The Furniture Hunt Continues

I’m back on the hunt for new, smaller-scale furniture for our living room. So far, it hasn’t been easy.

One problem is that there are still so many huge overstuffed pieces of furniture for sale out there. That’s not for anyone with a small house.

Of the sofas that aren’t huge and overstuffed, many are quite long. Again, that won’t work in our 12’ X 16’ living room. Although I’ve noticed while looking inside local homes for sale on Realtor.com (a habit I can’t seem to break) that many people with homes like ours buy a large overstuffed sectional, fill the room with it, hang a huge television on the facing wall and put a floor lamp near the sectional and call it a day. That’s not for us.

I’ve discovered that websites like Wayfair.com and Overstock.com offer filters so that you can weed out the wrong sizes and styles while wading through literally thousands of sofas and sectionals. That’s very convenient; the problem is that we haven’t seen a sofa we really like, and I suspect that, while affordable, the quality isn’t there and most won’t last very long.

But we’re getting closer. We just visited a higher-end furniture store with sturdier furniture. It’s not inexpensive, but we’re willing to pay for quality. Unfortunately, the colors and fabric available now aren’t very appealing to us. But we’ll keep looking.

We’re also looking for modest-sized chairs and a small stand for our television that will hide our DVDs and our DVD player. This appears to be another challenge: there are so many huge televisions out there that most stands are nearly as wide as the wall we want to put one on.

Redoing the living room is going to take longer than I thought.

Stuffocation is Just the Right Word

British television chef and author Nigella Lawson describes her habit of being messy and hanging on to things (including empty mustard jars) far longer than she should as being something that creates “stuffocation.”

What a great word! It brings instant thoughts of being overwhelmed by too much clutter to the point that you can’t breathe. Sure wish I’d thought of that word!

Young Declutterer

For most of my life, I struggled to keep my collection of stuff from getting out of control; I wasn’t usually successful until we were forced to move three times in four years. But I believe I first developed the urge to declutter many years before then.

When I was a small girl, I spent a lot of time (including most weekends) at my grandmother’s house. She lived in a small bungalow on the south side of Chicago. It only had two bedrooms, so it could get pretty crowded with four adults living there on a daily basis, plus my mother, my siblings and I when we visited on the weekends. But there wasn’t a lot of clutter in the house, though on weekend nights, any spare space held a rollaway bed.

There was also a closed-in porch on the back of the house. It was connected to the house by doors in the kitchen and the back bedroom. It was full of old furniture and odds and ends, including a small turquoise television. I can remember asking my grandma if we could clean up that porch and make it into a nice little spare bedroom that we could sleep in when we visited. I had ideas for what to get rid of and how to decorate the space once it didn’t have so much stuff in it. I thought it would be lovely in the summer, with its view of my grandpa’s lovely shade garden, and its many windows open to catch the breeze.

(Of course, I was too young to understand exactly how uninhabitable an unheated four-season porch would be in January in Chicago!)

Grandma would nod at my ideas, but nothing was ever done, and after a few years, two of the residents passed away, so my grandma moved out to the suburbs, by us. But I still remember that feeling of excitement, of all the possibilities, when I looked out in that porch and thought about what could be done once all that stuff was gone. I believe that is the root of my desire to declutter.