How to cope with diversity

All projects run longer than scheduled. So when I planned for remodeling the farmhouse as a two-week project, I figured it would take four weeks. But we are on week eight because we’re waiting for tile. And when the farmer and I have an argument, he says, “Go to Home Depot and buy some tile so we can take baths.”

It is useless to try to explain to him why Home Depot tile is not innovative design. He doesn’t care. He just wants to be clean. I used to think diversity was my best friend marrying a black guy. But the guy graduated from rich-kid private schools and has tenure at UCLA and, at this point, I think diversity is not skin color but rather social upbringing.

I noticed there’s a lot of information on how to create diversity, but there’s not a lot of information about how to cope with it once you have it. So here are my tips:

1. Accept that some people don’t care about what you care about.
It’s true that we have not been very clean during the remodeling. All the plumbing is on hold. We take showers under the spigot for the well, and I keep thinking a towel is dirty, and put it in the dirty laundry, and then a week later it looks relatively clean, so I use it.

The farmer is concerned that people will think we don’t wash. He says people in the country judge you by whether you’re clean. This is the hardest part of remodeling for him.

The hardest part for me was painting because everyone besides my designer, Maria Killam, told me that it’s a sin to paint woodwork. I painted anyway.

The painters were so offended by the idea of painting woodwork that after they did the whole upstairs they asked if I changed my mind because they could still leave the woodwork downstairs unpainted.

Also: The painters wouldn’t paint the pink bedroom until the farmer expressly approved, in person, the color of paint. (His commentary: “Don’t call me in from the field to look at paint again, okay?”)

2. Know when you have to get your way.
What we ended up with are colors that make me happy and creative.

In fact, these are the same colors I chose for my childhood bedroom. My parents were so sure that I’d hate the colors when I went through puberty that they bought everything really cheap. But I never stopped loving my bright blue carpet. (Even now I remember the crayon I used to pick the carpet color: Cornflower blue.)

3. Don’t try to change others. See the world differently yourself.
I was going to go for farmhouse chic decor. But only non-farmers like farmhouse chic: you don’t need an old bench in your house when you have four in your barn. So I decided that steampunk is a better look for me, and maybe I should sell our old barn boards — which I constantly rescue from the farmer’s bonfires — to the farm-fetish people of New York City.

4. Seek out opposing views, just to practice processing them.
Oh. Wait. Speaking of New York City, when I tell a New Yorker that I live on a farm, do you know what they ask? “How many bedrooms is the house?” Like all houses are weekend houses on the Hudson. And do you know what Wisconsin natives ask when I tell them I live on a farm? “Do you burn couches?” It’s so common for farmers to burn furniture in their yard that people in Wisconsin know which furniture makes the best fire. (Yes, we did, in fact, burn furniture. But I didn’t realize it until my nanny asked if she could have the dresser we’re not using, and the farmer said, “It was cheap wood, anyway.”)

5. Use innocuous obsessions to distract from genuine conflict.
While I’ve been waiting to unpack, I have been gardening — adding plants the Amish farmer down the highway has on sale because it’s too late in the summer to plant them.

Also while I’ve been waiting to unpack, I have been sort of unpacking. Going through books. I always try to throw some books out when I move because I have too many. In my 20s, my walls were covered in books. But once I realized that living a life buried in books is a sign of dysfunction, I’ve been trying to cut back. I still am not able to read a book from the library. I have to own it. But I am able to throw out a book if I no longer remember anything about it.

6. There’s relief: A new, jarring way of thinking becomes tame over time.
I read Fear of Flying the first year out of college, and then I realized I was missing a whole part of the literary canon, so I spent a year reading the history of women writing about sex. It was an eye-opening year, but twenty years later, the books are not as challenging. I throw out almost all the books, but I save:

Fear of Flying, by Erica Jong

The Pillow Book, by Sei Shonagon

Oranges Are Not the Only Fruit, by Jeanette Winterson

My Secret Garden, by Nancy Friday

The Story of O, by Pauline Reage

Then I got worried that the town is so small that everyone watches what everyone throws out, and people will not appreciate the literary aspects of books like House of Incest.

