As I outgrew the limited space of my closet, my bedroom became my haven. My mother gave me the freedom to decorate as I chose, allowing me to choose paint and wallpaper. I went through a phase where I Mod-Podged newspaper onto all the accessories of my room and another where I painted a full wall mural of a tree and a hippie (I know, I know!!).
I loved the security of my room. Behind the closed door. I could relax, I could think, I could sit and listen to the crackly songs from a tiny grey transistor radio. As a teenager I could take my inevitably cranky self away from the concerned faces of my parents and be miserable and vent onto the few lines offered in a fabric covered lockable diary.
I wonder now if I was drawn to study interior design less as creative expression and more as a longing to create a home. Forty years later I think, yes, that was always it. I've longed for the safety, security, freedom and relaxation of being truly home. And I've wanted to help others find it too.
A quiet corner for crochet |
I've been married, married with children, single with children, married with children and other people's children and now I live alone. In every case I've longed to create a home, a refuge for myself and my family. I've painted and fixed up and sewn curtains and chosen furnishings.
But I'm realizing more and more that while I craved a refuge from the world I also craved a refuge from those I lived with. I need a lot of solitude to offset the effects of being surrounded by others, even those I love. A few years ago I wrote a post about work."leaving the work place". Now I realize it was never work itself that was the issue, it was that working meant I lacked solitude, I was surrounded at work and at home, there was simply no possible way to have enough time alone. I felt trapped and not working afforded me a way to be alone while my family left for the day.
Thank you for visiting My Turquoise Kettle Life today.
I hope that you too find your home,
Sandra
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