The greatest surprise of all, of course, is a good old
fashioned dishwasher flood. Sure, it ruins your “floorboards” and “life”, but
as the Chinese say, “the character for crisis is a penny earned.” So if you
come downstairs one night, for example, after a family Christmas dinner, to
find your dishwasher is barfing soapy water all over the linoleum, presumably
disgusted by the amount of ambrosia salad caked onto the dinner plates within
its rumbling sanitizing belly, don’t panic/attempt to drown yourself: Embrace your watery hellhole of a home with open
arms. This is your opportunity (as the Chinese say, “the symbol for opportunity
is worth two in the bush”) to renovate, to bring your wildest countertop
fantasies to life, to turn a dull, functional kitchen into one full of
glamorous disconnected appliances. Industrial chic is in this season, and what
could be more industrial than exchanging your kitchen island for hunky geriatric
Russian cabinet installers?
It isn’t always an easy road, the surprise kitchen reno. A
little water on the floor may not seem like that much trouble, but it turns out
that water is wet and can ruin everything you’ve ever loved. It will rot the
bottoms of your kitchen cabinets and permeate your laminate flooring. And once
you replace the counters, you’ll probably want to replace the tile to match.
And once you replace the tile, you’ll probably need to paint. And if you’re
painting this room, you may as well paint the living room and build a new
fireplace and install a vaulted ceiling and replace the windows with a stained
glass depiction of your family crest. (You’ll also want to design a family
crest.)
It’s the same sort of grim snowballing situation depicted in
the classic When You Give a Mouse a
Cookie, the cautionary tale of a bleeding heart liberal and a greedy
anthropomorphic mouse riding the slippery slope of fiscal socialism. One thing
leads to another and another until finally, your daughter is giving up her Sunday morning to help you (brace
yourself) pick out tile. What have
you become!? What kind of life is this?!
But all the elbow grease will be worth it when you finally
get to sit down at your kitchen table and admire your handiwork. Of course, by
the time you finish the project, the year will be 2033 and cooking will have
been rendered obsolete by an especially effective iPad app, but I’m sure your
newly installed breakfast bar will make a handsome place to display pictures of
the grandchildren whose births you missed because you had to let the plumber
in.
TIPS FOR A SMOOTH RENOVATION
As the assistant editor for a magazine that often features
beautiful homes I could never afford to live in, I know a thing or two about
getting your house in ship-shape (or, alternatively, your ship in house-shape). Follow these easy
steps to make your unexpected renovation a snap!
1. Leave the country.
2. Buy a new house.
2 comments:
I think buying a new home is more difficult as compare to renovation. I do not agree with your tips for for smooth renovation. There can be other alternative, it is not necessary to leave the home for renovation purpose.
I think leaving a home is not a solution for any kind of problem. If you get frustrated with your old fashioned home design, it is good to choose the renovation plan rather than leaving the home.
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