Taking Over the Castle
by Becky Gunderson
For some men the garage is their castle. I know my husband feels this way, something to do with being a guy. However, he doesn’t actually like spending time in the garage unless it’s drinking beer with the neighbor.
To me a garage is where cars sleep, trash cans hide out, and tools live harmoniously together in an organized state of ecstasy.
We moved into our house nine years ago and only one car fit in the three-car garage. Broken down boxes and excess stuff we didn’t know what to do with expanded to take up every available inch, some special law of physics that I don’t know the name. “Let’s clean the garage this weekend!” became my favorite phrase. Hubby’s reply was, “Nah, that’s no fun. I’d rather sleep in, write, read, play video games, stab myself repeatedly with a dull kitchen knife.”
I find it absolutely ridiculous that only one car fits in a garage outfitted for three. True, my car was getting the rock-star treatment of spending each night in the garage, but that wasn’t the point. I wanted both vehicles sleeping side-by-side happily ever after in the garage. Why were we allowing empty boxes and stuff we no longer wanted or needed to occupy this precious real estate?
I finally stopped nagging and just did it. About an hour into it, the hubby realized what was happening. He reluctantly helped. It took the better part of the day, but we made room for his car. Hubby claimed he likes parking in the garage, but probably said that to shut me up. I squealed about 37 times “isn’t it amazing how BOTH CARS fit in the garage?!” Yes, jazz hands and flying arms included. I get excited about such things, I can’t help it.
A couple years later and the garage fell into a horrendous state again. Same argument ensued. Eventually we cleaned the garage. Now in 2015, another couple years have gone by, and here we are again. This is unacceptable.
While the hubby plays video games on the Xbox, I play the female version: Pinterest. With over 3,000 items pinned, some being projects I want to build, it’s clear a tidy, organized workspace is needed. We did build a kick-ass coffee table, loosely based on something I pinned, but that’s another story for another time.
During our most recent talk about the garage, I told the hubby, “I’m going to clean and organize the garage. I know you don’t enjoy or want to be a part of this and that’s fine. Here are the ground rules: if you want access to the garage, other than parking the car, then you need to help today. (Apparently I’ve adopted General Motors’ negotiating style). If you don’t help, the garage is mine.”
The look in his eye reads: this is too good to be true. Eyebrow cocked, head titled he asks, “Really?”
“Really.” I nod, proving I mean it.
“But…” his fingers resting on the keyboard, the bright screen screaming for his attention.
I know he wants to read, write, research, do anything but leave that chair. “Really,” my noggin imitating a bobble-head.
I love that he enjoys reading, researching, writing, cooking, and baking. He quickly and easily organizes his thoughts about anything: a movie, a book, a Supreme Court decision and then expresses it articulately. The hubby spends far more time in the kitchen than he ever has in the garage. He loves to cook and bake. He makes bread from scratch, regularly. Breakfast was homemade sour-dough bread he’d made into French toast. Last night we enjoyed freshly baked baguettes with the dinner he grilled. He’s prepared and cooked more meals in our 11-year marriage than I have made in my entire 41 years on the planet. I don’t enjoy cooking, as far as I’m concerned a bowl of cereal is a meal.
Me? I’m not articulate with my thoughts like the hubby. I ramble on and get lost and can’t remember what we were talking about. But physical spaces? I’m OCD when it comes to that. A place for everything and everything in its place.
I kiss him and head to my new domain.
It’s a cool Saturday morning, about 50 degrees. I remove everything from the space. Wow, my castle is huge! I looked around and admired the space, my space. Oh yeah!
All the boxes on, under, and near the workbench are now next to the recycle bin. The neighbor approaches, “You moving?”
“No, just cleaning out the garage.”
“Where’s the otherhalf? He still sleeping?”
“He’s inside writing.”
“Neat trick. How do I get my wife to clean the garage?”
We laugh.
“Hey, want a lawn mower? It’s filthy, but I think it still works.” He rolls the mower into his yard with the plan of donating it. I’m sure his wife is not amused by this but I’m thrilled to get it out my garage. We have a lawn care service; clearly we have no need for the grass eater.
Boxes recycled, I sort and group similar items together. What can I get rid of? Less is more. What the hell? Seventeen screwdrivers, really? Not in my castle! Off with their heads.
I admire my garage again. This is an opportunity to rearrange everything to fit my needs. No longer will the plastic shelving reside in a useless corner because that was the only option at the time. The pegboard with the much used hammers, screwdrivers, etc. will inhabit the wall next to the work bench. It drove me bonkers where it used to be. I had to contort myself because the useless lawnmower, set of golf clubs, and the trash bins were always in the way. Oh, MY space will be amazing when I’m done. I know just what I want and I have a plan. Victory will be mine.
But no. Whamo! My husband appears. So much for my plan.
