Rob Rosen
The IKEA Paradox
“Honey, come here!” screamed my
husband from the bedroom.
“What?” I screamed back from the
kitchen.
“Come quick!” he screamed, even
louder.
In a panic, I rushed through our
apartment, down the hall, and towards our bedroom. My husband is sadly
accident-prone. Visions of severed fingers ran through my head as I raced
towards him.
“What’s wrong?” I shouted, nearly
out of breath, as I sped into the room.
“Look!” he shouted.
I scanned the carpet for bits of
his fingers. I looked at my husband for signs of bloody gashes. I screamed at
him, “What? What?”
“There! Look!” He was pointing
madly at the TV.
“The TV? What’s wrong with the TV?
Did you lose the remote again?” Besides being accident-prone, my husband has a
propensity for losing things as well: car keys, his wallet, his wedding ring,
and, frequently, the remote control.
“It’s on the fucking bed.” I said,
angry with him for needlessly worrying me.
“No, not that. There!” He sounded
desperate, so I looked at the TV again.
“What? It’s a commercial. What am
I looking for?”
“It’s IKEA. They’re opening up a
store in Emeryville,” he explained, beaming up at me.
“IKEA? That’s why my heart is
racing? What’s the big deal?”
“It’s IKEA!”
“So you said. And?”
He looked up at me with a
bewildered look on his face. Like I was supposed to know what the hell he was
so excited about. My husband and I often have differing opinions on what
constitutes exciting, but this one was way beyond my comprehensive abilities.
He had never shown a predilection for IKEA or Emeryville before. I stood there
clueless as he sat there grinning at me.
“Okay, I give. Please tell me why
we’re so happy all of a sudden?”
“What’s wrong with this apartment?
He countered my question with his own.
“You want a list?” I stood there,
arms akimbo, and glowered at him.
The apartment was always a sore
spot with us. San Francisco apartments are notoriously small. My husband’s
apartment was just barely big enough for one person. When we met, and I moved
in, we agreed that it would be a temporary thing, our living there together.
But finding a vacant apartment in the city was about as easy as finding a
needle in a field of hay. Especially an affordable one. So, five years later,
there we were: happily cramped and resigned to the fact that we weren’t moving
anytime soon.
“Okay,” he said, still smiling,
“but what’s the one biggest complaint.”
That was easy. “No closet space.”
Which was true. We had one small closet; and it wasn’t even a walk-in.
Basically, we crammed all our belongings into whatever furniture each of us
brought with us to the relationship. Nothing I owned was crease free. Finding
specific clothes I wanted to wear was a huge headache. And we never, ever
bought anything new. There simply wasn’t room for it.
“Voila,” he said, pointing again
to the TV.
“What? Alpo? We’re getting a dog?”
The commercial had changed; my husband’s demeanor had not.
“No, two armoires.” He practically
beamed.
“From IKEA?” Now I was getting it.
“From IKEA,” he concurred, glad
that I wad finally with the program.
“And where do we put two new
armoires?” I asked, even more nervous now than when I was imagining rushing my
husband to the hospital, his pinky nicely chilling in a bag of ice.
“Easy. We get rid of that small
thing, that small thing, and that small thing,” he said, pointing out our old
furniture, which was clearly brimming with our clothes and assorted
accessories.
I stood there for a minute before
speaking. It did make sense, what he was telling me. It would be wonderful to
be able to hang my clothes up and actually be able to find them again. Still, a
chilling sense of foreboding hung in the air.
“Well?” he asked.
“Weeeeell…okay. Sounds like a
great idea.” I like to see my man happy. That definitely did the trick. He
jumped up and hugged me and planted a big wet one on my lips. Who knew
Scandinavian furniture could have such an extraordinary effect?
***
IKEA was much bigger than I
expected. Almost a small city unto itself. I never needed a map to maneuver my
way through Macy’s before. What if we followed the wrong overhead arrow? Would
we end up in Stockholm? I was nervous, but still excited, nonetheless. I was
getting some much-needed, new furniture, right? Visions of neatly folded
t-shirts popped in my head. And my husband was clearly beside himself. So I pushed
my worries to the back of my addled brain, and I happily smiled as my husband
gleefully pointed to the home furnishings section that lay sprawling before us.
