The schizophrenic decorator

I was cleaning the Small Child’s room tonight and came across (as you do) a little cardboard box full of his ‘treasures’.  It contained some mismatched bits of broken toys, some leads for a Pacer style pencil and a few coins and a strange die.  I opened it and asked the Small Child if it was rubbish and should we throw it out?

The look on his face was hard to describe… it wasn’t consternation or distress… it was more… incredulity really.  He was looking at me as though he couldn’t believe that I couldn’t tell that these were his special things.  He had something to say about each item in his little stash and it was quite obvious that these things were in there for their sentimental value.  One item I had given him when I came home from a trip, another was part of something he made with his teacher, the die came from one of his father’s games etc.

No doubt he gets this from his mother.  Because while I abhor clutter in my house I tend to sentimentalize certain knick-knacks and make souvenirs out of strange things that remind me of people, places or events, and these things could never be thrown away.

Finding the delicate balance between clutter and order is a particular Borys’ weirdness.  I often walk into my home and look around feeling slightly claustrophobic and twitchy that there’s too much stuff in the house and not enough clean empty surfaces.  Yet I’m the one who has decorated the place to have an ‘old English study’ kinda feel… dark burgundy carpets, leather wingback chair, lots of warm timber furniture, plenty of (very organized) bookcases, stained glass lightshades, prints and mirrors in heavy gilt frames.  So I’ve not exactly gone for a modern minimalist feel that is more conducive to producing clear surfaces.

I have many things in my house which have many special meanings or associations.  Just take my desk for example… there’s a cup from the DMZ in North Korea that I keep pens and pencils in.  There’s a Marinoni pewter hourglass (a more useless item you’d be hard pressed to find) that I bought for myself on a ‘cheer-me-up-IVF-sucks’ shopping trip in 2004.  Some shells from Vanuatu.  A fifty rupee note from Pakistan. A Tudor Rose paperweight from Hampton Court Palace in 1997. Some little glass mushrooms from an artist at the Salamanca Markets in 1994, a heavy glass globe I bought in Prague and then lugged around for the next six months, a rock I pciked up off the ground at Gallipoli and several other bits and bobs that have been collected throughout my travels.

But the most sentimental item on my desk is a pair of tiny Swarovski crystal mushrooms, one of which is broken, that was a gift from my first boyfriend back in 1988….  so I can see where the Small Child gets his habit of making treasures from little broken bits of toys.  And while I often pine for clean and clear surfaces the urge to discard and cull is always overcome by the need to keep my precious broken memories intact.

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Oh who are the people in your neighbourhood? In your neighbourhood? In your neighbourhood?

Several years ago we purchased our house (in the middle of our street,., our house) in Belmont which is on the south east side of BrisVegas.  Unbeknownst to us at the time this particular little section of Belmont is actually officially known as the rather snooty sounding ‘Belmont Heights’.   I guess I never felt that this was a particularly upmarket area considering the guy around the corner with his front yard that continually looks like a fire hazardous flea market, the guys two doors over with their Harley’s rumbling in and out at all hours and the  huge family of islanders that were living next door with car bodies on the lawn and their youngest son murdered in a drug deal gone awry… yeah what with all that going on I never felt we were living in the flash sounding ‘Belmont Heights’ so comes to filling out forms etc with our address, I can’t be fucked so it’s usually just Heights-less ‘Belmont’ that I fill in.

Anyway our neighbourhood hasn’t always been as salubrious as one might like, but we are rather privately tucked away on a largish battle axe block which means we rarely even see the neighbours except as we are entering and exiting the property via the longish driveway so it ws neither here nor there at all.  Given that we hardly ever see our neighbours and there’s a number of houses on our street that recently acquired new owners (there’s one house on our street that has been sold about four times since we moved in here and we keep wondering what is wrong with it?!?!) it’s no wonder I’ve been a bit slow on noticing that there’s seems to be a recent upturn in the juvenile delinquency around here.

arsonist

Last week, Thursday night or rather the early hours of Friday morning, it seems there was a spate of fires lit in people front yards on the two closest main roads to our place – Belmont Road and Meadowlands Rd.  One of these fires was lit on someone’s patio while they slept.  Some absolute wankers put an old futon couch on fire under the patio and it was only a passing trucker who saw the fire and pulled over to alert the home owners of the situation that stopped it before it turned really ugly.  No one has smoke alarms outside their homes and if the futon couch burned well enough to ignite the patio roof etc then it could have turned into a full blown house fire wile the occupants slept.  What sort of peurile morons thinks that maybe burning someone’s house down is a good night’s entertainment?

Further to this Yale mentioned that he’s noticed a number of cars in our neighbouring streets that have had their badging ripped off.  i hadn’t noticed them, stashed away as we are at the bottom of our cul-de-sac.  So I had a look around as we left the house last night and easily found nine cars all missing their badges before we’d even hit the main road.  Seems we might have some new petty criminals in our midsts.  Oh and I do mean petty… who’d steal badges off a Holden Barina???  None of the cars we saw missing badges were what you would call prestige vehicles so I don’t know what anyone would want with a collection of Holden, Hyundai and Daewoo badges!?1?!  It makes no sense.

