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Domestic Affairs_

October 11, 2007

That Black Hole In the Universe Otherwise Known as My Sock Drawer

As promised, I conduced a thorough investigation earlier this week into the distressed state of my sock drawer. The results were grim. It seems that I own upwards of two dozen orphaned socks. Where their mates have run off to, I have no idea. But I am developing some theories.

The first is that my dryer is connected to a black hole in the universe that has a particular taste for cozy, stretchy pieces of fabric designed to cover one's foot. I have long maintained the position that that if Heaven exists as a physical place, it is also where people are reunited with lost possessions. Should I ever have the privilege of ending up there, I expect to find quite a number of earring backings, lens caps, pens, winter hats and house keys. We can now add socks to that ever growing list of lost and found objects.

My second theory is based on the South Park episode Gnomes, where an underground army of gnomes sneak into Tweek's bedroom every night and abscond with his underpants. If memory serves it was never clear what the motivation for their endeavor was other than to sell them for profit. The Marxist scholar in me has always loved this episode as a metaphor for the mysterious workings of capitalism and its sometimes devastating effects. Whenever I find another orphaned sock, I can't help but remember that episode and blame my problem on the sock gnomes. Somewhere in DC a cottage industry of sock puppets is no doubt thriving, thanks in part to the fruits of my sock drawer. If this indeed the case I expect some sort of kickback.

October 09, 2007

The Domestic

I seem to own several dozen socks, few of which seem match one another. Or they might if they weren't scattered in various dresser drawers, under my bed and in my hamper. I know I should just roll them into pairs when they're fresh from the wash, but that would ruin the fun of frantically digging through my clean clothes basket every morning searching for two that look alike. Or even like cousins if my pants are long enough. I'm clearly no time-efficiency expert but I bet if you were to count, you'd be able to tell me that I lose x number of days a year as a result of the distressed condition of my sock-organization system. Scratch that--complete lack of sock organization system.

Hence the need for the sock project wherein I will dig through every drawer and under every piece of furniture that might possibly be harboring a fugitive sock and attempt to reunite each one with its intended mate. No progressive marital or divorce laws will be acknowledged as a part of this endeavor. While in real life I support the rights of heterogeneous racial pairings, along with homogeneous gender ones, I must insist on going Pat Robertson on these socks. Grey HUE trouser socks are only meant to be paired with other grey Hue trouser socks. Ditto for those expensive white running socks with the built in arch supports. It is possible that exceptions will be made in the case of 12 year old argyles from the Gap as I only ever wear those to the gym anyway, and I suspect that I have several widowers on my hands with these guys. Far be it from me to force the blue argyle to spend its golden years all alone if it can be happy with an equally grieving beige and brown argyle.

But among the others I must insist on being a traditionalist in the strictest sense of the term.

Even scarier than the fact that I just managed to use socks to create a metaphor for inter-racial and same-sex marriage is that I am totally looking forward to this. Earlier, when 47 asked what I was doing tonight, I related my plan to him with the same sort of glee I used to reserve for pounding whisky shots and flirting with random boys in bars. Somewhere along the way, when I wasn't looking, I became a domestic. My plan for the night includes yoga and matching socks, and somehow that feels just right. If I really feel like mixing it up, I may also knit a scarf.

October 08, 2007

The New Boy Comes Home to Nest

G is nesting. My third floor roommate since last Thursday when the previous tenant moved out to shack up with his girlfriend in Brooklyn. Whereas my former roommate lived sparely, at 24 not quite old enough to have amassed the number of possessions that weigh down and encumber so many of us just a few years old, G's stuff trails out from the door of his room and snakes its way around the perimeter of the hallway that separates our individual living spaces.

I have lived in this house for three years now. Despite popular custom, I have declined opportunities to "upgrade" to the second floor bedroom that has its own bathroom, preferring to remain settled in my own quiet corner of the house in the room that is actually two rooms, consisting of a modestly-sized bedroom and a separate space about half the size that I have painted a shade of green called "tea" and decorated with old battered furniture, most of it cast-aways from former roommates. Some people strive to live lives unfettered by the accumulation of random possessions should they suddenly feel compelled to up and move to Bali or some other exotic location. Or at the very least they live as such simply to maintain the ability to do so, even if pragmatism would ultimately prevent them from committing such a daring feat of relocation. I am not one of those people.

