Alana: A room of my own
Thanks for your comments… know you’re right about my terrible (terrific) two year old… just thought I’d share a recent blog I wrote on how to write and be a mum…
Rooms of our own
Women didn’t even have the right to vote when Virginia Woolf first voiced our need to have our own piece of space in a Room of Our Own. A hundred years later and feminism has taken us beyond Virginia’s wildest dreams I imagine. Back then as a single woman, she was refused entry into a library without the escort of a male gentleman. Today there are few, if any, buildings we cannot stride into, and even have the chance of running should we so desire or work hard enough. However, one thing remains the same. How many women – and us mothers in particular – have a room to call our own? A space that is ours? A refuge from the hurly-burly tumble of motherhood?
I for one don’t have a room of my own. Not any more. Not one room. Not even a cupboard that locks or has room enough for me to hide inside (believe me, I’ve tried!). I have two daughters under two and a half years of age, and by two my eldest had discovered the delights of trying on my new red suede high heels (scored before I’d even worn them), could reach into the drawer and unzip my make-up bag, (I won’t go into the implications of liquid blusher on a cream carpet) and stand on the windowsill to reach across my dressing table to pull my necklaces and beads off the rack. But it’s not just the physical assault on my belongings, the loss of scared things that are mine (as every mother knows – a two year lives by the motto, what’s mine is mine, and what’s everybody else’s is mine too). It’s that little pocket of solitude, that tiny oasis of space, that miniscule crevice of peace, a place to run screaming to and slam the door shut should the desire overwhelm us. My daughters have it. My husband has it – an office at work, a shed, the study. Even the damn cats have it. But somehow between being a child and having a child, I lost the right of privacy.
When I was young I had my own bedroom. Poster laden walls and heart patterned curtains with secret hiding places for furtive writings and diaries stuffed with longing. As I grew up and chased life in a tirade of exciting adventures I had many rooms, in many houses, in many towns, in many countries; rooms that, when all was said and done were mine to close the door on, and say goodbye to the world. And then, when I had wilted, recouped, rested, regathered, I could throw open the door again to say hello to world, myself intact and recovered.
I only ever actually owned one of those rooms – well, three to be precise if you included a bathroom and kitchen/lounge area – and that was the best room of all. Mine, all mine. Well, mine and the cats. I can still just grasp that glorious feeling of how good it was to wake up on a Saturday morning, the blinds still down and hiding me from the outside, the door still bolted to keep me safe inside, as I languished indulgently in my space, alone to decide how the day would proceed, with space to just be. But no sooner had I secured my room (s) of my own, than I invited someone in to share it. Our love took over and we moved on to own multiple rooms together in a sorry house that whispered of many stories untold. Now I own several rooms, but none of them are mine; no part my husband doesn’t share (and clutter), no area my daughters don’t ransack. I don’t even close the toilet door anymore – that intimate moment of privacy too has been stripped away by an insecure toddler. And since giving up my full time desk-job to look after the family and pursue a freelance career, I no longer own an office where people would knock to enter and I could choose to welcome them, or not.
Now don’t get me wrong. I wouldn’t change one second of motherhood (well, ok there are about 30 seconds I might exchange) but here I am. 37. A mother and writer. And for the first time in my life I have no room to call my own. I write at the dinner table amid dollops of baby food and smidgens of egg yoke and between piles of ironing. I was deliriously happy recently when my husband grudgingly allowed me to store some old crockery in the shed so that I could have a whole half cupboard of the dresser to store my laptop and writing. A whole shelf! Who needs diamond rings when you can have a whole shelf, I ask you? When I surveyed a bunch of mum’s recently about their thoughts on motherhood, one of the strongest moans was lack of privacy and personal space. And I don’t think we even dream of anything grand. All I want is a little corner of the house that belongs to me; a place where all my piles of ‘stuff’, and notes, and ‘things’ can congregate together in harmony. I’d like to feel I belong, rather than have bits of me scattered around the house in every available recess like a hobo in my own home.
But for now I suppose I must create my own ‘room’, my thinking and writing place. My solitude must take place amid the hectic squealings of motherhood. My creativity must fight its way through the mundane acts of domesticity. I must claim my room where I can; in my head; in the car as I wait for the lights to change; in between the nappies and the boiled eggs and soldiers; in bed as the moon recedes and little voices have yet to break the silence of the morning. And maybe one day I will have a room again; one that’s just mine. With a door. A soft door that’s knock is mild and not intimidating. A gentle knock that I will gladly say ‘come in’ to. Because I can.














Granted, I am 32 weeks pregnant with my second son and I’m hormonal, but I cried when I read this post. Then I called my husband into the room (he was watching our almost 2 year old so I could actually get on the computer) and while he tried to prevent Sam from tossing all the cat food into their water dish, read it to him (while sniffling over the keyboard) and said “This is EXACTLY how I feel.”
I love my son with every fiber of my being but he has taken over MY room, first with his toys, and now with his incessent need to turn the printer on and off, open and close the keyboard drawer, grab the mouse out of my hand, bang on the keyboards, and turn the power strip on and off. I can’t write at my own desk anymore. If I leave the room for even a spilit second, he is on top of my desk, throwing all of my piles and anything else I’ve tried to move out of his reach, onto the floor, is turning my monitor on and off, and trying to still paper clips in his mouth.
I have been telling my husband for months that I am about to lose my ever-loving mind. That all I want is a time or a place where I can write in peace. He says to write when Sam naps. That’s not really helpful, because when else can I mop the floor, unload the dishwasher, and use household chemicals without 20 month old “help”?
