Archive for ‘home’

March 22, 2013

my half-finished kitchen

by katie savage

I’ve wanted to post some pictures of my newly remodeled kitchen for a long time. The only problem is that I haven’t actually finished remodeling the kitchen. I haven’t finished for a long, long time, and I was waiting to have it all done before I went and slapped pictures up on the Internet. After reading your post, Maria, about hobbies and motherhood, I decided to go ahead and slap.

Interior design is, perhaps, one of my hobbies. I am by no means trained. I am probably not even very good, by most people’s standards. I like reading design blogs and figuring out how to DIY things for little to no money. I am completely attracted to the dreaming part, the transformation part, which is why it is so fun to see an ugly, old space and imagine what it could become. When we were house hunting, I was drawn to the old, pieces-of-crap sort of houses with shag carpeting left over from the 1970s and walls needing to be torn out. Scott and I hardly ever agreed because he was drawn to the, you know, functional houses with cherry cabinets and granite countertops and new beige carpeting.

When we decided last summer to redo the kitchen, I got giddy. I got so bold that I even called actual people on the actual telephone to ask for quotes, which is one of those weird fears of mine that makes me procrastinate like nobody’s business. I read even more design blogs. I took field trips to Home Depot. I painted cabinets into the wee hours of the night (that is, after 10:30, when we usually go to bed).

And then, after the kitchen was in working order again, and after the designy part was over, I stopped.

Here’s the issue: I felt, and maybe feel, some sort of embarrassment that the kitchen isn’t finished. It feels like a metaphor for my life, and maybe it is. I go from one thing to the next, leaving unfinished activities in my wake. I pull out a pile of laundry to fold, get half of it done, am interrupted, and go on to take care of whatever new thing interrupted me. It drives my husband a little batty. He wonders why I can’t just finish what I started. It drives me batty, too.

I heard recently that the greatest enemy to creativity is interruption. That hit a nerve with me because motherhood seems to be one giant exercise in interruption. The kids interrupt my sleep, my thought processes, my sentences, my huge remodeling projects. Since I’ve come to believe that much of my identity is wrapped up in being a creative, my frustration with unfinished projects began to make more sense. It’s difficult to execute creative projects—either new kitchens or new essays and blog posts and books—when you’re being interrupted by people who need things.

Am I blaming my half-finished kitchen remodel on my children? Absolutely I am. Those kids are little joy-sucking amoebas that have turned me into a half-asser.

But then again.

I think this frustration comes back to the “balance myth,” as you have called it. That term doesn’t feel right to me because I believe that balance is achievable—not in each individual moment, as your point gets to, but in an overall sort of scheme of things. Rather, I’d call it the “You Can Have It All Myth.” I don’t believe you can have it all—not on a large scale and not on a small scale. That’s the nature of life, I think: that you make choices. You figure out what is important to you and when, and you give your life over to those things. If you didn’t have to choose, and if there was some way that you could have it all, I’d argue that life would start to seem… flat.

Sometimes, a kitchen remodel is important. It is important because it helps me to be creative. It helps me to remember my strengths and what it feels like to throw myself into a project. It’s fun. It gives me a happy space. It gives me much, much better countertops.

And then sometimes, a kitchen remodel isn’t the important thing anymore. It gets pushed aside for playing hide-and-seek or peekaboo. For eating too many cookies with my husband. For catching my breath on the sofa during naptime.

And I am pretty proud of my half-finished kitchen.

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Before

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Before

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Before

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Before

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New open shelving. Counter-height bar area.

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Pay no attention to the exposed, unpainted drywall. Pay attention instead to the sparkly over-sink chandelier and the fancy vent.

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Again: green painter’s tape: not part of the design. Cool microwave shelf? Part of the design.

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Ceiling is unfinished. Floors are unmopped. But don’t you love the stainless steel countertops? And the cool white Corian?

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You can just see the giant pantry we added. It is a slightly different color than the dark green cabinets. It’s called “Extra Virgin Olive Oil.”

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Old, thrifted filing cabinets. They’re like old card catalogs except more functional.

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The stove. Not updated. I wanted to make use of our white appliances.

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Another shot of the microwave shelf.

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I had all that fruit in the fruit bowl already. Like a boss.

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Chalkboard meal planner was a Christmas gift.

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Craigslisted those bar stools. In love with them.

