Posts tagged with crappy apartment

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Tree House

The tatty sun-baked slab is cracked and cratered, covered with a fine layer of mossy bayou goo in some areas, freckled with oil slicks and tire tread in others. Trees older than I am line the drive. Majestic, tall, and strange in this otherwise drab and shabby place—a run-down apartment complex where the rent is cheap, the roaches abundant—they bend their heavy limbs in a startling brown and green drape. From beneath the pavement, undulating root systems erupt through concrete crust, easy like steam escaping the lattice of a fresh-baked apple pie. Some 30 years earlier a developer paved this swamp paradise, put up a parking lot. Left to decay—maintenance being of little concern to property manager pimps eager to fill (and bill) for four walls and a roof—it seems paradise is taking the lot back.

That’s kind of beautiful, I think, of the trees. But then I notice a sign stapled to one of the stately oaks, and I am bitch slapped back into reality. ATTENTION RESIDENTS, it reads, THERE HAS BEEN A SERIES OF BURGLARIES AT THE COMPLEX. PLEASE KEEP YOUR DOORS AND WINDOWS LOCKED. KEEP VALUABLES IN A SAFE PLACE AND BE AWARE OF ANY INDIVIDUALS WHO ARE UNFAMILIAR TO YOU—THX, MANAGEMENT.

“Ahhh, home sweet home,” I utter aloud to no one at all. And then I heft some boxes into the trunk of my corolla. After two years living amongst criminals, and craggy, pockmarked pavement, I am finally moving out … and thank God for that.

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The last moments spent in my dingy apartment—number 3201, with its sagging ceiling and weathered wooden façade—I am hunched forward, furiously running a whirring vacuum over threadbare carpet. In the front closet, dead leaves and detritus cling to the baseboards. I bend to my hands and knees for a closer look and see it—a black pepper army, their legions scattering and popping like water tossed into boiling oil. Fleas. Hundreds of them hop inches from my face. I recoil in horror, straighten up, step outside, shut the door. I put key in lock and walk away, fast. I never once look back.

And as I drive away that one last time, my tires grinding over rutted concrete, I accelerate a little more than usual. I need to get the HELL out of here, I think. And though it’s been calm all morning, suddenly a breeze kicks up, catches in the leaves of the apartment’s ancient trees. Their shaggy crowns tremble and shake, and I imagine they are nodding their heads in agreement.


(Photo credit: Zevotron@Flickr)
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OK, so it’s been three weeks since the move. What–pray tell–have I been up to? Andrew and I, we’ve been nesting. The new apartment is gorgeous with 12-foot ceilings, beige walls, white moulding, walk-in closets, and a wide-mouthed garden tub. Apricot tiles line the entrance hall, and plush, light-colored carpet (devoid of creepy crawlies) blankets the living and bedroom areas.

Some of you have asked for pictures, and though photography isn’t really my medium, I’m eager to please. Sneak peak coming soon, yo. Get stoked.

BTW, it’s nice to be back. Xoxo.

Friday is moving day. And this week, I am like Scrooge McDuck. Except, instead of blissfully backstroking my Glaswegian tail feathers through a cash-filled swimming pool, I am clumsily lumbering my sorry tush through a Texas-size coagulate of cast-off cardboard, packing tape, and permanent markers.

If someone were to sink a post into my brain, mount a hook, and hang a shingle, the lettering on the sign would read:

THIS SPACE OCCUPIED.

Cause it totally is.

No proper post this week. My bad. Your boon. Look at all the time you’re gonna have now that you don’t need to glom on and grit your teeth to make it through one of my marathon stories! You should totally thank me by coming over to help me pack! Oh, and while you’re at it, why don’t you tackle my homework?

Yes, homework. That creative writing workshop I signed up for, it starts tonight. And yeah, there is pre-work … which I haven’t started pre-working on. (Of course.)

In conclusion, I would just like to say that yesterday my mom called and asked me to write down a word. I-n-g-u-i-n-a-l, she spelled out. When I asked what it meant, Mom said it was a kind of hernia men get when their intestines protrude from their groin into their scrotal sac. Mom has decided she wants to be a sonogram technician when she grows up. She is learning all sorts of new words in her medical terminology class at the community college. Like it or not, I am learning them too. And now, so are you.

You’re welcome.


(Photo credit: Scootie@Flickr)

WHO THE EFF IS LEAVING THEIR WET CLOTHES IN THE ONLY WORKING WASHER?!

What about me? What about my needs? Do you know I only have one pair of athletic pants? Are you aware it’s cold here and I’ve thus felt compelled to wear these pants (in lieu of shorts) to the gym, like, five times this week? Do you know I’ve got exceptionally sweaty crevices? Do you understand my sweatiest crevice—which during fitness pursuits gives the foulest swamp, thick with mold and mildew and curdled stench, a run for its money—is situated, a split the size of the grand canyon, underneath the waistband on the ass-side of my pants? Forget crunches and squats—you do know that wearing the same pair of pants for five consecutive trips to 24 Hour Fitness is, in and of itself, an exercise … in OLFACTORY endurance?

