Tuesday 6 January 2009

Flat lining

I wouldn’t necessarily describe myself as ‘poor’. I have a job that pays above minimum wage, somewhere to live, I can eat out or buy new banana-print tights on occasion and as yet have never found myself in the position of having to ask my landlord whether he would accept charcoal drawings of cheese graters and ‘keep left’ signs in lieu of actual cash.

That said, one of the reasons I can afford to eat out and keep up with new trends in fruit fashion is because my flat is quite affordable (by London standards). And of course, as any real estate agent or flat-hunter will tell you, ‘affordable’ is usually code for ‘riddled with unique and curious problems no one knows how to explain, let alone solve’. Whereas I am now used to having a fridge in the hallway, flipping TV channels manually with a McDonald’s straw and think nothing of the tiny wooden block hammered into the kitchen wall with a picture of a completely-unknown-to-anyone-who-currently-lives-there brunette in a petite love-heart shaped golden frame perched on top, my flat can be an interesting place to newcomers.

A couple of connections:

1. The light in the upstairs bathroom has married the light in the downstairs toilet, and clearly wears the pants in the relationship because whatever it does, the downstairs light emulates like an obedient puppy. The light is on in the downstairs toilet when you walk into it, and you innocently sit down with your copy of Fruit Fashion – Fall 2008. Just as you are sinking your teeth into a fascinating article on the social advantages of a papaya-flavoured scratch-n-sniff cardigan, the light snaps off and you are encased in sudden blackness. This never fails to elicit a little scream, and since the light-switch is too far away to reach from your porcelain perch, you have to forego your riveting read and reach for the paper.

This has startled quite a few visitors, who naturally assume that the bulb just happened to blow out while they were marvelling at your choice of bathroom literature (not that the light above them is the switchy equivalent of a 1950s housewife following her husband’s every whim).

Three flights of stairs separate this light-switch couple, and I have always wondered why it shouldn’t work in reverse: why the comings and goings of the bulb downstairs have no impact on her husband up top. It would be entertaining to re-wire this fault so that she could sit on the bathroom throne barking orders for once. A light going off when you’re in the shower could provide a good two minutes’ entertainment for bored flatmates on a Tuesday evening. Which leads me to my next marriage in the flat, between the:

2. Kitchen tap and the shower. This is not unusual in itself. Practically everyone has experienced the sharp sting of hot water needles when a toilet flushes or an urge to scream ‘stop using the f*%king water, you pillock!’ when you find yourself sprayed with tiny ice-cubes. What may be unusual about this long-distance pipe relationship is that whenever anyone uses the tap in the kitchen, the shower completely ceases to function.

You have worked up a good lather in your hair and suddenly the stream dries up. Since the kitchen is three floors down you can’t really call out, so instead you stand there, hands clasped in front of you (almost in prayer), eyes fixed with a pathetically sad expression upon the tiny holes in the shower-head and mind envisioning soap suds bubbling up through kitchen mugs and luxurious hot watery waves washing over potato-skin encrusted baking trays. ‘They have to be nearly done,’ you think. ‘I’m pretty sure all that’s left is two spoons and the apple peeler.’ And then the real taunting begins.

A ring of water beads appear under the shower head, and they pulse one or two times before spurting out a few lines of watery salvation. Hallelujah! Your eyebrows relax and the stream returns. But then there’s the glass they forgot about in their bedroom, and the vase they just emptied that dead rose out of and wouldn’t it be a perfect time to scrub my bike chain and wash down the vacuum cleaner? And now after all that work I’m pretty thirsty, but what’s this? The kettle’s empty! Ah, easily solved. Drink up, my stainless steel friend. There’s plenty more where that came from. Oh, and would you look at that! The filtered water jug could use a refill too. Come to think of it, my orchid could do with a little splash. What the heck? Why don’t I just leave the tap on and invite the neighbourhood cats around to have a different drinking experience?

After all of this you feel a bit bipolar, a bit confused (that a shower-head could add or detract so much to your day-to-day happiness) and just the slightest bit homicidal. You start making all sorts of showery resolutions: I will always tell people when I’m about to jump in, and I will hang a tea-cosy over the tap so everyone knows that now is not the time to make friends with thirsty felines. You have also planned out exactly what you are going to say to your tap-happy flat-mate, down to the very last expletive.

But instead when you go downstairs you end up sheepishly enquiring about what’s on TV, then shoot a death-stare at the gleaming dishes and smiling orchid (as if they themselves were to blame) and watch Never Mind the Buzzcocks until Simon Amstell makes you forget about the whole debacle.

