lifestyle

'A stylish house didn't make me a stylish person'

 

 

 

 

by KATE HUNTER

We moved house a month ago.

We didn’t go far – a kilometre as the crow flies, a few minutes as the schoolboy walks, into a house that’s a million miles from our previous home, stylishly speaking.

That house was a stunner. An architectural gem. The floors were West Australian Jarrah, the colour of burnt rubies. The cabinetry gleamed white and clever timber walkways linked the bedrooms. A double storey void opened up the heart of the house. The living room swam into the kitchen and out to the garden. It wasn’t a huge house, but it was the kind of place people asked to be shown round when they came over for a barbecue. Pictures were on the architect’s website and yes, in magazines.

Our new home is on the flip side of the design coin. It’s unremarkable in every way. It doesn’t have ‘great bones,’ or ‘incredible potential.’ There is no ‘street appeal.’ It’s just a house with not quite enough power points, a dodgy extension and a terminally unfashionable terracotta tiled rumpus room. The bathroom is by Bunnings and it has no built-in anything.

We’re happy as pigs in mud. Or clams. Whatever is happier.

Because I realised, after 7 years, I’m not as stylish as I would like to think I am.

It was a slightly upsetting realisation, but ultimately, a liberating one.

In our stylish house, we were a bit scared to do anything to it. If we wanted to hang a painting, we consulted the architect. Every light fitting, door handle, toilet roll holder was carefully chosen. My daughter couldn’t Blu-Tac a Taylor Swift poster to her wall and the Brisbane Lions doona cover my son craved would have spoilt the whole entire look.

We needed to get over ourselves, clearly. And I needed to be honest with myself. Because it wasn’t the architect’s fault – I wasn’t talked into anything. I was all for the open spaces and the clean lines that were totally at odds with my slovenly nature.

I thought a stylish house would make me a stylish person. It doesn’t work that way. I just became a stressed person, wondering why my house never looked the way it was meant to. It’s my opinion that unless you’re the tidy type, bordering on obsessive compulsive, open plan is over-rated. So is white. Because, ‘clean lines’ only look clean if they are kept tidy.

I’ve realized I’m a lid-off-the-butter, crumbs-on-the benchtop-kinda-girl. And no matter how much I wanted to have nothing except a bowl of lemons on the table, it didn’t happen until the house was all styled up, with a For Sale sign out the front.

We were sad to leave, and there were tears as we walked through the empty rooms for the last time. Saying goodbye the backyard was the biggest wrench – it was beautiful in a wild kind of way, with twisty trees meant for climbing, and a creek at the back fence that sometimes roared but mostly trickled.

My kids are lucky to have had a backyard like that. But times change, I told them, just like Mum’s mind.

The new house has a backyard too, and kids in the street and parks and trees and laneways to explore. They’re growing up and what’s over the fence has increasingly more appeal than what’s inside it.

The blow has been cushioned by the purchase of a pool table for the rumpus room. Cleverly (not stylishly), it can also be used for ping-pong and air hockey. The kids’ rooms are poky but have been brightened by acres of Taylor Swift and Brisbane Lions posters, Blu-Tacked without a thought to what might happen to the paint.

My husband is walking around with a cordless drill (suspect he wants a holster for it) looking for places to make holes without permission or thoughtful measuring, and I suspect he’s having an affair with Maureen, who works in bathroom fittings at Bunnings.

I’ve got nothing but admiration (well, a little bit of envy) for people who live stylishly, effortlessly. But I’ve admitted that’s not us and we’re happier, if a bit daggier for it.

Kate Hunter is an advertising copywriter with over 20 years experience and one Gruen Transfer appearance to her name. Kate is also the author of the Mosquito Advertising series of novels. You can buy them here.

Have you lived  in a house that didn’t suit your family? Are you too daggy for your own stylish house? Or is your house too daggy for stylish you?

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Top Comments

Jemma 12 years ago

My husband and I are moving house this weekend.
We just found out we landed the perfect (and surprisingly spacious!) 2 bedroom unit we applied for on Sunday. Straight away we discussed the perfect layout for each room and how we would make it ours. We just got married and this is our first place. We have been talking excitedly about how he's got the kitchen sorted (I am soo not a cooking person!) and I have the 'big room' which is now my room to do what I want with it (and I have BIG ideas! Wardrobe perhaps?). The tiny room will be the bedroom (as besides sleeping and sex, we don't need that much space) and even just talking about the dreams and ideas we have for this place is fun. Yes... we are discussing a lifestyle.. and the lifestyle we will have in our new place. Will it be just a dream? I don't think soooo, but who knows? We love the idea that this is our first of MANY places we'll live in over the rest of our lives. Who knows what lifestyle we'll have in 1 or 20 years... as WE will change, along with our surroundings!

Then I realised I hate moving. I HATE MOVING. Hate the packing, unpacking, the decisions and the mess... I could go on... it's so stressful for me!

...Then my husband dropped the news that he's organised me to go away to Melbourne this weekend with a gf, as he thinks I should go have some fun, then come back in our new home once the boring moving bit is over!

Now I'm sooo excited again...! haha

picardie.girl 12 years ago

That is the most thoughtful thing I have ever heard - avoiding moving for a weekend in Melbourne is like winning a golden ticket to visit Wonka's factory!

Jemma 12 years ago

I still can't get over how lucky I am! I definitely feel like I've won a golden ticket! Friday arvo is my last exam for this semester, so it really will be time to celebrate, head off to Melbs, come back and then I have 4 weeks to entertain myself before semester 2! I'll spend the time hunting online for cool cheap ways to decorate, I'm sure!

Rob 11 years ago

You have found the perfect man!! Love him and cherish him!!!!


Mia Freedman 12 years ago

Yes! Loved this. Open plan IS over-rated. As soon as your kids are older than babies, you WANT different living spaces WITH DOOOOOOORS.
Ah doors.
I love them.

Manz 12 years ago

Totally agree Mia - whoever invented open plan, did not have 3 kids with 10 years between number 1 and number 3..... My house has doors on every living space (of which we have 3 separate ones, my kids make lots of noise) and there's nothing "stylish" about it, it's lived in shabby chic all the way! I admire you Kate, for moving to where you are comfortable!