How do you feel about that, dear-neighbor-who-can’t-be-bothered-to-empty-the-washer-after-the-rinse-cycle’s-complete? Does it help you to sleep well at night knowing that the god-awful odor snaking through our shared ventilation is not—as you’d assumed—the innocuous off-gas of a cluster of dead rats, but rather something infinitely more sinister? Would you, Maytag midwife, birth your white cotton sheets more quickly from the wash machine womb into the world of the waiting dryer if you knew that next to be washed was a pair of putrid spandex pants that could stand on their own without legs inside them? FOR THE LOVE OF GOD, A-HOLE NEIGHBOR, WOULD YOU STOP BEING AN INCONSIDERATE TWAT LONG ENOUGH TO REMOVE YOUR CLOTHES FROM THE WASHER BEFORE THE MACHINE—WHICH I HEAR IS QUITE BULIMIC—MYSTERIOUSLY BARFS (PERHAPS WITH MY HELP) YOUR CLOROXED CONTENTS ALL OVER THE DIRTY TILED FLOOR?

Quiet and contemplative, these are the questions I sometimes ask myself (mostly on laundry day).

(And also: I sometimes ponder the cosmos, the Israeli-Palestinian conflict, and the unfortunate exposure of my eyes to the dude next door’s shirtless, bony clavicle and his Rorschach blot plume of black, pubey-looking hair. Galloping across Dude’s chest in a tangled weave, I see horses … and posies … and people who should know better to keep their breast bone covered …. But I digress.)


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Two weeks from today I will have the entire contents of my current crappy apartment packed and ready to move to my (or rather “our”) new, not-so-crappy apartment where—omg!—I will have my very own washing machine. And then every day will be like Christmas. And I will be drunk off the fumes of power and Tide and bargain-bin dryer sheets. And when guests come to visit, they will say (of the Whirlpool appliance to which I am firmly affixed in an awkward embrace), If you love it so much, why don’t you marry it? To which I will respond, Fabulous idea! Cue up the organist! Buy me a bouquet! Book us two tickets for a honeymoon in Vegas. I hear the Liberace museum is *very* romantic this time of year.

But two weeks is not today. So for now, I can only do the thing of which hormonal teenage boys (and the similarly depraved) are adept. I fanticize. And furniture is my porn.

Even as the clot of cardboard I’ve gathered for packing sits untouched on my bedroom floor, in my head it’s urgent that I decorate a space I don’t yet inhabit. And so I spend hours—of which there are precious few remaining in this shabby little apartment where I found solace and self-sufficiency after my difficult divorce—researching, obsessing, making plans to spend what I’ve so carefully saved. Beveled mirrors, bamboo chairs, zig zag rugs and zebra pattern pillows—these are the trappings of a glamorous abode; and also, the smoke and mirrors of a glittering distraction.

Maybe the reason my packing thus far consists of three paperback books is, this place—the 600 square feet where I got my wings, did some healing, felt bad and then felt better—I just might miss it.

But only a little.

Hairy neighbor notwithstanding.


(Photo credit: Robert S. Donovan@Flickr)

living in sin diagram

If you asked me what’s new, I would say nothing except I’m about to commit what some—including my devout catholic grandfather—would consider a mortal sin. (Although, if we are keeping tabs on crimes against humanity, Grandpa’s insistence on stretching a tan thru Speedo across his wrinkly, 83-year-old butt cheeks would certainly qualify for more than a few Hail Marys … but I digress.)

The big news, which is “nothing new,” except that it is, is that:

Andrew and I are moving in. Like together.

We are going to live in sin, which if you think about it, is not unlike living in Singapore except there’s a few less letters to contend with. And also, the unfortunate practice of caning won’t come into use in our household … unless Andrew makes a habit of leaving the toilet seat up, in which case all bets are off. Just kidding, honey! (But not really.)

And no, we don’t think cohabitation is a bad idea. Andrew and I have been together two years and this particular pre-marital proposal has been under consideration for about six months. We both agree that marriage is in the cards, but we’re still sorting out when that will happen—wise men say, only fools rush in. And neither of us is into making serious, life-changing decisions by sticking a careless, wet finger into the wind. Now, sticking a careless, wet finger into an unsuspecting earlobe? We totally back that.

wet-willy-finger

In the interest of full disclosure, I will tell you there has been *some* concern, as it applies to increased domestic responsibility. “There’s a reason why women hesitate to shack up,” Mom recently explained. “Taking care of a man—all the additional washing, cooking, and cleaning—it’s like accepting a second job where the pay really sucks.” I told Mom she was being silly. I said I’d been living with a boy the past five years and I’d never had to fold his underwear. “That’s true what you’re saying sweet girl,“ Mom replied. “Sphynxy is very good about personal cleanliness and he doesn’t go through a lot of laundry, but honey,” she said, “that’s because he’s a cat.”