I need to finish my book for my own sanity. But I’d like to see how he’d react if someone told him to design a stage one bucket design in one and a half hour increments every day when deadlines still loom. This is the man who has a total fit when I leave my pajamas on the bathroom floor. How would he like to try to work in a space filled with singing barnyard animals and talking tool boxes? Or compose a sentence while matchbox cars are driven over his hands? What could he accomplish when sippy cups are being lobbed at his head?
I was beginning to develop pre-emptive post-partum depression at the thought of trying to write a grocery list under the onslaught of not one, but two, children. The thought was more than I could bear.
But then your blog came along, the heavens parted, and a choir of angels appeared with a big Vegas-style marquee with lights dancing and flashing that said “Your Husband Will Get This.”
And he did.
We are going this very afternoon to get a laptop for me with our tax return. So I can type standing up. Desperate times call for desperate measures.
You’ve just given me a lovely Sunday night smile. Really pleased you got your laptop – means you can write in bed before their dulcet tones shatter the silence of early morning! it’s amazing how little it takes to make us happy – i still smile every time I walk past my half shelf in the dresser. MY half shelf! good luck with the baby – and here’s a nugget to get you through the first hard six months… in no time at all they’ll be entertaining each other and then you can squeeze an extra few moments on the computer while they’re not looking!
Yup, you nailed it, Alana. Most of the time, sharing space doesn’t bother me… except when it does. I once had a tug-of-war with my 4-year-old over MY backpack (with all my notebooks inside) which he wanted. Um, NO. How dignified was that? Anyway, I’m so glad you helped Brittany (looks like you arrived to our little corner just in time!) and as for me – I’m looking forward to the day we can move into a house that will, indeed, afford me a room of my own.
Alana and Brittany–I was just indulging at Starbucks, by myself, journaling about this very issue. (Alana, I had read this post on your own blog a few weeks ago, and it stayed with me.) I used to have an office–well, a corner of a large room above the garage–but this space was never very baby proofed, so some years ago, once I got a laptop, I stopped working up there except for paying bills and filing papers. We turned the dining room into a playroom/office area in order to accommodate the little one, and that worked out well for a while–although I couldn’t exactly call clients from that space. But then the little one turned into a toddler, and working around him became increasingly challenging (although I can’t say I have it as rough as Brittany!).
On top of that, we put the house on the market, and so had to turn our dining room back into a dining room. My former office area above the garage has morphed into the teenage hang-out area (TV/Xbox, guitars, a pull-out for sleepovers) and one of my boys regularly uses my desk and old desktop computer for AIM, etc.–and though I threaten to strangle him, he can’t sit there without leaving behind cups, plates, wrappers, and crumbs. And someone managed to break my desk chair, so now if you want to sit there you need to balance yourself carefully or else risk toppling over. It’s no longer my space at all, just an area where I go to file things. When my sitter comes, I sit in a comfortable chair in the same space, but all of my stuff is either in storage, in hiding, or is out of reach. Just paying bills and doing paperwork feels like a major ordeal, and I dread it. I have the “scattered” feeling that Alana describes so well.
I can’t help but dream about the new house, if it ever gets built (contingent on our sale), with its own first-floor office, with French doors. Sometimes I think that as an only child, I NEED my own space, in a visceral way–more than anyone else in my family (although maybe that’s just an excuse, and really, the 4.9 children are really the issue!). My husband is demanding to have a “spot” in my future office, and I’m trying to figure out how to veto that demand. He spends all of his free time on the weekends playing video games, either on his laptop or on the Xbox, and I do NOT want video games in my creative space. It drives me mad. I’m going to be writing something, or painting something, with digital dwarves sword-fighting in the background? I do appreciate that he wants us to be together, but…
I want to be able to paint the walls the color of my choosing (periwinkle blue) and keep the room as pristine or as messy as I like. I don’t want to deal with anyone else’s stuff, crumbs, or complaints. I want to arrange the furniture to my own liking. I will hang drapes inside the French doors so that when my sitter is providing child care, the kids won’t be able to see me. The door will have a LOCK, darn it!
Brittany, I think things are even harder right now because even your body isn’t your own. As you know, I’m in the same place–just four weeks ahead of you. Sure, being pregnant is an awesome experience, but on the other hand I’m really looking forward to just being “me” again. For now, that really may be the closest I can get to a room of my own. (On a positive note, I do think that your laptop will be a life-changing experience. Please keep us posted.)
Thanks, Alana!
amen! so wonderfully put. we all need a little me space.
can i raise an hallelujah chorus?! newborn and all attendant stuff, which is much bigger than baby and expanding exponentially by the day has moved into my bedroom, already small and shared with hubby, my boys are in rooms of their own for the first time in their lives for the past year and and a half of living in this house where the office was supposed to be mine and hubby’s but mother in law has taken over, btw, she also has the master suite while we share bathroom with boys….the boys have taken over my computer in the office while i’ve been relegated to hubby’s laptop on bed while nursing…….not that i dislike any of it, but i have been w/o a room of my own since, essentially, 1989? even that one was castroconvertible in livingroom of another friend’s apt where she had the one bedroom.
even between exhub and current, at least one boy was in bed for cuddles every night. wrote at kitchen table, attempted artist’s way with baby gate to create sense of own space with my younger son screaming and hanging on gate while older son, “mom, when are ya gonna be done? mom, when are ya gonna be done? and me saying shrilly, mommy’s journal time, honeys, mommy’s journal time honeys, while coffee brewed or dinner cooked between 2 PT jobs, …ahh those days are over, but i have new own space challenges and new baby. nothing new to any of you…..