# What Kind of House Are You Now? **by Caryn Mirriam-Goldberg** I’m a bungalow with an airplane wing too hot to inhabit except in winter. Did I mention I could fly? I’m a rambling ranch going to town and back to the country again to plop myself down in a den of sunflowers, annuals with faces large as platters to face down the darkness until we all turn to sleep. I’m a Victorian in great disrepair on the edge of what was once a great dome of a city. It rains here, mostly drizzle now that we’ve lost our thunder, but in the flash of moon every October, my attic ignites into a miniature circus of curious and lost toys come home to roost and play. I’m a yurt full of flies in summer, a dusting of snow in winter, three sets of bunk beds but always enough blankets, which is good since I live at higher elevation than most humans can stand, and I love the solitude. I’m a house of dreams draped in snow, my roof starting to sag, but look what comes! Crows large as house cats, tiny juncos afraid of nothing, female cardinals with their orange tails and tailwinds propelling them and all the others to my bird feeders spilling across the yard, welcoming everyone.