“Um, whatcha doing?” I ask.
“I’m here to help!” my hubby replies as he sweeps. Now, this is tricky. I hate sweeping so this is good, but…
“Uh huh, but why?”
I thought he would do finger calisthenics on the keyboard; inside, far, far away from my kingdom.
“Well, I figured I should help. What do you want me to do when I’m done sweeping?”
This is a delicate situation. He clearly thinks of the garage as his domain. But I’d explained the rules clearly: he stayed inside and thus forfeited jurisdiction. When did our “Cool Hand Luke” moment happen? I stand there dumbfounded.
“Ah, ok, well, um, after you’re done sweeping will you hang the pegboard over here?” I show exactly where I want it, what height, etc. “No problem!” he says with a smile. Where the hell was all this enthusiasm of his coming from? I find myself in another part of the world… how did I get here? This is not the same as it ever was.
We’re in an alternate reality. Hubby works on the pegboard. He’s measuring and cutting it to size. I clean the items that get to return to the garage. We’re both in our zones pretending everything is going well. I’m freaking out on the inside. He’s sighing and muttering. The actual hanging of the pegboard proves more challenging than originally thought. The new location doesn’t have studs in the ideal location. While nailing a chunk of wood into a stud the wood falls and hits hubby on the shoulder. Uh oh, we’re quickly returning to our normal reality. Hubby picks up the chunk, throws it, and it splits. We stare at each other. Yup, it’s dawning on both of us that the garage is NOT my husband’s castle. We both know this, but don’t want to admit it. We grew up in traditional households and it’s challenging letting go of beliefs that don’t fit us.
We finally agree that I’ll give up the kitchen (and all nagging about it) and he’ll give up the garage. This is more than fair since I only use the kitchen for filling my water bottle and making the occasional boozy dessert. Since striking this deal he’s been amazing at maintaining the kitchen. I see the pride he takes in himself and his new space, and it’s beautiful to behold. I think my husband views the garage situation as a failure on his part. I view it as freedom. He’s no longer tied to space he’s not interested in and the tradeoff is he’s free to explore and do things he not only enjoys, but excels at.
And I get the bigger, better space, a space with power tools! It’s a win-win.
Welcome Becky!
Me? I’m not articulate with my thoughts like the hubby. I ramble on and get lost and can’t remember what we were talking about.
This wonderful post leads me to think you underestimate yourself.
Wonderful coffee table. And THE LAWN MOWER! I’m so proud of you!Report
You’re sweet!
I wanted to get rid of the mower years ago, I finally succeeded!Report
Awesome. We have a friend who has not only a garage but *THE* garage. It could hold two Hummers or four Yarises (Yarii?) and he doesn’t keep cars in it at all.
It has his tools, his wood stove, his fridge, and his handmade 10-man poker table.
I do not have a garage. It really only bothers me on mornings that I need to scrape. But, sometimes, when I stand in my bud’s garage, I feel envy.Report
I want more tools! A handmade 10-man poker table – pictures, I must have pictures! Sounds amazing.
I have a board on Pinterest named Garage Envy filled with things that make my heart go pitter-patter.Report
My dad’s is bigger.
Then again, it used to be a barn.
He kept a limosine and a roadster in there (plus the tools to completely rebuild a car from scratch).
The truck stayed out front, along with the three other cars…
(my car was a POS, but at least I got a car!).Report
A roadster, how fun! What kind?Report
We have a garage for one car (well, two if you park one behind the other) and zero cars in it. Clancy really wants us to get to the point that we can put a car in the garage, but since we don’t have any attic space I’m not sure it’s going to happen. We actually have room for up to four cars in the driveway – without any cars blocking other cars – though.
The people who lived in the house before us apparently never even got to use the nice basement.Report
Zero cars in the garage?! I know, I know first world problem…but it bugs me to pieces. Probably the OCD.Report
In our defense, we historically haven’t even had garages. This is the third place that we’ve had a garage, and one of them was a garage apartment we shared where we had literally no room for storage that wasn’t the garage. Parking outside has been the norm.Report
Excellent piece. Thank you. Some really stimulating food for thought.Report
Basements are for all the crap. Garages are for cars. Sadly I was unable to convince my (now) ex that the garage should be for the convertible sports car (third car) used only on nice days 🙂Report
Yes, basements are for all the crap. No wait, NO CRAP! I’m ruthless when it comes to getting rid of stuff. My dad doesn’t understand, “you might need that someday.” Might being the operative word. If I truly need it someday I’ll borrow or rent it. If it’s something I need or use often it gets a place honor. It’s really that simple.
Of all the things people cram into their garages, a convertible truly belongs in there.Report
Pretty much no basements in a typical Southern California house.Report
Or northern…Report
I miss living near the water. I grew up near it, so it will always feel more “natural” to me. But one thing I love about living away from the water is that it seems that the further you get from water, the more prevalent basements become.Report
If by basement you mean a nicely, finished space, then I’m all for it.
