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Supplements: Most people don't wake up thinking they need a different house. What they usually notice first is something smaller. A little noise they can't quite escape. A space that feels fine, but never fully settles. And over time, they begin paying attention to the rare places that ask less of them. It's on a block that doesn't compete for attention. Close enough to downtown Scranton to stay connected, far enough away that evenings feel like they belong to you again. 2 bedrooms. 1.5 bath. Not oversized. Not complicated. Just enough space arranged in a way that makes daily life feel manageable instead of rushed. There's finished space where you don't always expect it. A lower level that absorbs the day differently. An upper space that waits without insisting on what it should be. A fenced yard that quietly solves a problem many people don't name until they have it. It simply fits together in a way that tends to make sense once you notice it. And once that realization forms, something else often follows. As you continue reading, you may already begin to picture how the house feels at the end of a day. The hardwood floors steady underfoot. The way rooms hold warmth without effort. You might find yourself seeing how the finished basement becomes a place to decompress, while the attic shifts easily into whatever chapter comes next. Go ahead and imagine stepping into the fenced backyard and noticing how complete the space feels when everything has a place. Before you scroll past, notice how the quiet street, the extra finished space, and the proximity to downtown start aligning on their own. And as that picture settles, it often becomes clear what the next step is. Reaching out. Asking a simple question. Scheduling a showing.