When it’s time to move, this Memphian helps people relocate ‘with peace in the process’
Stacey Saed puts together a moving box while at a client’s home. (Brad Vest/Special to The Daily Memphian)
Gay Hammond found herself overwhelmed by a mountainous stack of cardboard boxes after she returned to her newly remodeled home three years after a flood made it uninhabitable.
Hammond, 83, lost her husband years before and recently underwent heart surgery, so she asked her son Josh Hammond, co-owner of Buster’s Liquors and Wines, to find someone in his network to help her go through it all.
Through a friend’s recommendation and a Facebook follow, Josh Hammond found Stacey Saed and her business Annestasis.
This is an excerpt of this story. To read more, please click here and subscribe.
Topics
Annestasis Stacey Saed Josh Hammond moving Subscriber OnlyThank you for being a subscriber to The Daily Memphian. Your support is critical.
As a 501(c)3 nonprofit news organization with a hybrid business model, we rely on a mix of revenue from subscriptions (50%), advertising, events and miscellaneous earned income (25%) and fundraising (25%).
Please consider making a fully tax-deductible donation or other contribution to The Daily Memphian today.
👉 Your subscription pays for you to read all our journalism.
👉 Your donation powers the work we do to reach everyone else with the news.
We believe an informed Memphis is a better Memphis. If you agree, join our growing list of donors now.
Sophia Surrett
Sophia Surrett is a University of Alabama graduate, where she received her B.A. in news media and M.A. in journalism and media studies. She covers small business, nonprofits, restaurant real estate, hospitality and tourism and manufacturing.
Comments
Want to comment on our stories or respond to others? Join the conversation by subscribing now. Only paid subscribers can add their thoughts or upvote/downvote comments. Our commenting policy can be viewed here.