Blood on My Hands

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In an effort to make our apartment look less like a dorm room, and more like a home of people approaching their thirties, my wife and I have decided to purchase a dresser, with drawers and everything. I hear that all the cool people are putting their clothes in dressers instead of cardboard boxes. It sounds kind of trendy to me, but my wife is into it.

So we took a trip to Ikea today. I normally hate shopping (especially furniture stores), but I have a particular affinity for Ikea. I like the contemporary / modern design sensibility for which Ikea is famous. I like that it doesn’t cost as much as “real” furniture. I like that if I accidentally spill something on my Ikea furniture, or nick the wood, I haven’t just ruined a $2,000 piece.

And they have Swedish meatballs there. Cheap.

As one might imagine, we own a lot of Ikea furniture. As I look around the living room, everything that can be sat upon, or can have stuff sat upon it is from Ikea. Our chairs, the TV stand, the bookshelf-thingie with the drawers and little wicker baskets – all Ikea. Even the computer desk from which I am writing this entry was assembled from a flat-pack with just a screwdriver and an allen wrench (included) by yours truly.

But as much as I love the whole idea of Ikea furniture, the reality is a real pain in the ass. I always begin with the best of intentions and following all best practices. I begin with a tradition handed down to me by my step-father. The ceremonial spirit (a fermented mixture of various grains) is consumed. I then utter the traditional invocation: “This box better not be missing any f***ing pieces!”

In typically manly fashion, the final step in the ceremony used to be the disposal of the instruction manual, but I have abandoned this final gesture. This is not to suggest that the manual is all that useful. There is no text, English or otherwise to give context to the simple graphics that fill each page. But, as useless as the instructions may be, I keep them around for reference – but mostly for a handy paper surface on which to catch the blood that will inevitably trickle from my hands before it stains the floor. Assembling Ikea furniture makes me bleed… and curse. This episode was no exception. In the process of constructing this chest of six drawers blood was spilled and expletives were spoken.

So after much bleeding and cursing, I sit here nursing a rum and coke held in blistered palms. The dresser is assembled and in place in the bedroom. It has been consecrated with liquor and blood, and various oaths were uttered over it. As a result, I suspect it is now imbued with voodoo magic. It is too soon to know whether this is scary or cool. I’ll be putting my clothes in it later tonight, including the pants I plan to wear to tomorrow’s Thanksgiving festivities.

That means tomorrow I’ll be wearing my voodoo pants. Oh yeah.

Bye for now.

6 Responses to “Blood on My Hands”

  1. Cait says:

    When the kids were small, there were always toys and items that needed assembly. “Santa” assembled the toys, etc., Christmas Eve, after the kids went to bed. “Santa” had a very nasty vocabulary.

  2. Troy says:

    Wow. You posted :) Good jorb.

    And I too made a trip to Ikea recently. Bought a couple of lamps, some utensils, a couple of smaller things. Nothing that required a lot of assembly. Though I tend to enjoy the assembly. The instruction manual is your friend :)

  3. The Minister of Squeaky Music says:

    Awww, you’re all grown up and shit now.

    Next thing you know you’ll be seperating laundry by color!

  4. M says:

    HEY! I was the one who put together your desk. :P Didn’t do too bad a job either, even if I did set up one of the sides backwards at first.

    I could really get used to this “grown up” furniture. Someday I bet we’ll even get more. Better yet, some of that $2,000 type stuff that comes already assembled. ;D

  5. obigabu says:

    Good to see that you held up your end of the bargain on our commitment to irregular blogging. I just wanted to stop by and see what was going on in the life of the voodooman. As I began to read this post I couldn’t help but laugh. A week earlier than you, the wife and I did the exact same thing. We’ve been married 8 years and (also) still did not have a dresser. We got in the car and drove down to the “New” Ikea here in phoenix. (Which by the way is the largest Ikea in the country, GO US!!) However, we didn’t find anything that quite tickled my wife’s fancy, so we check out a small antique store that she had found and picked up an old white washed dresser (with dove tail joints) for only 100 bucks. Although, we did try those swedish meatballs!!!!
    I found myself today getting socks out of that dresser thinking, “sure dog gone nice to have a dresser!” Civilized at last!! Okay, maybe i just have a dresser.

  6. Phlyst says:

    Just don’t let your collection of clothes outgrow your dresser. You’ll know this is happening when you can’t open a drawer properly and have to stick your hand in to get a t-shirt, or pair of socks, or some underwear unstuck that’s holding the drawer in. The holiday season is a good time to clean out and donate (maybe not the socks, definitely not the underwear, nor the t-shirts that are a little too threadbare, either).

    And *I* had drawers in my dorm room. They were furnished by the university, but hey.