Posts Tagged ‘purchase’

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.

Mouse on the rug

Tuesday, June 7th, 2005

My mother returned from a long weekend trip with a gift for me: a mouse-pad. What could be more insignificant than a mouse-pad? Hasn’t the floppy pad that came with my copy of Max Payne served well for the past few years? Is it not likely to serve well for many more? Perhaps, yes, but it can’t compare to a MouseRug.

This splendid Qashqa’i shekarlu rug covers… Sigmund Freud’s Psychoanalytic couch. The brilliantly coloured rug was made by one of the nomadic tribes of the Qashqa’i confederacy in Persia in the nineteenth century. Freud’s patients reclined on this rug, recounting their memories, dreams, and fantasies.

I’ve not much good to say of Freud’s theories of mind, but his taste in rugs was fantastic. The Freud MouseRug has transformed my desk. The mess of notes, books, and CDs that litter the surface around my computer screen no longer looks ugly and confused. It now appears to be the active workspace of a cultured eclectic. Alone, the new mouse-pad would be ostentatious, but in the context of my mess, it’s friendly and well-read.