Okay. I hate to admit it, but IKEA
really does sell some beautiful furniture. And it was all so large and
practical. I would love to have had any of their reasonably priced furniture in
our too small apartment.
“Which one do you want?” asked my
husband.
Crap, this was going to be hard. I
wasn’t expecting so many viable options.
“That one!” I pointed, truly
thrilled for the first time. It was an enormous armoire, made from beautiful,
cherry wood. The doors were a translucent white material, framed in silver. And
the inside had a long bar to hang a fair share of our shirts on. Centered below
this, there were three deep drawers that would surely hold all of our
underwear, and then some. On either side of this were three sets of shelves on
the left side and three sets of shelves on the right side. And this was all in
one armoire. I gladly imagined what we could store in two of these things. I
was beginning to see why my husband was so excited about IKEA.
Until…
“How do we get these into out
apartment?” I asked, my good senses finally returning to me.
“That’s the beauty of it, hon.
They sell it so cheap because we build it ourselves.”
“We who?” I asked. “The last time
you tried to hang a nail into the wall, you put a three inch hole into it.”
“That’s different. This stuff’s
made for your average person to be able to put together,” he assured me.
I wasn’t so sure, but it was
awfully beautiful and easily large enough to hold practically all our stuff,
so, “Okay. Why not? But let’s get just one for now and see how it goes. We’ll
come back for its twin if it’s as easy as you say. Deal?”
“Deal, sweetie. And don’t worry.
This’ll be a snap.”
That hole in our wall was still
there, but I smiled at my husband as he signed for our new armoire, anyway.
That’s where the snap stopped.
We were given our receipt and told
where to go pick up our furniture. Seeing this wisely hidden area of IKEA was
my first clue that all would not be “snappy”. There were endless rows of stacks
upon stacks of incredibly long boxes. I gulped when I looked down at our
receipt and saw that we’d have to find six of these boxes to fit on our huge,
flat, rolling dolly. And I thought Costco was a pain in the ass. That was
nothing compared to this. My husband and I painfully strained our aging muscles
loading these monstrosities. I remembered that the Swedes were descended from
the Vikings. That made sense. Who else could have lifted this shit?
I kept reminding myself how little
we paid for it, as we wheeled our belongings up to our noticeably small car.
That was the only thing keeping me smiling.
“Um, how do we get all this in the
car?” I asked. Yes, we could have had it delivered, but that cost extra. Wasn’t
the whole point of this to save money? I was beginning to wonder.
“We open the windows and have
everything slightly hang out,” my husband answered, still oblivious to the
consequences of going cheap.
Okay, that could work. And forty
minutes later, after countless shifting and reshifting, we actually made all
six boxes fit; though it hung out of the windows way more than I would consider
“slightly”. I prayed that our fellow freeway drivers would see us coming and
clear out of our way. We drove extra slow, just in case, and made it home in
one piece – us and the armoire.
Now all we had to do was get it
all out of the car, into the house, and built. Suddenly, my husband realized
what we were in for. Our smiles were rapidly leaving our faces.
“New furniture!” My husband
squeezed out one last ounce of jocularity.
“New furniture.” I mimicked, less
than enthused. I hoped our marriage was strong enough endure it.
***
I never realized how small our
apartment really was until we tried to fit those six big boxes in it. Even with
our old furniture gone, we had to put a few boxes in the bedroom and a few in
the living room. How we were going to get all of it together and in one room
was beyond me. I just had to have faith in my husband. I remembered what the
minister had said: for better or worse, in sickness and in health. Too bad he
never mentioned IKEA. I might have had second thoughts.
We stood there in our bedroom
looking at each other, once the boxes were in place.
“Now what?” I asked. I could tell
he had no clue. “The biggest boxes must be the outer frame. How about we open
them first?”
“Yes,” he
said. “Of course.”
I didn’t
think he was too happy with my suggestion. This was his baby, and I knew it.
“You
know,” I suggested, “there really isn’t enough room in here for both of us and
all of this. Why don’t I let this be your little project?”
