Sunday, November 23, 2008 | 6:22 a.m.

Peter McKay

Home > Lifestyle Columns > Peter McKay
Please contact your local newspaper editor if you want to read Peter McKay's column in your hometown paper.
Peter McKay

Recently

  • Shop Till You Drop
    I haven't kept an exact count over 25 years of marriage, but I'm pretty sure if you added up all the time I've spent at the mall, hour upon hour of standing around idly in the dress or shoe department while my wife browsed through the sale racks, …

  • An Hour to Kill
    I savor it more than any day of the year. It's the last weekend in October, when we get to set our clocks back one whole hour. It's like the federal government gives every citizen one whole hour to do nothing at all. I know, of course, that come …

  • Paddiddle! Bam! Owwww!
    The pointless game started years and years ago when our oldest boys, now out on their own, were little. We'd be driving along at night when, all of a sudden, a car would come the other way, one headlight burned out, and a boy would shout, at the top …

  • For Whom the Bell Tolls
    Early last year, our new 27-inch HDTV broke after only 11 months. (Twenty-seven inches might be pathetic compared to what you have in your house, but it was my pride and joy. Were our house to catch on fire, and I had to decide which to save, the …

Quick, Robin! To the Mancave!

About a year and a half ago, I came up with a brilliant idea. My wife worked at home as a journalist, but her home office was located in a cramped little room at the back of our house. It was cold in the winter, hot in the summer, and too close to kids, distractions, and, as she pointed out, me.

We had an old detached garage, however, at the very back of our property. The garage was built somewhere around 1920 to hold a Model T, and while we could get our modern, full-sized family car inside if we inched forward with care, we couldn't open the doors once we did so. Unless we were willing to go out and get a Model T, it was useless as a garage.

I spent the next year and a half, then, ripping apart the garage and rebuilding it as an office studio, with French doors, heated floors, even a minibar alcove in the back. I put in high-speed Internet, two phone lines and cable TV. Whenever we'd have guests over, they'd peer out the windows and ask for a tour of the little place out back. It was more comfortable, and more impressive, than our actual house.

It was just about the moment that I was putting the last nail in place on a piece of trim, after 18 months of plodding, sometimes discouraging labor, that my wife announced that she'd be working full time, at an actual office with real coworkers, and that she wouldn't need the home office anymore. At first I stared in disbelief, then shock, then anger, then tears. I went through all 12 stages of grief over pointless home renovation in about 60 seconds.

Then it hit me. For months, every guy I'd shown the garage to had remarked what a perfect male getaway it would make. You know — a "Man Cave." It had everything I needed to sustain a happy life: cable TV and a beer fridge. Sure, I could label it as my "writing" studio, but as anyone who has ever tried to write something can tell you, with cable TV and a beer fridge, there was little danger of any actual writing happening.

My wife, who would like to see me do more writing and less talking about writing, or drinking beer, agreed wholeheartedly.
She said she'd move all her stuff out and I could do what I wanted with the place.

When my oldest son came home from college for Christmas, we had to go out and get a fold out couch so that he could sleep out there. We went from furniture store to furniture store, looking for something my wife and I could agree on. I picked out a nice heavy leather sofa bed, something that looked like it belonged in a den. My wife, however, made such sad faces, like I was threatening to kill her puppy, that within minutes we were writing out a check for a puffy pink and white striped cotton couch, one with flowery complementary pillows.

And somehow, my wife's stuff never made it out. Flowery pictures and ribbons are everywhere. Gingham curtains still hang over the windows. There's a big bulletin board collage of the kids' finger paintings, family photos and mementos. Every surface is covered with cute knick-knacks. One friend called it the Richard Simmons room — male, but only by a technicality.

The other week, I had an electrician out to fix a bad circuit breaker in the garage. He came in, looked around for a minute, then remarked on what a cool idea it was to turn the little building into a room.

"Me, if I had something like this," he said, "I'd turn it into a guy's room, you know? Someplace I could get away from the family!"

"Yeah!" I said proudly. "This used to be my wife's office, but now it's my Mancave!"

He stopped short, clearly a little nauseous that I'd actually used that word to describe it. He suddenly seemed uncomfortable to be alone with me.

"You know!" I said, "like the Batcave, but … " Dead silence.

He looked around the room at the gingham, the dried flower arrangements and the pink sofa bed.

"You pick out that couch yourself?" he said, raising an eyebrow.

I shook my head sadly. My wife, I explained, had overruled me on that one.

"Hmmph!" he snorted, turning back to the fuse box. "Some 'Mancave', pal!"

To find out more about Peter McKay, please visit www.creators.com.

COPYRIGHT 2008 CREATORS SYNDICATE, INC.




AddThis Social Bookmark Button RSS Get RSS Feed for Peter McKay Email updates Email me Peter McKay updates Comments Comments
Originally Published on Tuesday April 29, 2008

Editors Picks - Lifestyle Columns
First Pup
Matthew Margolis
Realtors Give Their Vote to High-Tech Marketing
Jim Woodard
A Bailout of Hope
William Moyers
See All
More Peter McKay
Nov. `08
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
26 27 28 29 30 31 1
2 3 4 5 6 7 8
9 10 11 12 13 14 15
16 17 18 19 20 21 22
23 24 25 26 27 28 29
30 1 2 3 4 5 6
View By Month
About the author Print friendly format Write the author Email This Article to a friend
All newspaper editors want to know what their readers like. If you would like to read this feature in your local newspaper, please do not hesitate to share your enthusiasm with your local newspaper editor.

 

Shop Creators Syndicate

You can read more about Peter McKay, write to him, or learn more about how to get him in your local paper by visiting his website, www.peter-mckay.com.
 
Sunday, November 23, 2008 | 6:22 a.m.
About Creators | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Editor's login | FAQ | En Español
Copyright © 2006 Creators.com. All Rights Reserved.
Web Development by JJCO