I grew up with old, dark, dank basements. Spaces that looked at home in a horror moving. The stuff nightmares are made of.
But if armed with enough Raid bug spray and bright lighting, one can transform the dungeon into something wonderful. A workshop, a storage area, or a nice spot to kick back, drink beer and watch some HGTV!Report
I enjoyed this. Thank you.Report
Aw shucks, thanks!Report
What do you do if the other half both refuses to participate in the maintenance upkeep of a space AND refuses to abide by your expectations for its use upon you annexing it?Report
Barricade them out until they learn the lesson.
… works better if this isn’t the kitchen or bathroom, mind.Report
Shoot, that’s a doozy! They can’t have it both ways. Time to put on your laurel wreath and get all Julius Caesar on them. Or if you’re nice, try bribing them.Report
The current garage is a two car tandem (if your cars are both Cooper Mini’s), and is not acceptable as a shop space. In a couple of years, we hope to buy some land on Whidbey Island and then I intend to go pick up some used shipping containers (4-6 of them, ideally) and combine them into my dream shop!Report
Brilliant plan, I approve! 😉Report
Hmm, my wife parks her car in half, and I get the other half. (Technically, by the terms of the marriage I get the whole, but my current largess is appreciated.) My half? Two welders, a drill press, vintage motorcycles, a table saw and I am thinking of building a boat in there. That is what a garage is for.Report
You had me at two welders and a drill press! Of course I’d likely burn off a limb if I attempted to weld anything, but a girl can dream.
In lieu of an actual workshop (barn, old shipping containers, etc.) the garage shall fulfill this need. I think that’s in the Bill of Rights, though it’s possible our illustrious countrymen may have failed to mention it.Report
@becky-gunderson
A true garage rights amendment!Report
@becky-gunderson Very nice essay. It’s interesting how hard it can be to let go of what seems “traditional” even when those patterns don’t fit very well. And how letting go can be more a process than a decision.
My husband and I live in a snowy climate. Both our cars fit in our garage, though it can be a tight fit sometimes. I’d prefer to move all the rakes, shovels, etc. and pitch it all. I’m of the “garages are for cars” school. This is our first home with a garage, and it is such a luxury not having to scrape ice and snow on a winter morning.Report
Oh yes, letting go was probably one of the bigger process challenges we’ve faced. If it were just a simple decision peace and merriment would have reigned long, long ago.
I grew up in Wisconsin. I recall negative temperatures and ice on the car so thick you couldn’t see inside. Chipping away at it in the foolish hopes that before you passed out you’d have cleared enough space to see. Praying the key wouldn’t break in the lock and that perhaps the car gods would smile upon you that day and allow the engine to turn over. And if you were super-duper lucky the car would be warm before arriving at your destination.
I’m so happy you have a garage, it is a luxury! Enjoy.Report
@becky-gunderson
WooHoo! Another Cheesehead! Welcome!
(I grew up in the triangle formed by Sheboygan, Fond du Lac, and West Bend; got my BS & MS from Madison).Report
I found this amusing to read, because just last night I decided to spend this weekend — and the summer if need be — clearing out my garage, which is filled not just with junk (the detritus of two moves, never unpacked. Clothes meant to be donated, but never sorted. Boxes of books that lack shelf space and, given the large numbers of packed bookshelves, I will never actually shelve — and frankly aren’t good books, or they’d already BE in my house on shelves. And honestly, I have a KIndle now and I love it so much).
Furniture we like but have no place for, some furniture I meant to make small repairs to before donating to family….old toys, often broken.
In short, junk that should be thrown away, donated, or sold (I plan to cart the books to Half Price Books or sell them as a mass lot on Ebay. I can’t bring myself to toss books in the trash unless they’re unreadable). And I’m tired of it cluttering up my garage, and I need to sweep the place up and get rid of cobwebs from inaccessible corners and such.Report
I love your ambition and willingness to take all summer, if needed, to tackle this project. I hope for your sake it doesn’t take three months. Even I would find it difficult to sustain the energy and enthusiasm to do that, and I LOVE organizing!
Fortunately it sounds like you know what needs to be done and that’s half the battle.
Take pictures, lots and lots of pictures. You’ll be amazed at the progress you can make in just a few hours! Also, photographic proof of your effort is a great motivator to keep going when you want to call it quits. Good luck and let me know how it goes.Report
That’s a comment about laziness, the taking all summer. That’s literally “I will sort one box a weekend. I will commit to that. It will take me all summer to get through the garage if I do it that way, but it’ll eventually get done”.