Andrew—who has never had a roommate—is so lucky he’s leasing an apartment with me. I am a GREAT roommate! In college, I bunked with this sweet girl, Megan Snelling—she was on the crew team, which meant she was gone most weekends at rowing competitions. Every Sunday, while she was out, I would wash Megan’s bedding and turn down the sheets. I did this partly because I really liked Megan, but mostly because I’d secretly spent much of her absence passed out, naked—Saturday night’s vile vodka-Kool-Aid cocktail oozing from my pores like a steamy bowl of microwave ramen—on her convenient, bottom bunk. And only once did she catch me actually in her bed (she’d returned earlier than scheduled). She gasped at the sight of me tucked into her covers, drooling, at 2PM on a Sunday afternoon. As Megan ripped back the purple comforter, the one her granny had gifted her, she asked, Where are your pants?! Looking at her buff rowing legs clad in teeny athletic shorts, I could only reply, I dunno. Where are yours?!

(As an aside: I wonder what Megan’s doing now … and why she won’t add me as a friend on Facebook. It’s a nice gesture and all, but every time I send a request—instead of hitting “add”—my long-lost roommie emails me a link to this video called “Are You F*cking Kidding Me.” Poor girl. She never was very good at computers.)

So Andrew and I are currently apartment hunting. If you are in Houston, we highly recommend the services of Denise “Boots” Boucher at Apartment Living Locators (713-783-1441). She only winced *very slightly* when I told her Andrew and I (being fitness enthusiasts) had special needs that include: space for six bicycles, a dedicated spandex closet … and most probably, an intervention.

If we don’t get committed first, February 2010 Andrew and I are moving in. And then we’re going to buy new furniture. And then—if you ask my Grandpa Banana Hammock—we are going to burn in hell. I personally think the only burning Andrew and I will be doing will occur in our shiny, shared kitchen, but  there’s only one way to find out. Premarital cohabitation, here we come!

Two years ago, I signed a lease for the 600 sq. ft. apartment I currently inhabit. I’m starting to think moving here was a mistake.

It seemed like a good idea in the beginning. My first apartment post-divorce, it was small and cute—a place I could furnish cheaply with girly stuff: baroque frames and floral rugs. Rent was inexpensive, at just $500/month for the first year. I figured, with all the money I was saving, I could start putting something into an online savings account. Maybe I could squirrel enough away for a down payment on a small house, which was something I’d wanted for a while and felt kind of robbed of by the divorce, since I no longer had a cosigner spouse.

So when I first moved in to my space—stars in my eyes—it was easy to overlook the sloppy paint covering the 1970s cabinetry, the mildewed grouting, the broken hinges, the stuck door, the ominous sound of a compressor coming from the crawl space. But then one day, not too long into my stay, the sky fell on my head. Like literally! It was all downhill from there.

Stepping out of the bath one morning, I stopped at the sink to brush my hair. I had not gotten but two strokes in when a large chunk of drop-ceiling came crashing down on my skull. Startled, I fell backward. It was very strange, lying there like that. It’s not every day one finds themselves sprawled out, pantsless and dazed on the bathroom floor … at least not when sober.

In the months that followed I discovered all sorts of novel quirks about my humble abode. And many times I wondered if my apartment—just like the evil ship computer in Stanley Kubrick’s, 2001: A Space Odyssey—was trying to kill me.

retro-3

For example, there was the incident after the hurricane, when the broken limbs of a massive oak came smashing through my patio at precisely the time I’d usually pass through on my way to work. Fortunately, I was reporting from home that day. Unfortunately, unable to pry my door in the aftermath—the tree jammed so hard against it—I became a prisoner in my own home. That would’ve been OK if I lived in a nice manse, but when you live in a place that wants you dead, well it’s quite unsettling. When the maintenance man finally came to cut me out, he said that being imprisoned inside was better than a sharp stick in the eye. I asked him to stop speaking in clichés. He said he wasn’t.

And then there was the time the complex burned down … well 10 units of it anyway … mine not included. No, I can’t pin my apartment on that one. Police reports site maintenance’s illegal storage of chemicals in the unit garage as the source of accelerant. As you can imagine, this caused quite a stir amongst the residents. Partly because it was just so darn stupid to store flammable supplies in a residential space, but mostly because it was largely believed that maintenance had no supplies, it takes so long to get anything fixed around here.

It’s too bad it takes so long to fix things, because SOMETHING IN MY APARTMENT IS ALWAYS BROKEN. Take the plumbing for example. Periodically, and for no discernible reason, I will lose all water pressure. Or if the pressure’s working, the hot water won’t be. Well, that’s not entirely true. Last week when I came home from a six-mile run, dripping with sweat and grime and all manner of nastiness, both the pressure and hot water were out. Now that was a pleasure, and by “pleasure” I mean ABSOLUTE NIGHTMARE. Thank God they have showers at the gym … and that I didn’t get fungus from washing there.

Also, my dishwasher is now broken. But I’m afraid to call it in, should they fix the problem like they “fixed” the mold issue: that is, with a can of white spray paint.

Lately I’ve been thinking it’s time to vacate the premises. Really, I don’t need to continue my residency in the House of Horrors. My corporate job pays enough I can afford to upgrade. However, by leasing somewhere more expensive, the house fund will take a hit … But there again, better the fund than Hänni; Death by domicile is highly undesirable.