 

 

March 14, 2013

on the bike i ain’t nobody’s mama

by maria polonchek

IMG_3657Because we sometimes forget that we agree to disagree, my husband and I periodically have a conversation when he gets home from work that sounds like this:

me: I’m so glad you’re home. The kids are driving me crazy and we need to figure something out for dinner and I’ve been working on the house all day. I’m exhausted.

him: I’ve been working all day, too, you know.

me: I didn’t say you weren’t. But I need a break from doing the same kind of work. If I don’t get a break, I’m doing the same thing, 24 hours a day.

him: I know you work hard. But when do I get a break?

me: But if you get a break when do I get a break?

Then we say we don’t know how single parents do it.

This is not earth-shattering stuff. And it’s the stuff of a relatively privileged life. If you “stay at home,” you have similar conversations. If not, you’re tired of hearing about them from those of us who do. And before you get all excited over opinions of working moms vs. “stay-at-home” moms (always in quotations until I learn of a less ridiculous term for this lifestyle), understand: this is not that kind of piece. Yes, I know the debate is alive and well lately, but here’s a secret the flame-fanners ignore: I’ve done it both ways with young children and there are benefits and disadvantages to working outside the home and working with the home. Don’t talk yourself into thinking that if you could to just go back to work or just quit your job and stay home, your life would get better.

But after having this who gets a break? conversation with friends and, ahem, spouses-who-shall-go-unnamed, I’ve been thinking: It’s not so much that I need a break from the work (that is exhausting and unpaid and culturally under-appreciated…but that is a different piece); it’s about a break from identity.

Nothing I’ve done in life has flooded me with a tidal wave of identity like becoming a mother. It was only after having my third child that I finally knew I had what it took to “stay at home.” That’s right: going back to grad school and working full-time was easier for me than staying home with twins. I had lost my already-shaky sense of identity and I didn’t know how to be a mother until I understood who I was outside of being a mother.

Back when I was teaching and writing full-time, when I met someone new, I would tell them I have three children and I teach and write. Then, we would go on to have a conversation about interesting things. Now that I tell people I have three children and I “stay at home” the conversation stalls. She must not have much to talk about, is the unspoken message I get. This reaction is not just in my head. In social settings I’ve observed friends who work outside the home quickly make it clear that they have real jobs besides “just” being a mother. I could do it too; I can say I’m a writer. But unless I’m feeling especially insecure, I don’t. I want it to be clear that “staying at home” is something I value and take pride in and yet— surprise! —I still have other things to talk about.

Cycling is one of the few pre-children identity-holdovers that I’ve kept since becoming a mother. (Even writing is something I began professionally after I had kids.) And I’ve held onto cycling not just because it fills me with passion and the energy of living. I hold onto it because it gives me that break I need from being someone’s mother. When I go through the ritual of putting on my funny little lycra pants, my jersey, my helmet, and I head out to climb the foothills and speed down the road, I am a cyclist. I am anonymous and free and I could be anyone to the stranger driving by.

I need this and my children don’t know it yet, but they need this for me. I need a break from being their mother so I can be a better mother.

What is your passion? What fills you with the goodness of life? Is it professional? Getting that certificate, going back to school,  finishing that novel? Is it creative? Photography, fashion, design? Is it physical? Dance, yoga, swimming? Is it whimsical? Reading, watching your favorite show, sitting in a sunny corner with a mug of tea?

If you haven’t the means to engage your passion, I hope you can find a way. If you choose not to engage, think twice before judging people who do. It means the world has one less resentful, bitter, unfulfilled person, which can only make it a better place.

What is your passion? Don’t let anyone make you feel guilty that it isn’t why you got a degree or it doesn’t bring in money or somehow you haven’t “earned” it.

People will judge you. Let them. And don’t fall into the trap of telling yourself you’re doing it for the kids. There’s nothing wrong with doing it for yourself.

Sometimes you’ve got to be nobody’s mama.

February 15, 2013

when good friends move

by katie savage
Image

via anotherporch.blogspot.com

Probably our worst fight—maybe, really, our only fight?—happened just before you moved to California. You told me that I was the only one of your friends who wasn’t being supportive about the move. Man, that pissed me off.

But you were probably right. You were right. I wasn’t the least bit supportive. In the weeks leading up to your Bon Voyage, I brought up all the things about California that suck—you know, in an off-hand, jokey sort of a way. As if the crowded Costcos would convince you to stay in Kansas forever.

My motive was simple: your moving would not be cool for me. You would get to go off to a new land and a new house and a new adventure, back to the beaches and palm trees and In-N-Out Burgers that I was still missing in Kansas. And I would still be here, except it would be a little bit worse because I would have no one to try and convince me to smoke hookah with her. And even though you should have felt the teensiest bit flattered that I like you so much, I know that I was being really selfish. And I was wrong, even though I was right about the Costcos.

