Places
Sunday, December 13th, 2009New houses are seductive. A fresh coat of paint splashed on the walls, colonial crown molding. Every time I walk into a Home Depot, I am thrilled with the potential for re-invention. I have never owned a home before, was always at the whim of a stranger’s aesthetic. In past rentals, I covered old-fashioned wall paper and fake wood panels with Matisse museum knock-offs, old album covers, and Moroccan-styled tapestries. I marked each temporary territory as mine. I struggled to define each room’s identity.
In the first place I lived outside of a dorm room or my parents, I shared this fire-trap rental in a college town with my husband who was just my boyfriend at the time. We used milk crates as tables, and pushed together two twin beds we slept on horizontally. Our apartment was the second floor of a house that was otherwise abandoned. We had a big claw-foot tub but no shower, and two lizards we named Bonnie and Clyde. Having recently become vegetarians, we cooked rice and lentils and climbed out of the kitchen window each night to sit up on our rooftop drinking cheap wine straight from the bottle. Back then, we smoked under the stars. The lit tips of our cigarets punctuated our idealistic philosophy. Who we were going to be when we grew up did not matter. What mattered was that we could listen to bootleg Grateful Dead or Bob Dylan strumming acoustic. The possibilities were infinite.
Years later, we rented an apartment attached to the house of an angry landlord. My husband and I, newly married, would press our ears up to the shared wall that shook with his violence. We worried about his children. During the daylight hours when the wife left the house to collect the mail, she always wore dark sunglasses. In the sixth months we lived there, I never once had the chance to look her straight in the eyes. This is a regret I carry. That house accumulated sadness. My husband lost his job while we lived there, and I began to regret my own professional choices. Maybe, I’ll go back to school and get my MFA in creative writing. Dreaming is not the same thing as being brave. Like the inhabitants of that house, I cowered.
We lived in places that grew us like skin. The basement apartment we planned our wedding in, the two bedroom house we have lived in since five months before our daughter was born. I can trace the trajectory of my life, of all of my choices, by the shape of keys, the memory of their weight against my keychain.
There was a cottage the color of margarine that sat snug inside of woodland. From the computer desk tucked in the corner of the living room, I could look out at the bay when the trees were bare and beautiful. The air always smelled like salt from the ocean just a short ferry ride across to the barrier island. The hardwood floors were always gritty from the sand we tracked inside with our bare feet. David fed us all summer long from vegetables he grew in his garden. At night, we walked up to the movie theater in town. We watched old movies in black and white. We ate ice cream on the steps of historic buildings. We held hands. I lost three babies in the four years that we lived in that house. And yet, I still remember it as someplace that made me happy. Maybe it was because we adopted my son while we lived there. After he was born from another woman’s body, we brought him home to the screened in porch, to the pale green bassinet that we wedged next to our queen sized bed, the only furniture we could fit inside the tiny bedroom. It was in this house where my words came back to me. Some places grow themselves with only regrets, this was not one of them.
We are moving again. A home of our own is being created. There are rooms being painted like candlelight dinner, a bathroom the color of a Caribbean sea. I am hanging stars like Japanese lanterns on the bedroom ceiling for my children. I am still contemplating the perfect space to put my writing desk. I know that I will be a wife, a mother, and a writer inside this new place. I dream this is the house that I grow old in. But, as I contemplate the right type of art to hang in the living room, the perfect size area rug to cover the hardwood, I’m intrigued by the idea of identities and reinvention. I wonder just who I will become inside of these walls.