I bought a house at 19. My dad insisted it was a good investment
and helped me with the $3,000 down payment. In the mid-90’s you could build a
brand new three-bedroom house with a two-car garage on a half an acre for
$68,000 with a 5% interest rate.
My house payment was $550; I split it with my boyfriend at the time. We
spent the next two years spending every disposable dime accumulating stuff: a
washer and dryer, trashcans, hoses, a guest bed, a tree for the yard. We
furnished creatively with yard sale finds, hand-me-downs from grandparents and
splurged on two bright blue barrel chairs and a zebra striped rug from Ikea. We
saved months for a new TV. Evenings and weekends were spent taming that
half-acre into a lawn, which then required weekly mowing and endless sprinkler
moving, I hoed the old, dry ground for flower beds, and planted and weeded, and
tended the rose bushes. We assembled a bench for the front porch and installed
an old brown fridge in the garage for overflow beer.
But, less than a year into the new house, our relationship
was pretty much over. I had grown to hate my lazy, alcoholic slob of a
boyfriend; he thought I was a nag and a shrew, which was probably true, too. We
didn’t break up though, mostly because of the stuff. I was working full-time,
and a full-time college student. Clint worked nights. I knew we would both have
to find a new place and then find the time to split up the stuff which would
inevitably lead to bickering which would take more time. Neither of us had the
time or the will, frankly, to deal with all that. So, our stuff was the anchor
that kept us tied. After four years, though, I finally had had enough.
Instead of splitting up the stuff, I just let him have
everything. The barrel chairs, the TV, the mid-century modern couch that had
belonged to my grandfather. When we sold the house, the beer fridge was his
problem, and the garage full of yard tools, the computer desk that had to be
disassembled, and the zebra rug. I packed up my clothes, took only the things
that I had owned prior to our co-house, like family pictures, and my dog.
I did this mostly because I wanted a clean break. I didn’t
want “our” crap around when there was no longer an “us,” I didn’t want to be
reminded of him, of our space, our things, or the stink of our bad relationship
tainting up my future space.
Also, I was moving in with another guy and he had his own
house with his own stuff, and there wasn’t much room for additional stuff.
Nik lived in a small two-bedroom house built in 1911. He had
purchased the house because of its proximity to his work and for the two
freestanding shops at the rear of the property. Nik was a printer, a scholar, an
artist, and the shops housed his substantial collection of antique printing
presses, a Ludlow typograph machine and the support materials and tools needed
to maintain and run an authentic letterpress studio. The house was less important to him, but it provided storage
for the remainder of his collections: books, books, vintage clothing, records,
papermaking and bookbinding supplies. His furniture and appliances were circa
pre-WWII. Blood red velvet couches stuffed with horsehair, low brass lamps, splintery
wooden chairs, a wind-up phonograph. His fridge looked like a little igloo and
inside it was a shoebox-sized space that served as the freezer. As you might
imagine, my low blonde furniture and cheeky rug wouldn’t have fit, anyway.
I insisted on modernity in moderation. Gradually, we upsized
the fridge to a double door model with an ice maker, splurged on a washer dryer
set, expanded our music collection to include CD’s and bought a TV compatible
with a VCR. The creaky old brass bed remained, the piles of ancient tomes were
confident in their immobility and hand painted ties still brightened the ever
dim, one bulb closet.
We ripped up carpet. Tore down wood paneling. Patiently
spackled holes and painted the lath and plaster walls; flat paint, soft colors
to call less attention to the flaws. The toilet, we reseated it with a giant
yellow ring of wax. In the summer, in the yard, we toiled and tilled, dug and
planted – 50 year old heirloom rosebushes, trees at 10 ft. tall, required
thoughtful yet drastic surgery – 50 year old grapevines, up the side of the
tree, down the fence, up the flag pole – were Idahoan kudzu – persistent,
invasive, mildly alarming. The homemade sprinkler system was always on the
fritz. The neighborhood feral cats vigorously procreated and pissed in
unwelcome locales, like under the house. Our furnace, temperamental, in turns
violently blasting and then whistle whimpering with a damp nasal exhale.
