I am now reading Salvage by Jane F. Kotapish, and I am totally hooked. Her language is mesmerizing, and the story is edge after edge.
And now living amongst gargantuan chaos, as perhaps two thirds of our apartment is packed up, and only a narrow path is cleared to walk from room to room. I keep thinking of new reasons to break into the boxes I sealed two weeks ago, and of new boxes to fill with things I'd forgotten we owned. I keep thinking of new things to own, and other things to shed. Of the light in my new kitchen, which I've only ever seen in February, and how they'll get the sofa out the door.
I think about losing our big storage closet, and where will we store our baseball gloves now? The exposed brick and the fireplace, and the roof beams in our new bedroom. The ugly carpets, for which we've traded our hardwood, but then the Mexican tiles in the kitchen, the cupboards in the bathroom, the two decks, and the premise of laundry without coins or going out of doors. The "spare room" and "library" and that they'll be one and the same doesn't make me swoon about it any less.
And to be settled down again. This is how I function best, how I write best, and for the past month, we've been positively in-between. My brain moved out the day we gave notice, and I hope it's packed somewhere too, in a box I've just forgotten to label. I'm looking forward to being home again, to the day the apartment stops smelling like someone else's, to the familiar sound of rain on that roof, to the lazy easy light of Sunday morning. And not only to being home, but I'm looking forward to coming home, day after day. Counting the stairs, my key in the lock, somebody's already put the kettle on to make a cup of tea.