I told the farmer that he should be careful bringing the box to the dump because some people would think it’s porn.

“Oh, really?” was all he said. And he moved those books a little bit away from the trash pile.

Then I noticed the books were making their way slowly, one by one, to our pink bedroom.

7. Real diversity requires real patience.
The tile is not the only thing holding us up. Also the faucets. Which the farmer assumed was the contractor’s fault and not mine because what sane woman would wash dishes in an outside well for eight weeks on her own volition?

“Actually,” I say, “I need brass polished finish for the s-trap, and I have had a hard time finding it.”

The farmer tries very hard to understand why a nickel finish on the pipes would not be steampunky-y enough for my farmhouse kitchen. “I hate to end up with a kitchen that is actually ironic commentary on our farm life instead of insightful commentary.”

“What? What are you talking about?”

“It’s why I need brass pipes instead of nickel. Steampunk is insightful commentary on vintage decorating.”

The farmer hugs me. He knows I’m onto something, and maybe he can wait another week. Or three.

We go up to the bedroom. We knock over the stack of maybe-porn and we bump into the chandelier so hard that it sounds like wind chimes. We pull off the duvet that I had to travel to New York City to find, and just as the farmer is about to go down on me he says, “What’s this?”

“What?”

“There’s dirt.”

“Really?”

“How do you get dirt in your underwear? Were you gardening nude or something? How does this happen?”

I think about the dirty towel getting me dirty instead of dry. I think the farmer is not going to want to hear that we have no shower and no washing machine and no end in sight. So I say, “Yeah. I think it’s gardening.” And somehow, he’s relieved.

107 replies
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  1. Suzy
    Suzy says:

    Love your comment about the farm-fetish New Yorkers.
    When we visit St. Louis, my husband gets the biggest kick out of friends who “show of” their French Country kitchen to him. He is, in fact, from the French Countryside of Bretagne and finds nothing familiar or French about their kitchens. Rien!

  2. Sigivald
    Sigivald says:

    Paint protects wood.

    That’s why you paint it. Painting high quality wood means it’ll last even longer.

    But nobody will be able to tell> how high quality it is… yeah, and unless you’re trying to make a statement, who gives a damn?

    Decorative wood is for furniture, not house trim and doorframes.

  3. Kathleen
    Kathleen says:

    I love sharing books with others, so I totally appreciate the gesture of sending them to the dump (aka community share space). When I finish a book on an airplane, I offer it to the flight attendants. When I finish a book in the cafe, I offer it to the staff. I’ve acquired some of my best reads from others’ offerings, and I like the idea of keeping that pattern going. I’m even OK when I’m offering it while full of my markups – that’s what was important to me as I was reading it; I enjoy inheriting books from others with their markups and observing what was important to them at their time of reading.

    I encourage you to keep sharing books. Rather than thinking about ditching them, shift to think that you’re merely giving the books the gift of moving them along to another appreciative audience. It’s what I’d want if I were a book.

    Having lived through many a renovation myself, I feel (appreciate) your adventure. I spent more than 2 years where my deal with my husband was that he’d promise I’d have 2 out of the following 3 everynight, but I wouldn’t know until 5p which those two would be: shower, toilet, kitchen sink. Amazing how attached to the gym I became and how comfortable I became with dirty dishes in the sink. And, how I learned to pee downhill. Enjoy the process.

    • Deborah Hymes
      Deborah Hymes says:

      If I finish reading a book on a plane, train or bus I love to just leave it behind. I like to think of it wending its way through the lives of different readers, and I’ve often stumbled across interesting things this way myself. ;)

  4. neko
    neko says:

    Gentle Readers: Do not fear the dump! What PT says is absolutely true — bringing things to the dump so that others may collect treasures is perfectly normal. I know this because ….

    1) I grew up in Wisconsin (in Milwaukee vice farm land, but still); and

    2) My grandfather owned a Milwaukee-area trash-hauling company & a small dump in the 1940s.

    Needless to say, some of my family’s most treasured ‘stuff’ was found & brought home from The Dump !

