Posts Tagged ‘furniture’

Unlikes some flag

Saturday, September 10th, 2005

(There was something to say about Heino Pars. There was a reason why you remember watching his films as a child, very early in the morning. Why are you reminded of him?)

Sunlight comes in through the window (a window that opens: rejoice) with complete disregard to my retarded sleep cycle—contempt, almost. My navy blinds are made a joke. Walls, furniture, retinas, all are blasted a fierce and relentless white until the late afternoon when the sun, gorged with the satisfaction of having made my adversely positioned monitor unusable for the majority of the day, lowers itself behind the houses across the way. My new room is beige only in the evening.

An image of a bed with beige sheets

You’re using the space well, they’ve said. It was smart of you to remove the closet door. It must have saved, what, like, six inches along that wall. You’ve managed to fit quite a lot in here.

What they can’t appreciate is how new and fragile this economy is. How long do I expect to maintain the Scandinavian show-room tidiness that has freed so much space? This undramatic tautness is days old and already showing signs of atrophy, soon to give all at once. What they don’t see is the lack of purposeless surfaces. There’s no leeway. I sense the sagging shelves, can feel the failure of this room in the startling dreams I suffer in it, waking to sounds from the open window (a mixed blessing), to white walls.

I’m a stone fruit here. Not only in this room, but here in these twin cities. And on the television I’m being sold the tragedy of mismanagement.

On a Flärke

Wednesday, July 27th, 2005

My desk, a few days ago:

An image of my messy desk

Since, the tangle of wires has been thinned some, thanks in part to a working wireless card; the most urgent bills, the ones buried deepest under the desk-toys and scribbled notes, have been paid; and the dishes spotted with cheese made their way to the sink soon after I found them under a pile of shirts I was to put away.

It is the books—four of which can be seen in the photo—that give me the most trouble. I have too many of them, and a bad habit of buying more before I’ve finished the ones I’ve already begun. (I am convinced that, it being summertime, I have ample time to make my way through all the titles I’ve jotted down over the past months, and so, shortly after my paycheck hits, I find myself waiting in line for a cashier at a bookstore. It’s only when I get back home, when I see the small piles on my dresser and on the floor, that I realize how quickly I’ve been accruing books—and lament how short the summer is.) My shelves are already packed. The papers can be shredded and recycled, the dishes washed, the clothes folded, but where do I put the books?

Earlier this afternoon, my mother phones in a solution. It’s from Ikea, you see. It’s on sale.