So here I am, back where I started. As recently as six months ago, I would have laughed loudly at the suggestion that I'd ever find myself living again in the little city where I grew up. But, my script has flipped.
Underemployed in South Florida, and about to be divorced, I began to think it might be good to live someplace I could afford. I'd also have the support of family and friends and be able to provide the same for them.
Still, there's something about going back...
I try to keep in mind what my therapist, the Good Doctor (boy, do I miss her) said when I whined about returning here, as I said, "with my tail between my legs."
"If that's the way you choose to look at it," she said.
I am a little...embarrassed, I guess...not to have returned home in a blaze of glory, or at least in a fancy new car. That's the trouble with expectations. I'd gotten a great start in life and I was supposed to become all that and a bag of chips, as we used to say.
But at least I didn't come back battered and bruised, running from or dragging along my drunken husband. And, I'm not drunk myself.
So I'm available to spend time with my parents and those of my friends who live elsewhere, to visit the old folks in the hospital, to run their errands sometimes, maybe even to take them places in my 11-year-old car.
Which is more important: to look good or to do good?
I vote for the latter, especially since my actions are something I have control over, while I can't control what other people think of my looks. Perhaps after I've made myself useful here for a while, I'll relax a bit about who and where I am.
As for whoever's assessing me, I'll try to remember something I heard once: People who matter don't judge, and people who judge don't matter.
OK!... now I know what the problem is! Is there an anesthesiologist in the house?
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Space… the final frontier? Nah, just the much-needed distance and solace you need after living under the same roof with the EX. The women of the D-Word weigh in on the pros and cons of being...
I'm moving out of the house, out of South Florida, in about 30 seconds. Actually, in about a week. Because, as Tina Turner put it back in the day, I never, ever do nothing nice and easy — I put off packing until shortly after the last possible minute.
Maybe deep down inside I'm still hoping the mortgage fairy will drop by and pay mine off so I don't have to leave my home, but s/he hasn't appeared yet. So I still face the task of compressing my life — as represented by the contents of my house — into living space less than half the size.
A while back I accepted the idea, intellectually, that I'm disassembling not just my marriage but my life. (I have a family court date this week, too.)
Emotionally, I'm still trying to catch up.
Since my therapist the Good Doctor tells me it would be illegal to act on my fantasy of getting a flamethrower, setting it on low, and burning everything in my home as a sort of sacrifice or Viking funeral, I'm having to downsize the old-fashioned way: by hand, a piece or six at a time.
It is going very, very slowly. I find myself staring at a vase that once held roses Ed bought for me. I know it is just a vase. But looking at it brings back a precious memory of one of the good times in my bad marriage.
Still, it is just a vase. I can wipe it off and put it aside for donation, hoping some other romantic will find it in a thrift store and give it a second chance to make someone happy.
Okay, I've got a new house for the animal family and me. Now: What to do with the old one? The plan is to ready it for sale or rent. I've talked with a couple of friends to see if they might want to buy it or maybe even rent it at a reduced rate just to keep it from standing empty.
And, my soon-to-be-ex Edgar has volunteered to rent it.
Edgar tells me I have to hang onto it. "That house is the only thing you have." Well, sort of.
I like to think of things like friends and family, years of experience in the kind of work I love, even my books and music as things I "have." But he's right. The old homestead is certainly my biggest material asset, even though its value has been dropping like a stone.
"This isn't the time to be selling your house," he told me.
I didn't buy the house as an investment, per se. I bought it 11 years ago because I'd always wanted a house, and needed a nice, quiet place to keep myself and my stuff. I kept it even when strangers approached me in the yard during the real estate boom and offered me several times what I paid.
But they were offering only money. This is my home.
And though it is worth much, much less than it has been, I should still make a profit if I'm able to sell the place.
But that's a big If. I'd love to be able to rent it to Edgar and keep it. He does have a stable job, he knows the house's idiosyncrasies and might take better care of it than I have.
However, I also remember worrying, when he lived here, that he might set the place on fire during a drunken episode.
Typically, Ed is presenting himself as the solution to my problems, even though he says he can't afford the full mortgage payment. I'd have to pick up the shortfall. "But if you'd be willing to lose your house over a couple of hundred dollars a month," he said, "that's just stupid."
read more »The last time I wrote, I was trying to be brave. But I was really scared that I might not find a new home for myself and my six pets. To keep from panicking, I reminded myself that even though I had just three days to find a place to rent, I only needed one place.
