How a graphic novel helps this millennial cope with living in a cluttered family home

Guest post by Miranda Whittaker

Privacy-Meme

There’s nothing like coming home to find the entry way blocked by five bicycles. I’m not a fan of walking sideways like a crab, but I’ve done it regularly because I have to to get inside my home. I’m a millennial living in the two bedroom apartment I grew up in. I do this because my beloved job — which I’m lucky to have — is part-time and pays minimum wage. I’ve crunched the numbers and I can’t make rent, pay back my student loan, and eat too.

“But what’s up with the bicycles?” you ask. Well, everyone in my family, myself included, has multiple hobbies and side projects. (Repairing and selling old bicycles on Craigslist is one the more lucrative projects, so the bikes are here to stay.) The result, when combined with our mountains of reading material and rescued furniture waiting to be repaired, is a state of constant chaos. Living surrounded by a dozen or so bikes, bike parts, repair tools, stacks of magazines, and piles of papers was normal for me until I went away for school. You can’t know that your normal isn’t other people’s normal until you have something to compare it to.

I love possessions as much as the next person. As a nerd I’m acutely aware how much nerd culture is about stuff. You want to show the world what you love so you buy the shirt that features the game/movie/show/comic symbol on it. This year’s merch will let everyone know you were at a particular festival or convention. Fashion speaks and nerd fashion does so loud and clear: This is what I love. This is who I am.

Household possessions are much the same. I like this fact: one look at my room and you know what you’re dealing with. My book shelves tell you things about me. The art on my walls tells you where I’ve been and what I’ve been up to. On my shelves are a few of my favourite things.

Everything in my room says something about me. What does a cluttered house say? Far too much.

Bad Houses
Bad Houses
In the graphic novel Bad Houses, by Sara Ryan and Carla Speed McNeil, every item piled around the protagonists’ hoarder house holds a memory. Danica struggles to hold onto the life she once had — the time when her husband was alive and when her daughter Anne was a child — and the things that remind her of happier times. Her memories physically invade the house and her hoarding reveals deep emotional pain.

Anne feels like their accumulated possessions are all speaking to her at once — whether she wants to hear them or not. This pains her, making her long for space of her own. When Danica hides some of the hoard in Anne’s room, to create an illusion of order for a house guest, Anne is reduced to tears. I imagine I’d feel the same way if my personal living space were taken from me.

The millennial generation knows too well the need for a room of one’s own and the ache of lacking privacy. Many of my friends have lamented over not having any truly private space while living in their family homes. But when your parents are paying the rent, they don’t see an issue with walking through your space to see if you left the window open or to retrieve a sock that made its way into your drawer. Logically they have a point, but the feeling of violation is almost physically painful.

The pain of losing privacy is second only to the pain of being surrounded by too much stuff. A heavily cluttered space is exhausting to look at. Too many textures, shapes, things can all come together and overwhelm your eyes. I find I’m anxious if I’m surrounded by too many things or if I have too little room to move. Different people respond to their environments in different ways, but hoarding draws out a visceral reaction.

My physical reasons for being unhappy around clutter are pretty obvious. Reading Bad Houses made me understand the emotional reasons for my clutter-anxiety: the things that clutter the main living spaces of the apartment aren’t mine and neither are the stories they tell. I worry that the stuff will creep into my room and start to influence the self-expressive space I’ve curated for myself. Like Anne, I hear and see more stories than I can manage whenever I’m surrounded by my family’s things. I can only handle so many memories, or so much information, at a time.

I’m not alone in worrying. My Mom was thrilled when I built her a little bookshelf out of old wine boxes. I did this thinking we’d free up space elsewhere, not thinking about how a collection of books reflect on the owner. When her books were on the shelf, she said she felt like her soul was suddenly bared there in the living room – and I knew exactly what she meant. By trying to help her I accidentally stomped on her sense of privacy.

Living with my family is a work-in-progress. It won’t be forever, but while I’m with my folks we’ll have to take turns filling the space we live in. And if all the things get too invasive, I’ll always have a book to hide in.

Comments on How a graphic novel helps this millennial cope with living in a cluttered family home

  1. I always find it fascinating when other people talk about needing private space because I’ve almost never had it. I shared a room with my brother until I was 5 and my sister was born, then I shared a room with her until I went to uni at 18. We were never allowed locks on our doors and doors in my house were almost never closed (if they weren’t cats glared at them as if it was a personal insult and the dog tried to dig underneath). At uni in the UK the vast majority of students have their own rooms, but in my halls we almost always kept the doors open and were in and out of each others rooms all the time. Still, for 3 short years, during term time, I had a room that was exclusively mine. Then I was back to my parents and sharing with my sister until I moved in with my boyfriend, now husband and sharing all 4 rooms of the flat with him.

    So for me private space has always been about time more than place – finding a room no one else is in at the moment rather than having one only I use, getting my stuff out and spreading it around while I’m using it rather than having it permanently arranged. I find it hard to imagine having a whole room just for my stuff and my use and I don’t really know what I’d do with it.

    On the other hand I know all too well the stress of stuff (mine or other people’s) taking over shared spaces. I think it’s one of those things everyone involved just needs to be aware of and open about. If people can mention whenever it’s an issue there’s less risk of someone bottling it up until they hot breaking point, which I’ve definitely been guilty of in the past.

Join the Conversation