The smile
returned. I gratefully let him be. If too many chefs spoil the stew, too many
inept carpenters surely spoil the armoire. Besides, I was glad for the peace
and quiet of my still uncluttered kitchen.
Twenty
minutes later, I heard, “Fuck!”
“What’s
wrong?” I asked, after running through the house to check on him.
“Look at
this,” he said, handing me the papers from within one of the boxes.
There were
no words, just diagrams. I supposed IKEA was now all over the world and this
was an easy way for them to standardize the process. I could tell immediately
why my husband was so upset. The instructions were pages long and incredibly
difficult to figure out. This was going to be a major undertaking. Fuck indeed.
“Want some
help?” I offered.
Dejectedly
he said, “No. I can do this.”
Thirty
minutes later: “Honey, come here.”
Nervously,
I walked to our bedroom.
“Wow. The
case is done,” I said, as he stood there grinning. But then I noticed
something. “Honey, what are those holes in the front?”
He looked
down and I could see the creases in his brow start to form. He had the base on
backwards.
“Fucking
Swedes. I hate them. I hate their meatballs. I hate…I hate…ABBA. I hate…them.”
I guess he couldn’t think of too many Swedish things to hate. I didn’t want to
rub salt in the wound and remind him about the Volvo parked in our driveway. I
quietly left the room. I don’t think he noticed. Poor man.
I started
to make dinner to try and keep my mind off the turmoil that was surely ensuing
in the other room. If patience was a virtue, my husband would not be considered
a virtuous man. I’m sure the armoire was testing his limits. I was happy,
another thirty minutes later, when I heard a gleeful, “Honey!”
“Nice,” I
commented, upon entering and seeing the case done, correctly this time. “What’s
wrong with your hand?” His hand was wrapped in paper towels.
“It’s
nothing. Minor accident. Okay, back to the kitchen now.” I was being dismissed.
“Okay,
sweetie, call me if you need anything.” Like a tourniquet or an ambulance or
anything.
Ten
minutes later: “Honey, where’s the power drill?” Uh-oh. I was afraid of that
one.
“I thought
all you’d need is a hammer and a screwdriver. Isn’t a power drill a
bit…um…extreme?”
“You have
to drill holes in the doors to install the door pull things.”
“Oh. At
the store they looked like they were already part of the door,” I said, and
regretted it immediately.
I could
see he was counting to ten before he responded. “Please, just tell me where the
power drill is.” I did and rushed back to the kitchen. I prayed our nice,
hardwood floors would somehow miss being marred by that power drill. Better
yet, my husband’s hand.
An hour
later: “Honey!”
“Wow, the
doors look great. It’s almost done, huh?” I smiled appreciatively at my
husband. In truth, the door pulls were just slightly uneven, but there was no
way I was going to make mention of it. Besides, the floors and his hands were
still in tact, so I was counting my blessings.
“Almost,
just the inside stuff needs to be put together. I’d say…another half hour.”
“Would you
like dinner first? It’s almost done.”
“No, this
shouldn’t take long and I’d like to get it done.”
“Okay, sweetie.
I’ll keep it warm for you. Great job, by the way.” He smiled, but went right
back to his work.
An hour
and a half later: “Honey!”
Thank God.
I was starving by that point. But then…
“Oh, not
done yet?” I asked, timidly.
“Close.
Those bastards had three sets of screws that all looked about the same on the
diagrams, but weren’t as interchangeable as I thought they’d be. Had to start
over again midway through. Fuckers. Anyway, fifteen more minutes, tops, okay?”
“Sure
sweetie, no problem. Take your time.” Poor thing.
Thirty
minutes later: “Honey!”
“It’s
beautiful!” I beamed. He beamed back at me. I didn’t mention the mysterious
extra parts that were lying on the floor, or the several bandages wrapped
around both this hands. And it really was beautiful. I couldn’t wait to put our
clothes in it and be done with this whole thing.
Then I
remembered: “What about the other one?”
My husband
paused before answering. I held my breath.
“JC
Penny’s. We’re only buying American from now on. Fucking Swedes. Now, what’s
for dinner? I’m starved.”
“Hamburgers
and fries, honey.”
Can’t get
any more American than that.