Sigh…. I guess we should do a check around the yard to make sure there’s nothing of value or highly flammable left outside at the moment.  No doubt we should chain our BBQ to something solid too.   🙁
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Beetle of Cane.

Cane Beetles.  We used to see them in plague like proportions every summer when I was a kid.  I used to spend my mornings before school getting out the pool skimmer and rescuing them by the dozens from Mum’s swimming pool.  Now… we hardly ever see them at all.  Where did they go?  Is it the little Indonesian gekkos that seem to have taken over South East Queensland that is responsible for the absence of the Cane Beetles?  Or is it the drought that we’ve been experiencing the last ten years of so?

I have no idea where the blame ought be laid but the absence of Cane Beetles and their flashy cousin the Christmas Beetle has been very noticable indeed.  So much so, that when I found a Christmas Beetle in the garden today I kept him aside contained with some shrubbery and water until the Small Child came home so I could show it to him.  Angel says he remembers seeing them once before. 

Once!  In seven years!  Such a rare sighting deserved a photo op so I pulled out the new camera and placed the little beetle back amongst the greenery to take some pictures.  Several shots snapped off while telling the Small Child a story about the beetles being so plentiful when I was little that my sisters and I used to chase each other around with them and put them in each other’s hair (ah sisterly love… some thingst never changes)… when unexpectedly Caesar (our Aussie Terrier) wandered into the middle of our photo shoot and promptly ate the subject!

We did get him to drop the poor little beetle and while shocked he seemed mostly unharmed .  Silly puppy.
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Weeding…. on a sunny afternoon.

When we moved into sunny Belmont, there was a flurry of activity.  Firstly there was a major push to try and convert Bleak House (for bleak it was – decorated entirely in shades of dark grey and black) into something with a little less craptastic 80’s feel and a little more posh English study feel.  Which was done by painting every bit of grey out of the place with deep cream colours, lots of heavy gold picture frames, dyed the grey carpets burgundy and navy and moved in small tonne of timber furniture, books and rugs etc.

The garden likewise got a swift makeover.  Ripped out two vicious date palms (you know those ones with the massive unfriendly spikes on them… great for kids to play around :S) and removed a massive fan palm thing which was particularly resistant to the idea and required my Dad’s 4WD and some chains to remove the root system.  If memory serves I also dug out a huge golden cane palm that was opposite the driveway too.  If you’re starting to think I don’t like palm trees you’d be quite correct in that assumption.  They’re not native plants and I really just don’t like them.  So they were pretty much condemned before we even moved in. 

We also had a couple of areas around the back yard where grass wasn’t growing very readily due to either shady conditions or too much direct sun or the ground wasn’t getting good water as the grass was competing for moisture from near by trees.  Given that Mr K isn’t overly fond of yard work – I thought we’d reduce the amount of mowing to be done over sections where the grass doesn’t want to grow too well by making garden beds and planting some drought hardy shrubbery 🙂 

Big mistake…    … Huge!

For while I was effective at reducomg Mr K’s mowing obligations and transferred them all into weeding for yours truly.  Not my best laid plan.  Especially not now when my back is arcing up and I can’t hardly manage to weed the gardens for 15mins together without doing that thing I do where I hold my breath because I’m causing myself more pain.  Sigh… not good.  So for months and months I sit and look out my lounge room window at what should be a lovely little garden covered in delighful red and purple little bushes and groundcovers but instead is a mass of weeds trying to reclaim my pathetic excuse of a garden.  🙁

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Hung but not drawn and quartered…. thankfully.

I came back from my trip to Pakistan in July last year and while I was there I bought a lovely Esfahan rug from central Iran…. which has been living ever since rolled up on the floor in my bedroom because I wasn’t sure how I wanted to hang it and I definitely didn’t want to sew a strip on it or anything that would cause damage to it.

So a couple of weeks ago I took it to a rug dealer in Brisbane called Urban Tribes and thought I’d kill two birds with one stone and have them do an insurance valuation and sew a strip on it for me to allow it to be hung up.  It was probably a pretty good sign that it was a nice rug when the staff all came out and started oohing and aahhing over it 🙂   The valuation came back with a nice surprise it is apparently valued at more than twice what I paid for it which is kinda cool.  You always get a little bit worried that you might get ripped off when shopping overseas.  Well I worry about it… especially in shopping environments that require bartering.  I hate bartering and would much prefer if they’d just give a fair price so I can decide if I want it or if can afford it.  Can’t stand the stuffing around and the time wasted going back and forth.  (Mr K is the exact opposite and I remember him arguing hard with some ladies in Indonesia over about 50c when I was buying sarongs!)

I picked up my rug last week and now it’s finally hanging on my wall and I must say it looks even better than I remember when I first bought it.  I can’t believe how well the colours in it go with my house – it’s like it was made for the place all burgundy, navy and gold/mustardy colours.  Normally you should do it the other way around – choose the rug (or artwork) and build up the decor around it, but I must have just gotten lucky I guess.

See abeekay ?  I’m trying hard to look for positives already … though admittedly they are ones from 15mths ago!  🙂
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