An Ode to My First Home & Adieu to the Concrete Jungle

Creative Exploration

If the four walls of my first home could talk; they would be at a loss of what to say. Instead, the drywall would likely crack & the studs would buckle from the extreme pain I endured under their watchful eyes.  

I bought my first home in the beginning of 2015 and officially closed on its sale yesterday. The heaviest weight has been lifted from my shoulders as I say goodbye to my first home & forever city, Chicago.   

The self-imposed milestones were all happening at once during the first six months of 2015. 

I received my 2nd promotion, to what I thought was the dream job I had been working towards for years, the same week we moved into our River North condo. I moved in with a boyfriend I adored. We had a dog we loved and purposely purchased a two-bedroom condo; dreaming of a future that may one day allow for a growing family.  

There was no way to prepare for how much would change, quickly, after moving into those shiny four walls.  

Six months after my promotion and moving in, I was fired from a job I loved and excelled at. Illinois is an at-will state and no justification is needed to terminate employment. Two weeks later I turned 30. In the year that followed, I lost myself, little by little.  

The following year, one week after my 31st birthday, my boyfriend of 5 years moved out of that shiny new condo we were so proud of. I ended a relationship with my best friend from childhood. I did not want to bring him through the ashes with me and could feel the mental turmoil intensifying in my mind.   

When I regained my footing in 2019, those four walls gave me the safe space to re-build from the ashes. And rebuild I did. In all the ways.  

Slowly, my passion for design came to life.  

I built my own personal oasis within those 1,200 square feet.

I donated furniture that was part of a communal, past identity and selected new pieces that better reflected who I was becoming. The walls beautifully portrayed art from some of my favorite travels. My home became a reflection of experiences & memories that brought me immense joy. There was meaning and purpose everywhere I looked. My home became more intentional. I minimized. I simplified. I showcased pieces in my closet to remind me of simple joys.  

I created that meaning and purpose, alone. This was the first time in my life I stood alone, so rooted and grounded, in my own being. My home was an extension of me.  


In the fall of 2020, I was dealt two major blows, simultaneously. I slid back into survival mode.

It was also 6 months into the Covid-19 pandemic and I was managing all the chaos alone. I had never felt stronger, while recognizing how angry and broken I physically felt.

Despite this, I felt a creative energy bubbling internally for the first time in my entire life.  

I started logically | outsourcing my creative energy to a contractor.

I had a vision for my home that had to be brought to life. We knocked down a closet in my main bedroom, adding 18 square feet of space + outstanding sunset views and a much wider entry into the main suite. I removed the traditional bedroom door and replaced it with a sliding barn door. The carpeting was pulled out of the main bedroom and hardwood floors were laid. I helped saw down a textured ceiling fan that was gifted to me from my dad.

Creative Exploration to Process Grief
Creative Exploration to Process Grief

As the work continued, my internal need to more personally involve myself creatively, intensified. 

I have never been artistically inclined. I painted one wall in a rental my first year after college and that did not go smoothly. I could not deny the underlying urge bubbling up inside of me to express myself through creative exploration.

Self-expression via the arts has become instrumental in my healing journey.

In the following months, I painted all my Brazilian Cherry Shaker cabinets in my kitchen and both bathrooms a linen cream. I stained my slate fireplace and slate foyer with a charcoal gray paint. I applied a gray wood stain on the Brazilian wood flooring in my second bedroom. I pulled out my builder grade medicine cabinet and fixtures and repurposed materials the original owners left me when I bought the condo. I painted the walls, and ceiling after I accidentally painted the blue wall paint onto my ceiling because I did not have the patience for painters tape. 

Creative Exploration to Process Grief
Creative Exploration to Process Grief

I bought power supplies and paint brushes and tools via Amazon because I was too physically impaired to drive. I got hundreds of splinters. I left blood on the cabinets. I painted over the blood. I was unable to use a screwdriver to get any of the hinges or fixtures off, so I painted over them & then scraped excess paint off weeks later.

DIY Kitchen Cabinets with Chalk Paint

I kept on, despite messing up every step of the way.

I did not do any of it well, but I learned so much more than I can ever express.

I learned about how I learn.

I thought about who I became in the years I lived alone.

I thought about how I thought I had already been through the hardest hurdles life would offer, but new difficulties arose that broke me down in inconceivable ways. I processed the grief of my newest hurdles. I felt the pain of basic desires and abilities that I had lost as a result of my newest obstacles.

I sat in the pain.

I painted through the pain. 

The first four walls of my first condo saw me through what I hope will be my hardest days. The life I built out of hardship is more incredible than I could have dreamed of. I would fight my hardest battles all over again, to experience the joy and abundance I feel on the other side of the storm.  

This form of self-expression via an explosion of creative desire became an outlet for me to heal.  

It also came at a price.  

As I painted and repainted, already a year into my chronic pain journey, I developed carpal tunnel in both hands. I stopped being able to hold a pen. I wore wrist braces to paint with. I wore a compression sock on my right leg as I painted. I tucked ice packs into the waistband of my leggings to provide relief to my right lumbar region. I had ice packs tucked into my compression socks to minimize the constant tingling & nerve sensations in my right leg.  

Ultimately, I destroyed my home in many ways and lost a significant amount of money in the sale of my first home. At the end of all of it, I am so incredibly grateful.

I have learned how to live. How to let go. How to be in the moment. How to stop fearing change and uncertainty. I finally learned how to not just stand, but absolutely love and admire how strong I stood on my own.  

I became my own anchor.