3. Apart from these two connections, anyone I invite over for dinner may be perplexed by my modified recipe book. A problem that has followed me from flat to London flat has been the dearth of basic kitchen tools. Here in Whitechapel, instead of 1 cup of Arborio rice or 350g butternut pumpkin, my modified recipe calls for ‘That mug with ‘Hoff’ on it about ¾ full of rice’ and ‘about 7/8 of that green plastic bowl full of pumpkin’. 320° becomes Gas Mark 9, and ‘placed into a large pot and covered tightly with lid’ becomes ‘placed in cake tin, covered with foil and fingers crossed the ingredients don’t overflow.’

You may ask why I have not just gone out and bought the muffin trays and mortars and pestles our kitchen so desperately needs, but there are two very good reasons why I have yet to get them:

(a) When I have money left over at the end of the month, I prefer to blow it on mango brooches or coconut-themed gloves (white and soft on the inside, brown and hairy on the outside!), and,

(b) When a previous flat-mate left, he took all of the kitchen implements he had bought with him, and the current flat-mates have resented him for it ever since. Apparently all they were left with was a napkin dispenser and one rusty sieve. Naturally when I move I will want to take my mortars and pestles with me, so I refuse to buy them in the first place to save myself the loud conversations regarding my cheese-gratery greed and odd fascination with fruit fashion that I fear so much after I leave.

5 comments:

Kyle Archer said...

Good to see you still have that old measuring cup problem. But reading this makes me quite relieved I didn't convince you to move in to the place i was staying before the Hackney flat. It was affordable, yes, but instead of the cute little problems that only arose after a few days experience with the place, there you could see the holes in the roof, the (broken) fridge AND oven in the hallway, the one lunatic housemate, deeply religious, and the army of mutant bugs and critters shortly after the whole-body feeling of dread swept over you as you passed throught the front door.

Julien said...

I bet you're missing my Brussels flat, aren't you ? ... You wouldn't if you heard about the difficulties I went through when I wanted to rise the temperature above 12°C/not-quite-enough°F/you-don't-wanna-know°K... Maybe the central heating of my building was having an affair with the light of your upstair bathroom, and ressented it for doing nasty stuff with the light of your downstair toilet. Anyway, I had a hard time comforting it... Now my flat is back into the warm of Mediterranean civilizations, but eh, I was close to lose a toe, and it would have not been as funny as in the Big Lebowsky !

Sarah said...

Kyle - yes, the same old measuring-cup woes. Was that the place in Stoke Newington? I don't think I would have even been tempted by that place, from the way you described it while you were here! I remember something about having to share your room with the landlord's son when he came to visit every now and then, too, or was that somewhere else?

Julien - I do miss your Brussels flat! It was a perfect little place, with plenty of mugs, dishes and tea selections to its credit. It must have been hard without heating though. The London papers always show the temperature in Brussels and lately I have seen some minus figures, so I wouldn't have wanted to be there then. At least that's one thing *right* about my flat - it is always so hot I have to peel off the 10 layers I need to survive outside as soon as I arrive home!

Julien said...

So you miss my flat, uh ? Be sure my flat misses you as well ! In fact, you've become a legendary figure for my flat. All the furnitures are looking forward to see you coming back. The couch keeps on crying "when will Sarah come back ? Or are we going to visit Sarah ? When will I see her again ?" The same for the coffee-table, it wrote a prophety about She-who-had-golden-hair-and-said-yop, otherwise known as Sarah, and claims you're a messiah. All my new stuffs were told about you by my older furnitures, elders amongst the elders. The new frame prays your name every morning and refuses to be turned in another direction than London "for prayer purposes", it says. The Super NES paddle you used has been kept as a relic by my TV which refuses to let anyone else use it unless we worship it before. And according to the Gospel of the Microwave Oven (chapter 13:24), "until the return of The Sarah thou shall not be swapped before the sun goes down". Not to mention my bathroom, which has become quite a dangerous place : the mirror is the Pope of the Orthodox Sarahist Church and has declared a fatwa against the Shower curtain because he founded the Fundamentalist Order of the Holy Sarah (which has exploded since a schism happened involving the Sidetable over an argument upon wether your Final meal before crucifixion was made of pastas or rice)...

Sarah please come back as soon as possible, I heard my mattress calling me an heretic...

Rebecca said...

Haha! This reminds me of when i lived in Camden, sharing a flat with three bartenders, one nanny and a student (and three-four Bosnians sleeping on the living room floor, but i never saw them).
I had to clean the floor with old socks on my hands, dipped in soapy water from a big mug with 'I love sex' written on it in big, red letters.
You had to shake the shower head constantly to make it work, and the water was always too cold or too hot, and never enough.

But i had a good time there, even though i had to bring a towel with me to sit on when i wanted to use the living room because the couch was so dirty, and my feet got stuck to the carpet so bad that i actually stepped out of my socks one time.

But it was cheap.