Monday, May 18, 2009

Ikea, football and the vertiginous nature of eternity

I spent all day Saturday building Ikea wardrobes but succumbed to only two really prolonged sessions of swearing.

Impressive, yes, but I am pretty adept at building Ikea furniture these days. I know its sneaky ways. I know, for example, that before starting you should lay every bit of wood out on the floor exactly as shown in the minimalist instructions, paying very careful attention to the arrangement of the bastard little holes. Failure to do so is fatal. In my early years of Ikea, things were very different: essentially one long stream of expletives interspersed with occasional hammer-whacks. The futon, which had about three hundred plastic nodules each of which had to be hammered in with maximum physical force, was a particularly memorable afternoon.

I also know that there is never enough storage space in the world, and just because you have built stuff to hold stuff, and thrown stuff away in the process of moving stuff into the stuff you have built, there will always, always be more stuff. This just has to be accepted.

Anyway, one of the two foul-mouthed effusions came when I was attempting the apparently simple but actually immensely difficult task, when performed solo, of screwing a clothes rail into the completed wardrobe. The camel’s back broke when, contorted unnaturally inside the wardrobe with the rail balanced on my head, I dropped the screw I was attempting to affix. For the eighth time.

The second cascade of cussing came when the wireless told me that Manchester United had won the Premier League and thus equalled Liverpool’s record of 18 titles. As a Liverpool supporter, this hurts, but less than it would have done a few years ago, because I have wilfully detached myself from caring too much about football. Alistair McGowan was talking about a similar thing on the radio; he has gradually weaned himself off his Leeds United addiction.

The key thing is perspective. Sure, Manchester United have equalled Liverpool’s record and next year they may overtake it. But so what? That isn’t the end. Liverpool can catch up again, if not in the next few years then in the next decade, or the decade after that, or the next thousand years. Even Sir Alex Ferguson will eventually retire or die, but football will continue. It is a race without a finishing line. There is no end to football, it just goes on and on and on. Like the infinite inadequacy of storage space, this just has to be accepted and enlightenment is possible.

5 comments:

will said...

urgh, you've really 'crossed the beams' Ghostbuster's style this time

my two least favourite things in the whole world, ikea and football

As a youngster I did buy the occasional item from ikea, but these days I have found that antique or modernist furniture (already made and full of character) on ebay is often much cheaper than cardboard crap from ikea - especially larger items like wardrobes and chest of drawers etc.

(You've just got to have a van to go and get it with)

Then you don't ever have to give money to that soul-destroying swedish vampire furniture warehouse. The place that guarantees to supply an argument with your partner after they embark on an impulsive tea towel/ cushion/ candle buying frenzy

Brit said...

Well I can only congratulate and thank you for reading past the title, Will.

will said...

I may not like the subject, but I always enjoy the delivery!

malty said...

Brit, you immerse yourself in the world of Ikea and emerge in one piece, admitting to the support of Liverpool football club, a person of substance, I'll be bound.
Nothing less than a degree in mechanical engineering will ward off bloodied fingers, a course in logistics management is a must if the packaging is to be effectively dealt with.

Ikea is Sweden's revenge upon the world for criticising its siding with the Nazi's. It's naming committee resides in the secure unit of the Malmo mental hospital and Ikea alone is responsible for the booming economies of Vietnam and Cambodia.

Re football......nice weather we're having.

Re storage space and the lack of, wait until you retire and downsize, for the past ten years we have had the contents of a large house crammed into a smaller one involving the constant shuttling around between rooms, summer house, garage, outhouses, sheds, log store, occasionally the local dump or Oxfam, a never ending battle of wills between myself and the guv.

Throwing stuff out without written permission involves protracted question and answer sessions.

Brit said...

Ikea is Sweden's revenge upon the world for criticising its siding with the Nazi's. It's naming committee resides in the secure unit of the Malmo mental hospital and Ikea alone is responsible for the booming economies of Vietnam and Cambodia.

You've said it all, Malty.