The Honest Countertop: Why Laminate Is Not a Failure of Aspiration
My left arm is screaming at me today. I must have slept on it at some impossible, ninety-degree angle, pinned beneath the weight of my own stubborn torso, because every time I reach for my coffee, a sharp needle of electricity shoots from my shoulder to my wrist. It is the kind of physical annoyance that makes one particularly intolerant of nonsense. And right now, standing in a kitchen in Fort Saskatchewan that smells faintly of Murphy Oil Soap and , I am surrounded by a very specific kind of nonsense.
The contractor, a man named Miller who has “Modern Luxury” decaled onto his truck in a font that suggests he overcharges for shiplap, is running his hand over a swollen seam in the existing laminate. He looks at me with a pitying squint, the kind you usually reserve for someone who has just admitted they still use a flip phone.
“You’re going to want the Carrara-style quartz,” Miller says. He’s already pulling out a heavy sample slab that looks like a frozen storm cloud. “It’s the only way to get the resale value out of a rental these days. Laminate is… well, it’s what people do when they’ve given up.”
– Miller, Contractor
The Psychological Heist
I’m a mediator by trade. My job, specifically as Noah R.J., is to step into rooms where people are