I could do it in a weekend or two. But I am lazy. 🙂Report
Uggh, with the recent move into the new place, we’ve had to start being ruthless in our purging. The intent was to do it during the last two moves, but the first one fell apart when my father-in-law died a week before the move, and the second planned purge never happened because our son came along. Instead of just dumping everything into the garage, this time we rented a storage space, so we have a financial motivation to purge as soon as possible.
I think our goal this year is to donate so much of our old stuff that we can itemize it on our taxes.Report
Sorry for the loss of your father-in-law.
Ruthless purging is THE way to go! And, if you need a financial incentive, like renting a storage unit, then go for it. I personally would cry every month when paying that bill! All that money that could be spent on making the garage even spiffier.
Congratulations on your son! A future garage cleaner. Train em’ when they’re young 😉Report
Nice! Good work 🙂Report
Thanks!
Next up: a new furnace and/or air conditioning unit. I’m really excited about this project.Report
Call in the pros to do the installation. I’ve done it twice & it is so worth the money.Report
Oscar is right about this. I used to do this on a facilities level, and there are a few things that if you don’t get them right, you will have major problems. (Gas lines and drip lines.)Report
Oscar, you Cheesehead you. Hiring pros to do the installation?! Clearly you’re smarter than the average Bear’s fan (hahahah – sorry, I don’t get out much).
I grew up in Milwaukee, Waterloo, and Watertown. As an adult I lived in Sun Prairie and Madison. I miss the Mad City, but not enough to welcome winter back into my life.Report
Same here! Lived in Sun Prairie for a time as well, before moving closer to campus.
And yeah, as much as I love WI, my old broken bones are done with winter.Report
Oh yes, I’ll be employing the services of professionals to install the new system(s). Have the first estimate appointment scheduled for tomorrow morning.
Questions for Aaron David (or anyone with knowledge in this area): any particulars I should inquire about regarding a furnace and/or air conditioning unit? Opinions or advice on the home systems available today? Any I should avoid?
Thanks!Report
Are you replacing an old furnace/AC or getting a new one?Report
Yes, replacing Fanny the furnace, and Alvin the air conditioner. They’re both 22 years old and they’re itching to retire to Florida. They’ve earned it! It’s time to say goodbye.Report
@aaron-david any particulars I should inquire about regarding a furnace and/or air conditioning unit? Opinions or advice on the home systems available today? Any I should avoid? Thanks!
(Just learned the protip of using the “@” symbol, sorry for not employing it sooner.)Report
@becky-gunderson
As always, get at least 3 bids and make sure they all have airflow analysis for each room. If you have two stories, you really want a separate system for each floor, at they actually have different climates. As for brands, they are all really pretty good at this point, just remember that it is better to go over on the tonnage just a bit rather than down. (AC units are rated in tons of air they can handle, and the tonnage will be relative to the overall heat load of your home.)Report
Also, unless you are out in the boonies, you may have HOA or city rules regarding noise, placement, screening, etc that are not part of building codes. A good contractor will be familiar with the local rules, but do your homework & make sure you know them as well.Report
@aaron-david Thank you. I didn’t know I’d need an airflow analysis per room, that’s good stuff! Fortunately we’re a single story home with less than 1,800 sq ft. Thanks again. 🙂Report
@becky-gunderson
Every room is a different size, and they all have different windows with varying amounts of sun. Also, each room has a different facing, meaning the sun hits it a different times of the day, requiring a different calc. to get the numbers right. Also, you want someone who will understand the pressures needed to keep a comfortable environment. (Hospitals in CA have negative pressure to keep air inside, for example.)
Oh, I misremembered one thing I wrote earlier. Tonnage refers to the BTU’s a unit will push, not the amount of air. Sorry, its been a long time since I thought about this.
Feel free to get my email from Tod or Burt and send me questions directly if you need too.
I hope this helps!Report
@oscar-gordon no HOA and we want a quieter unit (Alvin’s a party animal!). Thanks for the tips. I’ll research the local laws and quiz the contractors – hahaha!Report
@aaron-david yes, your info is extremely helpful! Thank you.Report
@morat20 a box a weekend is better than doing nothing at all. And maybe you’ll be inspired to tackle two or three boxes. It’s totally worth it, just keep at it.Report
This was a great read!
As part of a densification effort, our city has just blanket re-zoned almost the whole place to allow ‘garden suites’ – i.e. a small house in the back garden of an existing house, possibly but not necessarily built as a second storey above a garage. We’re considering doing this. I’m a bit (okay, a lot) of a cheapskate, so the idea holds some terror for me…
Our current garage really isn’t much of a prize as a “domain” – if we leave it a few more years we could probably accomplish the demolition without needing of a sledge hammer.
It looks like any such project is going to have to be postponed somewhat – we’re going to need to use the garage as a staging storage space for a while to accomplish some more urgently required basement renovations.Report