12 OPINION Kyte Spyte with Lindsay Kyte | have already written about my new apartment. It was a darn long and limb- numbing search to find it, but I did, and | love it. But, a cou- le of weeks ago, | saw my ovely abode through new, more critical eyes-- you guessed it, my parents came to visit. Why is it, even though I am twenty-one, graduating, and have not lived at home for four years now, my parents think that they are the real ten- ants of every place in which I reside? My mom, the grade- five teacher (trust me, that is significant), entered first, opening her blinking eyes wide and pursing her lips in a fake, teacher-ish smile, “O-o- ooh?!!! This is . .. interesting.” My heart sank, as I followed her eyes and read the inescap- able thoughts flashing through her mind: “This place needs thousands upon thousands of stupid little doilies.” Mom then proceeded to do her “mom things,” much to my annoyance. Luckily, my years on this planet have taught me to let her do what she wants now, and re-arrange it the way | want it later (actu- ally, Dad told me this). First, she organized m kitchen cupboards, opening all of the boxes and organizing in- vie ae in what | perceived to be alphabetical order in tupperware contain- ers. She conveniently ar- ranged things so that I could no longer reach nor find any- thing ever again. Then she filled any remaining space with food my sister likes and I do not. She also questioned me throughout this process as to why P had not eaten the food she had brought over on her last visit, which was, of course, food that my sister likes and | do not. I knew Dad would be a while, as he had to scour the neighbourhood for criminal looking types and interview the landlord. | heard him com- ing up the stairs, and jingling the door knob. I unlocked the door, and left him to play with the locks, as | knew he would, testing and re-testing them. | then heard the clang of a tool box, and knew he had come to the inevitable decision that | definitely needed a few more dead bolts installed. | do, af- ter all, live in downtown Charlottetown. Mom is now in the liv- ing room, strategically placing little pots of potpourri in places where I will surely knock them over. I hear her murmuring, and I know she is making my apartment into a story for the Teachers. Ah, the Teachers. Their name must be spelled with a capital as they rule my life. Whatever their kids are doing, Mom thinks | should also do. Luckily for me, though, they get a giggle over their tea cups about Mrs. Kyte’s “artsy” daughter, as | do pursue my creative endeav- ours solely for their recess amusement, So Mom is now re- hearsing her humorous anec- dotes about my apartment to be added to her repertoire of “my oldest daughter, Lindsay”’stories. | strain, and nod when I hear her use the term “vintage apartment,” which is what the teachers will call itevermore. | wait for, and hear, the planned giggle after- wards. I am never disap- pointed. Dad has another word for my apartment, and that is “fire trap.” He makes me lock and unlock the fire escape door hundreds of times, then pro- claims that I will never, in the event ofa fire, be able to reach that same lock I just unlocked hundreds of times. I’m assum- ing he believes that extreme heat makes me shrink three feet. He walks into the liv- ing room (Mom has moved on to my bedroom by now) and nearly has a breakdown over the plastic doilies covering the large silver radiators that “I” put there (I wonder which teacher's kid has the fetish for plastic doilies). | know Mom will exclaim her distress over “my” removing them when she returns, and I roll my eyes to the ceiling. Unfortunately, so does Dad, and he declares that I don’t have nearly enough smoke alarms for one person. Coincidentally, he’s just bought fourteen at Canadian Tire, so he sets about install- ing them. While Mom does like that I provide her with quirky conversation over teacher tea, she hates my “habit” of buy- ing vintage clothing. She is now hiding the pieces which offend her the most, and re- ompe., them with clothing she as bought on the premise of its being “in style.” Dad gets his two cents in on fashion also, giving me the practical advice that every pair of shoes I own with even a slight heel should be tossed out, as there are “twenty-nine steep steps” I could fall down (oh, yes, he’s counted). Unfortunately for me, Mom’s idea of haute couture is constituted of what every girl in her grade-five class cov- ets for its glitter and glamour. This means that I will be trot- ting down those same vo erous steps while pulling down my oe skirt and try- ing not to kill myself on Spice- girl platforms come Monday — fter Dad has run every tap in the place, and failed to find a way in which these could also catch fire, and Mom has made every room look like something Martha Stewart has thrown up floral patterns on, they are finally satisfied, and we go out to the restaurant of my choice (and I know which one not to go to). | don’t eat too much when I’m out, though, as | know I have a big box of my sister's favourite instant garlic mashed potatoes waiting for me at home, on a shelf | cannot possibly reach, in an apartment that requires more keys to get into : now have e alarms. 30 March 1999 The Cadre + Y EP 24 Slice PARTY PIZZA (Any 3 Ingredients) PRESENT YOUR STUDENT ID FOR PICK-UP ORDERS! Net wad wath coher speci + This spect wate for to UPEL Brows Court, olan obege * Seutere © - rte . a heer Mh ee -