MY STORAGE EXPANSION PROJECT
There is nothing like kitchen renovations to make you see
how complicated we make our lives by owning too much stuff.
And, there’s nothing like owning a kitchen with way more
cupboards than usual to make you see how having a ridiculous amount of storage
space leads you to storing a likewise ridiculous assortment of such stuff.
Weirdly it was my interest in wanting even more ergonomically
friendly storage options that set this renovation in motion.
This means, if all goes according to plan, by the time we
are done this adventure I will have even more storage area than I started out
with. This is even in spite of my swearing when I emptied out all those
cupboards that a significant portion of it was not going back in when the reno
job was done. Knowing my penchant for hoarding
totally useless things I’m not quite sure at this time which three items are
not liable to make the cut.
What I’m striving for here is more useful space. Kitchens have evolved a lot over the past
century. My great grandmother probably didn’t
have much for cupboards because she didn’t have much for crockery and her pots
and pans were likely seldom not in use and put away. Besides, that big old cast iron cook stove
took up most of the space. Her daughter
inherited her mother’s kitchen and no doubt the dishes and utensils as well,
but I don’t think anything else changed.
Women of my mom’s generation had no choice to get more
cupboards – they were now into the Age of Tupperware. Trying to corral all those bowls and lids is
not for the faint hearted. The struggle
is real.
The kitchen I’ve operated for the past 37 years has double
the cupboards any kitchen should have.
Half of them came with the original tiny kitchen of the original tiny
house and the rest were doubled when we doubled the size of the house and the
family. The over abundance of spaces I
can hide by closing cupboard doors is phenomenal. I’ve been married twice, raised four kids,
and attended countless Tupperware parties, and I throw nothing away. My daughters live in terror of the day I die
and leave it all to them.
And yet it would seem that it was not enough storage. I wanted more.
Well, not so much more storage, as better storage. Somebody (almost surely a woman) has come up
with all kinds of smarter storage options.
Things like upright dividers to keep your multiple cookie sheets and
pizza pans from avalanching when you’re digging for your muffin tins – speaking
as one who has had that whole business land on her toes more than once, I am
quite excited about a system that makes gravity work for me, instead of against
me.
But so much more than that, I cannot wait for the drawers
that are going to replace the deep lower level cupboards that sucked all my
favourite bowls to their back, forgotten, hidden places waiting for a day I
felt spry enough to hunt them down. My spry
days are getting fewer and farther between all the time. These drawers are going to deliver my things
to me without some kind of hunting expedition.
This is almost surely the last renovation we will do to my
kitchen, but I feel that it’s the most important one. I may have quite a few good cooking years
left to me if I don’t have to fight my cupboards for their contents any more.
A major part of the
carpentry part is done and we await the cosmetic application of paint before
the doors and hardware are put back on. This is so exciting!
Meanwhile I’ve been losing sleep as I spend the hours of
12:30 until 3:15 every night deciding where everything is going to go.
Oh yes, and which three things that will go off to a garage
sale in the spring.