As much as I love school life, it's still school life. I feel comfortable in my dorm room, but it's not home. Home is where my mom is making cupcakes and my dogs are fighting me for the couch they've claimed since I've been away at school. It's pumping the "Spring Blossom" hand sanitizer in my bathroom and smelling what home smells like. But perhaps the most important part of home, my very own bedroom to do with whatever I please, doesn't greet me with the same fondness as my hyperactive pups or my welcoming mother. Why?
We moved. In May of my senior year in high school, we moved a couple of towns over. Long enough to unpack boxes and situate furniture before my late August departure, but not quite long enough, when spliced up by a 12-day trip to Italy and frequent commuting to the Jersey Shore, to create the perfect sanctuary.
Especially when I never quite unpacked everything, and the boxes multiplied as my stuff continued to collect on the floor of my closet, and my dresser conveniently fell apart during my first month at school, causing my mother to package all of its contents in plastic bins before shipping it off elsewhere. And so here I sit, on the floor of my bedroom, surrounded by twenty three--nope, missed one: twenty four--plastic bins, filled with roughly a third of my life. Don't ask me where I got that proportion, I'd never be able to tell you.
And so I wonder, how does one reclaim home in six days or less? I'm home for an extended long weekend (oh, the joys of national holidays, Jewish holidays, and convenient college scheduling, all working together in perfect harmony.) That's my project for the week. Wish me luck.
1 comment:
your post makes me miss college (some things at least)
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