We Should Have Done This Sooner: A Minnesota Senior Couple’s Rightsizing Story
Jim and Carol Peterson had lived in the same four-bedroom colonial in Buffalo for 41 years. They had raised their children there, watched their grandchildren take their first steps in that living room, and maintained the house with the kind of pride that comes from genuine ownership.
But in 2023, Jim was 82 and Carol was 79. The house required constant attention — the furnace, the roof, the lawn, the gutters, the driveway. Jim’s knees had not been right for three years. Carol had started to find the stairs difficult at night. Their children, scattered between Minneapolis and Chicago, worried constantly.
The Five Years They Waited
The Petersons had talked about rightsizing for five years before they actually did it. Every time the conversation came up, something stopped them. The attachment to the house. The complexity of sorting through 41 years of belongings. The uncertainty about where they would go. The feeling that moving meant admitting something they were not ready to admit.
What finally moved them was their daughter Kate, who sat with them one Sunday and said: I am not asking you to leave because I want you to go. I am asking because I want more time with you, and I am afraid that if something happens in that house, I will not have had it.
That was the conversation that changed everything.
The Search and the Move
The Petersons spent four weekends touring independent living communities in the Buffalo and Monticello area. They had specific requirements: they wanted to be together in the same community, they wanted access to a walking path, and they wanted a community with enough social programming to keep Jim, a natural extrovert, engaged.
They found a two-bedroom apartment in a campus-style community just outside Buffalo. The apartment was smaller than their master bedroom and closet combined. They kept what mattered: their bed, their reading chairs, Carol’s piano (the community had a music room), and three generations of family photographs.
The rest went to estate sale, family members, Goodwill, and — for the things with no apparent value except to them — a memory box that lives on the shelf in their new apartment.
One Year Later
Jim plays poker on Tuesday evenings and has been elected social chair of the community’s events committee. Carol has joined the watercolor class she always said she would try someday, and has discovered she is genuinely good at it.
The Buffalo house sold in two weeks and closed on their 51st anniversary.
When their son visited last Thanksgiving, he found them at a table with six other residents, laughing at a story Carol was telling. Walking out to the car, he called Kate and said: They are happier than they have been in years. I think they are happier than they were in the old house.
Jim, when asked what he would say to couples in the same position he was five years ago, does not hesitate: We should have done this sooner. Every year we waited was a year we spent worrying instead of living.
Explore More Stories of Success
- Rightsizing a Family Farm in Minnesota: One Family Unexpected Journey
- When Aging in Place Stopped Working: How a Big Lake Family Found a Better Answer
- From a 4-Bedroom Home to Independent Living: A Minnesota Senior Story
- The Adult Daughter Perspective: How a Twin Cities Family Navigated Their Mom Move
- From Overwhelmed to Overjoyed: How One Wright County Family Rightsized with Confidence
Circle Partners helps Minnesota senior couples navigate the rightsizing journey together — with clarity, confidence, and care. Contact us today in Wright County.