Not yet two years later, I find myself in a similar position. One of my closest friends, Megan, just got a job in Indianapolis, and I feel like the selfish girl who can’t see past her own issues to be happy for this exciting new stage of life that awaits my friend and her family. This one hits particularly hard, as Megan used to live right down the street from me. She stayed home with her kids, who are close in age to my kids, and we’d have play dates or go to the grocery store together or take walks. Before that, she was there when both of my children were born. And before that, she and her husband and me and my husband would get together every week to eat dinner and watch LOST.  Now, I know you’re not a big TV watcher, but people who ARE know that people who share LOST with you are special people indeed.

We had this easy sort of rhythm going where we could walk into each other’s houses without knocking. We never needed a big event to get together, or even a “company-worthy” meal. We knew where things like the extra toilet paper were kept. We preferred if you didn’t call and instead just stopped by.

Probably most of my anxiety about your move, and about Megan’s move, comes from my own feeling that I’m not quite settled yet. We moved to Kansas for Scott to go to school. We thought he’d finish school and then we’d be back in California, where both of us had grown up. That didn’t happen. I went to graduate school. Scott got a job. We got pregnant.

Our situation is not abnormal. The average number of times a person changes jobs now is up to twelve or thirteen times in a lifetime. Our culture is a mobile one; we are all on the go—sometimes out of desire, sometimes out of necessity. We are people who change locations, jobs, dentists, pediatricians, churches, yoga classes, favorite coffee shops. (For some reason, we tend not to change hair stylists. At least I don’t. Not unless I have to. Please don’t make me.)

I’ve been reading a book called The Wisdom of Stability: Rooting Faith in a Mobile Culture. The author, Jonathan Wilson-Hartgrove, has this to say on the subject:

Staying, we all know, is not the norm in our mobile culture. A great deal of money is spent each day to create desires in each of us that can never be fulfilled. I suspect that much of our restlessness is a return on this investment. Mobility has a large marketing budget […] But I am convinced that we lose something essential to our existence as creatures if we do not recognize our fundamental need for stability. Trees can be transplanted, often with magnificent results. But their default is to stay.

I don’t blame you or Megan for moving any more than I blame Scott and me for the decision to move away from our own family and friends six years ago. Of course not.  Moves like these are part of our lives—sometimes magnificently so. But I do long for stability and for a place, probably because I know how valuable it is to have it—even for a little while.

But maybe that’s a benefit to our mobile culture? A silver lining? The ability to see and appreciate good friends who never have to knock. The stability that we do have, even amid all the movement.

February 7, 2013

judging a man by his book covers

by maria polonchek

First of all, I totally got permission to do this, so don’t worry about Chris’ feelings. He’s fine.

Here’s the thing: Chris and I are readers—fiction, non-fiction, science-fiction, instructional, entertaining, informative, provocative—you hand it to us, we’ll read it. We have piles of books in every room and, much to the amusement of visitors, a main bookcase organized first by genre, then, when possible, by color:

both practical AND aesthetically pleasing

both practical AND aesthetically pleasing

You’ll notice the bottom shelf is not arranged with the same care and attention as the others. These are the books that fall into Chris’ Books, Group B. Chris’ Books, Group A are books he brings home that I can totally get into, read, and discuss. Group B books are as follows: graphic novels, science fiction, and step-by-steps of whatever physical quest Chris is into. I began looking through the last of this list recently, after Chris showed me a paragraph in his latest Amazon purchase: The 7 Secrets of Skiing, by one Mr. Chalky White. While I have no doubt that Chalky can ski circles around my ass, an expert carver does not a writer make:

You then managed to consistently fore and aft balance that ROCK. As a result, it then became largely instrumental in your consistent ability to, constantly, get the full length of your skis pressed onto the snow thus, increasing your ability to cause a ski to grip the snow… You did that, knowing only two ‘Secrets’—imagine where you’ll be after seven?

But I’m not picking on Chalky White alone. Here’s my list of Top 5 in Chris’ Collection of Revolutionary Secrets:

  1. Enter the Kettlebell! Strength Secret of The Soviet Supermen
  2. Chi Running: A Revolutionary Approach To Effortless, Injury-Free Running
  3. Convict Conditioning: How to Bust Free of All Weakness—Using the Lost Secrets of Supreme Survival Strength
  4. Total Immersion: The Revolutionary Way to Swim Better, Faster, and Easier

and, my personal favorite, based on the cover alone:

5. The Complete Juggler: All the Steps from Beginner to Professional.

He owned this before we met and I married him anyway.

He owned this before we met and I married him anyway.

How do I incorporate these into our collection? Thoughts? Titles we’re missing? Leave suggestions below.

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