For The Love Of Laurel
Guideposts|November 2018

This small-town girl had big-time dreams. Little did she know she’d find them right at home.

Erin Napier
For The Love Of Laurel

MY HUSBAND, BEN, AND I ARE about to launch our third season of Home Town on HGTV, where we help folks in our town of Laurel, Mississippi, make and remake their houses into dreams come true. Truth to tell, the whole thing still boggles my mind. It is not at all what we thought we’d do or become when we met at Jones County Junior College.

I figured I’d be an art director for a publisher in a big city far away. Ben was a fledgling history major who volunteered on every committee on campus. I was quiet and shy, not seeking out the limelight that seemed to belong to him. He was tall (six foot six) and broad-shouldered, bearded and magnetic without ever letting it go to his head. We fell for each other hard over the course of six days and soon after transferred to Ole Miss. And that’s where we got married on a cold November day.

Ben was the son of a Methodist preacher. His family had moved around a lot, so he didn’t really have a hometown. I did: Laurel, a sleepy old place that had seen better days. Found ed in the 1880s, it had flourished when lumber mills were harvesting the area’s yellow pines. But industry moved on, and people moved out. Others might have hurried past the shuttered storefronts, but I kept seeing the myriad possibilities amid architecture that was worth preserving. What if there could be a bookstore on the corner or an Italian restaurant or a shop that sold sweet-smelling candles and soaps?

Ben and I made Laurel our home. Together, we fixed up a second-floor loft in a flatiron building in the historic district. The floorboards had nickelsize gaps, the nine-foot-tall single-pane windows were a century old and too expensive to replace, so we learned to love how the wind whispered through them in all seasons.

This story is from the November 2018 edition of Guideposts.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.

This story is from the November 2018 edition of Guideposts.

Start your 7-day Magzter GOLD free trial to access thousands of curated premium stories, and 8,500+ magazines and newspapers.

MORE STORIES FROM GUIDEPOSTSView All
EVERYDAY GREATNESS: Jessica Manfre
Guideposts

EVERYDAY GREATNESS: Jessica Manfre

Uniting military and civilian communities through acts of kindness

time-read
2 mins  |
October/November 2023
The Cake Mixer Mishap
Guideposts

The Cake Mixer Mishap

I should’ve listened to Mom

time-read
2 mins  |
October/November 2023
Star Turn
Guideposts

Star Turn

I worried about my introverted daughter. Then Olivia flipped the script

time-read
6 mins  |
October/November 2023
Unearthed
Guideposts

Unearthed

I pulled the overgrown remnants of my herb garden, putting it to bed for the season, and went over a mental list of all the things to do before winter began—change out the screens for storm windows, finish the yard work, bring down the draft blockers from the attic.

time-read
1 min  |
October/November 2023
Confidence Builder
Guideposts

Confidence Builder

My five boys didn't need me to homeschool them anymore. Now I wanted to be good at something else. But could I?

time-read
7 mins  |
October/November 2023
Ordinary People
Guideposts

Ordinary People

The story behind Norman Rockwell's celebrated painting

time-read
6 mins  |
October/November 2023
A Woman of Courage
Guideposts

A Woman of Courage

After I was widowed, fear took over my life. How could I trust anyone if I couldn't trust God?

time-read
7 mins  |
October/November 2023
Keep on Truckin'
Guideposts

Keep on Truckin'

How to bring a couple back together: share a long-haul drive in an 18-wheeler

time-read
6 mins  |
October/November 2023
My Answer to Pain
Guideposts

My Answer to Pain

Inflammation was wreaking havoc with my health. Was God trying to show me a better way to live?

time-read
6 mins  |
October/November 2023
Letters From Phil
Guideposts

Letters From Phil

My older brother and I went our separate ways: he to the Air Force, me to a marriage that didn't last. He lived a rough-and-tumble life, but that's not what really worried me

time-read
6 mins  |
October/November 2023