I take comfort in my innate ability to grow roots. I bristle at the idea of perpetual motion. When I arrive in a location that I like, be it a neighborhood bar on a Friday night, a city to live in, or even the sofa in our den on a wintry Sunday afternoon, I set up shop and do not move. Some people save their money and dream of spending it on roaming the globe in search of transcendence on foreign beaches. I save mine and dream of the sofa I will buy when I can finally afford a one-bedroom apartment of my very own in a neighborhood I adore. Not because I am so shallow or materialistic that I base my happiness on the accumulation of possessions, but because my happiness is based on my ability to create my own sacred spaces.

I am a nester. I accumulate things. Old magazines, antique jewelry, art, books, porcelain boxes, quilts made from hand by my mother. In surrounding myself with objects of varying degrees of beauty and meaning, I feel more anchored and settled. More content in my skin and with the choices I have made. At times I wonder what would happen if I were faced with a cataclysmic life event such as a fire or a robbery and all of my possession were snatched out from underneath me. Would it compromise my sense of security and self? Or would being liberated from hundreds of pounds of literature and fine art provide some sort of catharsis I am currently preventing myself from experiencing? It's a situation I hope to never encounter.

Until G moved in last week I had never met a male nester before. Most of my male friends and past boyfriends have displayed a marked indifference to their domestic possessions. One in particular was so adverse to the possibility of being hampered by his possessions that he made a point of discarding all of his furniture every time he moved, even if it was within the range of only several zip codes.

I remember vividly the sense of hurt and betrayal my mother articulated when she separated from my father. Not because the marriage was ending but because he expressed no desire to equally split up their shared possessions. To my mother the antique highboy in the foyer of their Noe Valley condo was a symbol of years of domestic solidarity. 20+ years of shared history, raising a child, weathering various personal crisis's. He saw it differently and exited the marriage keeping only a framed water color painted by an old family friend some 30 years earlier. Where my mother collected antiques, old quilts, the occasional sterling tea service and decorated her homes to look as if there were inhabited by old money bohemians, my father's first apartment as a single man was modeled in a purely reactionary vein. Brand new Japanese furniture sets, a Miro lithograph, vases containing a single orchid on the occasional black lacquered surface. An articulation of independence or a fresh new start.

With G's arrival in our house the topography of our shared floor has gradually changed with the addition of new objects in public spaces. Early Saturday morning I stumbled into our shared bathroom for a glass of water to find my feet cushioned by bathmats where before I had only encountered a hard, cold surface. The window ledge, formally host to my sprawling collection of high-end lip glosses, mascaras, makeup brushes and hair products is now cluttered with a dozen or so new toiletries of the male variety.

Disorganized by nature and indifferent to its potential cures, I have long expressed my presence on the third floor through my sprawl. My possessions are never confined to my own room. I long ago claimed the hallway that divides my space from that of my roommates as my own personal domain. If any of them have really minded none have expressed any indication to that effect. But a new force has been introduced and it is reigning me in.

I certainly don't mind performing a little reshuffling in order to make a new roommate feel at home. I'm adaptable by nature and I empathize with his desire to carve out his own space. I am even impressed with the bravado with which he has done so. On his second day in the house he brought home a can of paint and proceeded to color his walls a masculine yet chic shade of olive-khaki. Painting is frowned upon by our landlord, a fact that some of us clearly disregard. Nesters create their own spaces at the expense of the rules. We'd rather suffer future consequences than be forced to live within walls scuffed by years of neglect or lack of imagination.

Yet just as one adjusts to the preferences of a new love, living with a new roommate presents its own set of required compromises. The hallway closet that I annexed as my own several months ago when it became clear that my old roommate had no use for it had to be sacrificed to make room for G's impressive collection of business-appropriate attire. Its former contents now sit in piles in the hallway awaiting reassignment into storage devices that do not yet exist. I fear that a major purging may be lurking around the next corner.

Sometimes people find the initiative within themselves to enact changes to their surrounding or to their lives as a whole. Other changes are imposed by external forces. The arrival of a new roommate is an example of the later. But sometimes the introduction of a new life force is exactly in order for shaking up the status quo and moving yourself forward. However tiny and incremental the steps.