Friday, October 28, 2011

Apartment Envy, and Dirty Laundry


When I was moving to New York the first time I would spend hours and hours online looking at pictures. I would research small spaces trying to find out how to maximize every inch of my apartment.  The Apartment Therapy Small/Cool Contest was my best friend.

This is NOT my apartment! I wish it was

There was something about my things that I couldn’t let go of, memories here, adventures there, a book that I may or may not pick up to read again one day.  “Oh I can’t get rid of those jeans Mom. I bought them too tight in the first place and have never been able to wear them…. But you never know when I might go on that diet.”

Then I actually got to New York.  My 500 square foot apartment was spilling at the brim. My closet was overflowing with clothes. I would wait until I had absolutely NO underwear, at which point I would cart 60 lb. (trust me, I weighed it once) worth of clothing DOWN the hill TO the laundry mat.  At this point I really started to consider the possibility that I just might have too much stuff. But that wasn’t the breaking point.

One night, after filling 7 or 8 washing machines, I can’t remember exactly, and folding shirts and pants and towels and sheets…….I loaded everything into my shopping cart to take home. Or should I say, I attempted to load. It didn’t fit. I also had a large IKEA bag full of laundry to carry (which by the way, IKEA bags are great for carrying dirty laundry). It was just too much, I couldn’t even get out the door.  At this point in my life I was stubborn and bull headed, and determined to get this mess I had made for myself back up the hill and onto the third floor of my apartment without any help. I remember struggling up the street thinking, “Ok Nikki, if you ever worried about looking like an idiot in public, today is not the day.”  Oh did I mention it was raining?!?!? Not raining hard but drizzling and the city sidewalks were wet. When I think “wet” in New York City, I think dirty. Dirty and covered in Bed Bugs.

So you can imagine my dismay when my shopping cart hit a crack in sidewalk and fell over; spilling all of my nice, neat, CLEAN clothing onto the wet sidewalk. Oh you can imagine my dismay.  I will save you the story of how I ranted and raved the rest of the night like a little child……

The next day I made a decision. Things in my apartment were organized and in their place but it just never felt like home (I realized later that this was for a different reason but that, my friend, is irrelevant). It was too cluttered.  I was always uncomfortable.  I went through all my belongings and started purging everything.  If I wasn’t using it at that point it wasn’t important.  I reduced my wardrobe by 50 percent, and found that I actually had MORE to wear after that.  Maybe actually being able to see the things I wore on a regular basis helped.



I realized that I want to have a beautiful home free of clutter. I told a friend the other day that I wanted to have cabinet in my dining room, and when you open the doors….empty. Just because you have storage space you do not need to utilize every spare inch of it. Make your home beautiful but make it work for you. In the past year I have detached from a lot of my clutter and I notice now that I have much less anxiety when I am not looking at piles, when I can see the things I need to get to because there is not a bunch of junk I DON’T need in the way.

Next time I live in New York…..Things will go much differently.



And my apartment will look more like the ones pictured in this post.

And I will be Swedish....

The End.

All images of Moa Lundberg’s apartment; Styled by Lotta Agaton; Photographed by Pia Ulin

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