After recovery, Bromstad set stricter personal boundaries and shifted his perspective on public expectations. “I’ve had to like suck back in and kind of put boundaries up.
And so saying ‘no’ to people has been this really unique journey that I’ve taken since getting sober,” he said.
“It’s been a necessary journey and it’s been such an incredible thing to see people [when] I go, ‘I’m not doing pictures right now, but I would love to have a conversation with you.’”
The completed home now serves as a highly personal space he intends to keep permanently.
“[After] working on my mental health, I was like, ‘I have nothing to prove to anybody but myself,’” Bromstad shared.
“So, my design is a sneak peek into me as a human. Like, I’m unique.
I’m different. I’m relatable, but also, like, completely strange, in the most weird and wonderful way, you know?
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And that’s my house!”