  5. disillusioned fan
    disillusioned fan says:

    Dear Penelope: I miss the days of you actually blogging about content that aligned with your moniker of “brazen careerist”. I enjoyed seeing columns in which you gave common sense commentary against “conventional wisdom”, things like “gaps in your resume really don’t (or shouldn’t)” and “don’t worry so much about typos in your resume”. Sure the occassional personal anecdote focused column is to be expected from any good blogger, but it seems now that you’ve completely strayed from your original focus. It seems you do still have a fan base, so more power to you, but I can’t imagine that it’s the typical Gen X to Gen Y corporate ladder climber anymore. Apparently it’s people who want to hear about competing interior design styles. PS: who actually has “a designer”?

  6. Gia
    Gia says:

    I loved that line, “don’t change people just try to see the world differently for yourself”

    So true. <3

  7. Morgan
    Morgan says:

    How funny, I specifically remember Cornflower Blue as always being a disappointment. The crayon itself suggested such a beautiful blue, but when you colored, it just faded into the white paper… Crayola crayons were always vibrant colors, and Cornflower Blue was just so washed-out.

  8. Mark W.
    Mark W. says:

    The best photo in this post is the “new” photo of yourself in the banner at the top of the post – much better in my opinion!

  9. Dree
    Dree says:

    Aww shoot, you did not just drop some Nancy Friday on this joint.

    That book was MAJOR to me as a 12 year old. I hope nobody ever does the Sherlock-Holmes-what-page-does-this-book-fall-open-to? trick with my copy.

    And yay for Jeanette Winterson! My hot, genius Calculus professor passed me Oranges are Not the Only Fruit. Sadly, it did not mean she wanted to sleep with me.

    Although…I wonder if she’s on Facebook…

  10. WorkingMom
    WorkingMom says:

    And I still have “Wifey” in my house for the same reason – I live in a small town, and I’m afraid eyebrows might be raised if I donate it to the library ;-)

    Glad to hear you’re doing well, dirty or otherwise.

  11. Annabel Candy, Get In the Hot Spot
    Annabel Candy, Get In the Hot Spot says:

    Happy colors, happy new photo (love that) and a happy life. I found renovating one of the most stressful times of my life – probably best not attempted with a newborn baby to care for, you seem to be coping marvelously! 2 weeks though, that WAS optomistic:)Happy nesting!

  12. Peggy
    Peggy says:

    Check out research by Annette Lareau….she suggests that social class impacts our though processes way more than race – my experience personally and with clients, students, and life in general is that this is true.

  13. Susan
    Susan says:

    Penelope,

    As the daughter of a Stanford-graduated Black doctor, who grew up in white suburbs and then went to high end private schools, I have to say, the experience of middle-class African Americans in mainstream life is still much, much different than those around them. Like when you meet someone after talking to them on the phone, and they say “Oh, oh, oh. I didn’t expect you to be.. I didn’t know…” pause for the awkward silence and then try to regroup. Or having a conversation with a neighborhood mom who is explaining to me the significance of what a Mercedes is (read: prestigious German import), when I learned to drive on one and my father spoke fluent German. Or running into a random mother (white) at the bookstore with her newly adopted toddler from a third world country, and she befriends my children without realizing they’re mixed, only to see me and shut completely and utterly down …

    And don’t even get me started on how we are shunned by our own “community” in many instances. Again with the questions of why do we talk that way (as if correct grammar were a crime).

    Don’t discount the diversity (issues) of your friend & her family because there’s no such thing as “privileging” your way out of the racial divide (or any other social/class divide for that matter).

  14. Wiana
    Wiana says:

    Really missed you, love the pictures and learnt a new word “steampunk” – link makes it look like a lot of clutter? My main point is, its almost criminal to throw away books, even almost porn books. There must be a literacy charity that can give them out to young women who need to go through that part of their education who cannot afford books? I did no read all the comments, sorry if its a repeat. Preaching done

  15. Raisin
    Raisin says:

    It isn’t so much that painting wood is a sin, but painting high quality wood is a sin, and you are wasting money by painting it. Do you start your fireplace with 100 dollar bills? You should have at least ripped out the high grade wood, sold it to a carpenter, replaced it with paint grade wood and painted that.

    I know nothing about bags, but I wouldn’t use a Coach bag to line my trash cans.