And then I decided to go to graduate school in Indiana. In
August I rented a room in a stranger’s house in Bloomington and took only what
would fit in the trunk of my 1984 BMW. Nik stayed in Idaho to tie up loose
ends, like selling the house and moving the shops to storage. It was a huge job
and he worked tirelessly; it took until Christmas to sell the house, and at a
loss. He lived with my parents until Spring Break when I flew home and we
packed up the biggest Penske we could find.
By the time we got to Indiana, 3 days later, I felt
suffocated by all that stuff. I had grown accustomed to the freedom of a
garbage bag full of clothes; I’d spent nearly 9 months focused on friends and
school, discovering a new place, becoming myself as an individual sans a yard,
a washing machine, a record collection. For the first time in my life I was a
person without things and I dreaded unpacking the boxes of dishes, the old
lamps, the dusty books. I wanted to go forth, unencumbered by someone else’s
things, even my things. Nik and I broke up. His stuff went back in the truck.
I was alone for the first time in my life. Just me and my
stuff. I collected carefully, useful, beautiful things. I bought artwork, a
good mattress, a new couch made from ice blue organic cotton. My coffee mugs
all matched, so did my sheets.
And then I met Tim. And he had a nice place, with nice
stuff, but he wanted to play house and shop for major appliances together at Best Buy and I
couldn’t do it. I wasn’t ready.
And then I met Bryce. And his gigantic mess of stuff. And
that was a mess.
And then I met Ken. And he drowned all my things in the
desert until there was nothing left and I had to move back home with my
parents.
It always seems to boil down to the stuff.
Today I have a tiny purple-grey house with a green door,
arched doorways and a big fenced yard that gets mowed by the landlord. It’s just
big enough for me and my two little dogs. I got a couch off Craigslist and two
chairs from my grandma, a TV for my birthday. My sheets match and so do the
mugs, also, please use a coaster. I like to keep it “just so.” I like the
sunshine in my front window, and the raspberry bushes in the back yard. I like
the pillows on my bed, in the winter, two with flannel pillowcases, two
without. I like the books arranged by color and the thermostat set to 67
degrees. Almost always there’s a vase of fresh flowers on the dining table, and
always there’s a bottle of wine in the fridge.
A year ago, I met Rocco.
He owns a house a few miles away. About two months into
dating he asked me to move in and I said no. Clearly, all too often I’ve moved
in with a boyfriend (I’ve cohabitated with 4) and it hasn’t worked out. Except
it has, in that I never should have been with any of those guys any longer than
I was or maybe at all. I wanted to
give our relationship room enough to breathe and grow without being complicated
by all our stuff.
Rocco’s house is a bachelor pad. The furniture is mostly
brown. There is a very large TV. The dishes are mismatched and there is an
entire cupboard dedicated to plastic storage containers and the lids that do
not fit them. There are beard trimmings around the bathroom sink and a great
deal of loose change and old mail. The king sized bed has a memory foam top and
high-thread count sheets, but something about it makes me feel lost. I can’t
seem to get the pillows right and I’m always too cold or too hot. Every time I
try and get comfy on the couch there’s a dog elbowing me in the side and I get
a cramp in my neck from the overstuff pillow jut. There is little to no natural light, the blinds are always
closed, so it feels like a cave. A man cave.
Now, before you get all judgey about my being judgey and
high-maintenance, you should know that my knickknacks under bell jars make
Rocco nervous. He finds the bouquet ridiculous and wasteful. The angle and the
softness of the bed give him acid reflux and because my bedroom is small,
someone has to have the wall side, which is annoying, also, it’s too small being
only a queen size. He finds the couch uncomfortable and the fact that there is
no dishwasher AND no microwave is practically a deal breaker. I keep the house
much too warm for his taste. He would rather I keep the drapes closed,
especially when he’d like to be walking around in his underwear in the morning
while drinking his coffee.
After a year, we find ourselves spending less and less time
together. There is an occasional night at the other’s house, but there are dogs
to consider, and schedules that require a good night’s sleep. More often then
not we retreat to our own comfort zones, our own pillows, our own couches, the
contents of our fridges and our preferred toothpaste. I used to think, “home is where the
heart is,” but now it seems “home is where my stuff is, and not his.” Maybe
that’s how I’ve always felt, only I never admitted it. I love Rocco, but I
don’t love his stuff. I’m pretty sure he feels the same way.
And so we find ourselves at an impasse, a stalemate of
stuff. Because it always seems to boil down to the stuff.
Finally a guy I knew. (Clint)
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