After Evan Turner moved into her parents’ house in Washougal, she struggled with the fact that she no longer had a residence of her own, and felt guilty that her daughter was growing up in a “glorified attic.”
“Here I am, almost 30, living with my parents, a divorced single mom, and I felt like a loser most of the time,” she said.
One day, after her ex-husband stopped by and told Turner he admired the fact that she had made a home out of that attic, Turner reevaluated the meaning of the word “home.”
“Even though I don’t have my own home right now, I can make sure that my daughter doesn’t lack a home-type feel,” she said. “Now I’m saying that to other people, too. Just because you’re not in a perfect circumstance doesn’t mean you can’t make the best of it.”
Now, Turner hopes her new business, Mindful Renewal, will help other families create that same sense of home in their own living spaces.