    Painting finish grade wood is just like throwing money away.

    When we moved into our house with solid oak cabinetry that my wife wanted to paint all the wood. We got an offer from a carpenter for the wood that would pay for new cabinets, pay for paint on the new cabinets, and leave us with profit from selling the solid oak. We ended up keeping our cabinets.

  16. bb
    bb says:

    i’m glad you’re back, too.

    i’ve been working on my kitchen since march. sanding the cabinets to repaint them (because it’s cheap wood and sanding the varnish off damn near sanded the super-thin layer of real wood off the particle board) and painting the walls to have some color. we rent so we can’t do much more. i haven’t had doors on my cabinets for three months. seems i can only sand two doors a day with two toddlers running around. but at least my husband can’t gripe that i don’t shut the cabinet doors all the way.

    i’m steampunking my brand new office btw. my business outgrew the corner table at starbuck’s. when i first started reading your blog, i had just started my business and was excited and scared about where it could go. now i’m so busy, i can hardly keep up.

    penelope what do you think – if your business was going to lease new office space somewhere would you ask the farmer for permission? will he have any say in what you do with the company? i’m having trouble with this on my end – the hubby is very controlling but my business is my business and i don’t think i should have to ask him permission to get an office if i’m so busy i can’t handle meeting all my clients in our dinky rental house or at local coffee shops like i have been.

  17. Gretchen Seefried
    Gretchen Seefried says:

    Only now catching up on posts from June…I love you blog. And really can’t understand why it’s anybody’s business if you paint the woodwork.I do admire your willingness to seek out opposing views. Too often I find that folks with those views are extremists, narcissists, bullies, or busybodies. The human urge to pass judgment is a nasty one – and on that I too must battle on a daily basis.

    We have a pink bathroom that I accented with black and white-went the metro look to make it work for teen children of both genders.

    I had no doubt that the books you were tossing were going to others…duh as those teen kids would say.

    Your farmer sounds like a keeper.

  18. Maria Killam
    Maria Killam says:

    Last week I bought a lamp because it was so steampunk and brought it home, only to realize that is not the look happening in my house; sigh. I haven’t returned it yet though because it looks sculptural and cool standing next to my open ironing board in the dining room (as I’m still waiting for furniture to arrive and my living/dining room is not yet done, I care less if my ironing board is still up).

    Thanks for the mention!
    xoxo
    Maria

  19. mdingo98
    mdingo98 says:

    my favorite crayon was periwinkle. maybe what you need is a peri bottle until the bidet is installed:)

  20. George
    George says:

    My gosh, this post is the perfect example of point one. It may also be a perfect example of some other points too but I can’t tell because getting to that point would have been worse than pulling out my teeth. Therefore, good job on identifying point one, and good job on writing some more things after that for these people that find it interesting.

  21. Paula
    Paula says:

    Yes, diversity comes in many forms–which is why I still read your blog although I think painting woodwork is not just a sin, but usually indicates that the woodwork was actually plywood to begin with. And I often get a weird sensation of unreality when I read your work… as if I were reading the words of someone on drugs or… maybe just from New York. Because sometimes I can get insight from trying to look at the world from what seems to me a skewed angle. At the very least, I can be fascinated by the idea that, for instance, it’s not only in movies that there are big-city people who would redecorate a farmhouse according to a big-city interior designer’s ideas. Wow. My life would no doubt seem just as odd to you.

  22. Clara
    Clara says:

    Great commentary! and those throw-away books? Forward them to me (waay too old to worry about what my being holed up in “book world” implies:)

    Clara.

  23. Esther
    Esther says:

    Well said Susie! Knowing what is important to ones boss not only keeps them happy, but it could lead to power. By power I don’t mean a higher position, but the ablity to achieve organizational group, and individual goals. Power can be good if presented correctly.

  24. Esther
    Esther says:

    I am not one to read blogs, but I certainly enjoyed this one. I learned a new concept; diversity by perception. The fact that you explained with example your thoughts really helped. Tahnk you.

  25. Carrie
    Carrie says:

    “Don't try to change others. See the world differently yourself.”

    This is excellent advice! Thanks for such an insightful post!

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