Posts tagged with decorating.

Home for the holidays: It’s not always peace on earth

When my friend Jen Yip returned to her parent's house in Calgary after completing her first semester of university in Vancouver, she found that her bedroom had been converted into an entertainment centre. “I wanted to go to sleep in my bed” Yip remarks, “instead I found a large screen TV, golf paraphernalia and hockey posters.” Her father had reclaimed her bedroom and transformed it into a shrine of manhood. There was not a bed in sight.

Jen frames the story in a positive light, earnestly explaining that it “signalled my independence” and was a “positive step into the future.” Now I won’t suggest Jen’s memory is a tad revisionist, but I do recall arriving at her house and finding her in a very impassioned conversation with her parents over the fate of her bedroom. She didn’t seemed too positive at the time.

Coming home last week, I was curious to see if my parents had conducted any secret renovations while I was away. However, I had no such excitement. My home was the same as I left it. My re-entry has been boringly smooth. I’ve even taken on chores, the first of which was to go outside and pick up a few weeks worth of dog poop. It's nice to be back.

I’m not quite sure which experience is more common, mine or Jennifer’s. There’s an article in the New York Times on the very subject of renovating your kid’s room while they’re in university. Google, the definitive authority on what’s important in the world, yields numerous websites proffering tips on how to reintegrate your freshman into the family. I never the knew the process was so complicated.

The moment university begins and parentally supervised development ends, parents and children drift in independent directions. The extent of that drift becomes apparent when everyone reconvenes at Christmas. Parents find their children maintaining the same habits they had in university: going to bed at odd hours, shirking household responsibilities and occasionally drinking copious amounts of alcohol. Children find their parents maintaining the same habits they had before university: nagging, curfew-setting and altogether not recognizing their flowering adulthood.

It takes time for both parties to adjust and come to terms with shifting realities. My parents and I have had a head start on this process. My gap year allowed a good amount of time for my parents and I to figure out how things would work. Coming back after my first semester, everything is pretty well figured out. That said, after two days I still haven’t shovelled the snow off our sidewalks much to the chagrin of my father. Whatever. I’ll do it later.

An obvious way for parents to facilitate re-integration is to avoid renovating your kid’s bedroom without their consent. I’m assuming very few people, even in retrospect, would look upon the furtive dismantling of their childhood space as a “positive step into the future”.

The first few months of university are on odd transitory phase and it takes some time for both parents and returning children to adjust.

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Not an Ikea showroom

 

Until recently my dorm room had as much aesthetic appeal as a dead fish. Recently, I attempted a revival of my dull interior. I put up a few posters and bought a cork board to put the papers that used to be on my floor on my wall.  Things are looking pretty good.

 

There's no unified theme though. Instead, my room is a blend of things: an obnoxiously large Albertan flag, a map of the world with North and South America on the right side and a poster of the periodic table. I have a limited budget and learning to decorate on little money takes practice. I assume that's what your twenties is for: drifting from apartment to apartment learning to make the most out of milk crates and Ikea catalogues.

 

Still, I like my room. Its design is based on a set of principles I have. These principles have produced positive results for me and I'd like to share them with you. I call them CHIL. If you want a CHIL room, it should be:

 

1.  Cheap

 

Try not to spend a lot of money, even if you have lots to spend. Sure, go to Ikea but don't spend hundreds of dollars buying everything they sell so you can copy their showrooms. Be cheap, get creative and make your room your own. Join the legions of university students already making beautiful things with little money. Make your own artwork and check out thrift stores and specialty shops for some sweet design steals. And bring what you can from home. You'll appreciate the reminders of home once the cold wind of mid-November brings final exams. 

 

2. Home

 

Your room has to feel like home. It is your one personal and private space. In your first year, your life will be very public. Wherever you go, someone else will be there too. It doesn't matter if you're in the dining hall, the library or the washroom. There's always someone around. It's important to have a space to retreat to when you need a moment. You should feel that your room is that space. Make sure you decorate your room with whatever makes you feel relaxed, comfortable and at home. Stuffed animals are allowed. A few are still in use here.

 

3. Inviting

 

You'll use your room for romancing and small gatherings. Keep it clean. I've a cork board for loose papers and readings, binders for notes, file folders for magazines and important documents; my dirty clothes are in a laundry hamper inside my closet. Doing these basic things can make or break budding relationships. Remember to keep some snacks and two mugs for tea on hand when floor-mates stop by needing a break from a cram session. These impromptu meetings are good for bonding. Besides, when you're stressed-out, you'll need them too.

 

4. Lit

 

Lighting is key. Good lighting makes the ugliest space nicer. I'm not the only one who believes this: my parents believe it, too, along with that guy Julien on my floor and this lady from the New York Times. Most residences come with some fluorescent overheads and a desk lamp. Fluorescent light is depressing. It makes everything look slow, droopy and sad. Get an incandescent floor lamp and a reading light next to your bed. If you're so inclined, you can even put white Christmas lights round the ceiling.

 

What works for you will become apparent as the year progresses so don't feel compelled to go out and buy everything at once. Let it develop and grow. Dorm room decorating is an organic process. Run a Google search, keep it CHIL and you'll be fine.

 

 

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