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(This week’s side note: I like the heading format I use for my “New Thing” posts, so I'm going to carry it over here - the name of the post, and then the topic. A bit of organization for me, and a bit more informative for you, the reader.)

Welcome to week two. =]

Home design (specifically, designing floor plans) was something I just started doing on some random weekend afternoon back in my teens. I remember we had a Reader’s Digest book about home architecture from the 50’s 60’s & 70’s. Each chapter started with a sketch of the outside of a house, and then discussed the design and style elements. I never read the chapters - didn’t care about that part of it.  But I did start to imagine from the sketches just how each of those houses would be laid out on the inside, and one day I grabbed some graph paper, a pencil and a ruler, and started drawing floor plans.

One in particular was my all-time favourite. It’s been well over 30 years but I could sit down right now and recreate it almost exactly as I did back then. And if I were to build a house today, it would be this house. It was a 60’s style horseshoe ranch, set on a corner lot. One arm of the horseshoe was the 2-car garage, with the driveway coming off of the side street. The base of the horseshoe started behind the garage with the kitchen and dining room, followed by a 2-step sunken living room. The final arm of the horseshoe started with 2 smaller bedrooms along the back of the house, and the master at the front. Large windows in the living and dining rooms overlooked the back yard, where there was a large deck and in-ground pool. In the front, the horseshoe design of the house created a courtyard entrance, with a cement bridge spanning a large pond and waterfall feature. (like I said, I could draw it right now if I wanted)

With the benefit of hindsight, I can look back now and see that this was how I was able to express creativity. I’m a very left-brained person - analytical, linear, strong at using things like scale and spatial reasoning. If I were to try painting, I would end up with a lot of hard lines and stark colours, and would probably make Bob Ross want to rethink his statement that “anyone can paint”. But this was almost like a natural extension of my normal way of thinking, and became an art form for me.

Again with the benefit of hindsight, I can look back now and see some of the possibilities of how my life could have played out differently. This could easily have been a career opportunity. It would have meant attending different schools in different cities, meeting different people, etc etc. I’m not saying I regret the choices I made in life - but I do find it interesting to think about the different paths a life could follow.

I wish I knew what happened to that book. Every floor plan I did was kept in that book, folded neatly and tucked in at the start of the chapter it came from. The book, and all the drawings, disappeared years ago - probably along with all of the Reader’s Digest volumes of short stories that my parents collected back in the 70’s (anybody remember those?)

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