludge in Build-a-Website Land!
But I’m pretty close to being ready. I have yet to create and refine the tabs along the top. And my logo is pretty much not a logo at all. 🙂 I don’t have photoshop anymore and that huge pic is the best I can do right now.

But I’m going to go ahead and make the blog LIVE and see what happens.
Very soon I’ll do whatever it is you do to direct all the traffic from your old blog to the new one.
And THEN I will share the Kasl Family Tiny House blog, BlessThisTinyHouse.com, with the world!

Excited!