home stabilitycomfortprivate property unexamined privilege
The Sims
In The Sims 4, you can recreate the facts of your “real” life in unprecedented detail (richer diversity in skin tone and body type, an ever-present mobile device resembling an iPhone, the option to WooHoo with your partners in the shower rather than just under the covers) even if it makes you cringe to have your class cover blown (the addition of a “freelancer” career track, the incorporation of “tiny houses”).
The sophistication of gaming platforms has also changed over the years. Developers can now tweak The Sims 4 “on the fly,” Vice reports, adding “small and large changes . . . in every update” to reflect our own world. While a game that evolves with cultural mores is intellectually appealing to me, I can’t help but read a glimmer of condescension into the way the developers have knocked the goalposts wide open. I got off on the old Sims, the thrill of scoring a cushy life past the keeper. I found comfort in its simplistic economic fantasies; the way that any life, with hard work and good planning, could get hitched to a house and ride that equity off into the sunset.
In the real world, the reasoning behind certain lifestyle changes can be harder to string into something coherent. The day I moved into my second Toronto apartment, affluent passers-by watched from their SUVs and porches as the truck was unloaded. They offered various words of welcome, with greetings evenly split between “welcome to the neighborhood” and “get off my lawn.” These were the kinds of people I lived around, now. I’d moved from the west, near one end of the subway line that cuts across the city, to its opposite extreme. Rent was higher and rooms fewer, but the unit afforded more privacy, the bathroom walls weren’t crumbling, and “non-smoking” was more than a neat idea.
Only days into the relocation, I began to experience the tilted shame of feeling like an interloper; a renter on homeowners’ turf. This was also the case in the west end, of course, but there the properties were less sprawling, the produce more affordable, the real estate ads stuffed into my mailbox in smaller handfuls, and so the wealth disparity felt less ostentatious. I go for fewer walks than I did when I lived on the west side; to creep past these looming house fronts—one of them containing, like a peach pit, my landlord—on my own, unaccompanied by a child or leashed canine, feels like an invitation to suspicion. When I pass a dog on the street, pissing aggressively on a lawn, I wonder if it feels my silent cheering. When I pass a human on the street, I wonder if it bleeds surplus cash out of tenants housed in an investment property.
I find it hard to place my current situation—this apartment, this “stage” of my life—into any sequence of narrative events that I can understand. If, for reasons beyond my control, I may never call my own the totality of where or how I live, I’m not sure what else I trust as a substitute metric. Minimizing the visible class disparity? Eking out more square footage? If I’m not so hot on this neighborhood, am I supposed to haul ass back to the other end of the city, where I’ve convinced myself that I feel more at home?
If I want an extra bedroom to convert into an office so I can devote more time and space to my writing, is that a laudable commitment to my desired life, or an unwise funneling of funds into another rich white pocket? A present claimed or a future lost?
I’m wary, perhaps too much, of being lured into a false sense of progress under economic circumstances so rigidly fixed to rebuff any hint of actual success. To bend to that fiction of movement, to read any kind of headway into that literal, lateral shift back and forth across this grossly inflated city, would feel like helping nail shut my generation’s coffin.
As if she sensed my vitriol, when I was in the home stretch of drafting this essay, my landlord announced she was raising the rent. Law school tuition aside, this was my first subjection to that kind of flex and I did not take it well. I’d only just become properly intimate with my four-figure monthly sentence; the sharp slashes of its first two digits and its rounded second half, and then this new turn of the screw.
The number was ugly before, but it’s uglier now. It turns out my reactions are, like the price I’m charged to live, also subject to inflation.
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My allegiance to The Sims declined around the time the game shifted into its second generation. I’d been motivated by all the goals of the old, first-gen expansion packs—sex in The Sims: Hot Date, stardom in The Sims: Superstar; animating garden gnomes in the delightfully weird The Sims: Makin’ Magic.
But The Sims 2, with its promise of faithfulness to the life that I was stumbling along trying to live, failed to stir me. The point of it, for me, was never representation; it was to build and succeed at lives far different from my own. I did make “myself” a few times, but it was more to laugh at the options for skin tone and hair texture and perhaps aspirations; any interest in my alternative life fizzled shortly after conception.
The one time this conviction slipped was with the advent of The Sims 2: University. It mostly has to do with where I was in my life then—applying to universities, predictably—but this was the first version of the game that sparked in me a more human desire: to craft, in granular detail, the kind of future I might have. To establish goals—intellectual and creative ones rather than my former allegiance to the economic—and see if the game allowed me to rehearse what I dared hope the real thing might look like.
I don’t think I lasted more than a handful of hours. It was sensory overload in which I had a personal stake in every catastrophic variable. I wanted my Sim to be a novelist; she gave no shits about ignoring the steps needed to actualize that goal. It was, impossibly, even harder than it had been in real life to pick a major. I tapped out before my Sim was supposed to leave for college, slinking back to The Sims 1 and its two body types, its helmet hairstyles, its reductive ambitions, its fiction of total control.
But that was a decade ago, and I was different then. I have a job now. I have an apartment and a landlord and a bone-deep animosity. If what used to terrify me was the unchecked infinity of possible life outcomes, I’m in far enough that that’s obviously no longer something I need to fear.
This morning, The Sims 4 was on sale for five dollars. I’m open to, but not counting on, the chance that I’ll find some catharsis in its weird hall of mirrors. Maybe I’ll become an influencer with a tiny house. Maybe the house will be in my name.
Tajja Isen (@tajjaisen) is the editor in chief of Catapult magazine.. Her first book, Some of My Best Friends: Essays on Lip Service, will be published in April 2022.