Just one house with one fenced yard. Just one landlord amenable to six pets.
On the second morning of my search, I set out to see a house. My map indicated I could go south, then east to a major road that would lead to my destination, or so I thought. Turned out that while the roads cross on the map, one is an overpass, and I ended up on an interstate highway headed out of town.
Annoyed, I exited at the first familiar road. As I was finding my way back, I spotted a "For Rent" sign, and turned to see what was available.
It was . . . shall we call it a cottage? A very modest house with a fenced yard. The neighborhood seemed quiet and nice. Quickly I called to ask if it would be available to someone with pets. How many pets, the landlord wanted to know.
Some people I love and respect had advised me to lie about that. But AA teaches honesty in all things, and I soon realized that the stress and distress of having to explain or hide some furry person or persons would put me in jeopardy of drinking.
I took a deep breath and told the truth, all set to drive on.
"Hmmm," said the landlord. "That's a lot. I'd have to meet you, and we'd have to talk about it. Where are you now?"
Within minutes he was showing me the house. I scarcely looked at it: Did it have floors? Yes. A roof? Check, and ceilings too. Oh, and how much was the rent? I was thrilled to learn I could afford it.
I went back to see the place twice more that day, and the next day I said I would rent it. As we shook hands, I sighed in relief.
"Feeling better?" asked my new landlord. "Much," I replied.
read more »OK, I give up. I surrender, I confess, I admit it: I cannot afford my home anymore. By my home I mean both my house and the crazy city that I love, where I've lived for the past 20 years — longer than I've lived anywhere else, nearly half of my life.
I went "back home" to North Carolina last week, to attend my 30th high school reunion (!) and spend a week with my parents. I ended up using a lot of that time looking for a place to move my remaining family, the three dogs and three cats.
And I found something, a tiny little house in a great, big fenced yard. The rent is just over half of what I'm now struggling to pay for my mortgage.
For years I'd been scrambling for work, and just getting by, with the inconsistent assistance of Ed. It occurred to me, as I gazed at the satellite image of Hurricane Ike covering the entire Gulf of Mexico, that homeowners insurance — already prohibitively expensive - will never get any cheaper in Florida.
My beautiful house, the cherished fulfillment of a long-held dream, needs work that I can't afford. Relatively speaking, it's a wealthy person's home.
Relatively speaking, I am not a wealthy person.
Also, my parents also are not getting any younger. I'll feel better being closer to them — though I will decline, at least for now, their generous offer to let me live in their basement for a modest rent. I would not feel better being that close.
Speaking of which, I'm not opposed to putting several hundred miles between myself and my soon-to-be-ex-husband.
I don't want to move, I don't want to leave, but I can't afford this life any more.
I give up. That much is certain. Now all I have to do is work out the details.
This past summer will henceforth be known as "Cohabitation Experiment Summer." Yes. Just a few short months ago, Mike and I tried living together — in strictly controlled, scientific circumstances, of course.
The Initial Plan: I am used to spending the summers in New York. Since I am now dating someone who lives there, living in the NYU dorms no longer seems like a good plan. Mike, unfortunately, lives in an apartment the size of a shoebox. There is no possible way two people can spend an entire summer in a place this size and not tear each other's faces off. We both like being alone too much. We both want the option of getting away. We need a door to close.
We decide that he will sublet his shoebox, I will take the money I normally spend on the dorms, and, together, we will sublet a larger apartment for the summer.
This will be a living together experiment. We will see how we do when it's longer than a week or two. We are pretty sure we're not ready to live together For Real — at least, I am, but this will not be For Real. There is a time limit. It is temporary. It is safer. We will discover new and exciting things about our relationship.
Delightful Possibilities: The luxury of spending time together without anticipating its end in a few short days. Seeing what "real life" with each other is like. Waking up together every morning.
Scary Possibilities: That we won't get enough alone time. That I will somehow freak out and mess everything up.
All these things, as it turns out, came to pass.
Next post: Alice examines just why this experiment was such an epic failure.
Maybe I didn't have it all, but I had managed to build a life I wanted. I had a home and a family. (Well, I had a husband and a bunch of animals.) I had work I loved. It took my entire adult life to put it together.
And now it looks like my next task is to take it apart.
Typically, perhaps, I didn't give a lot of thought to what would become of me after Edgar. I was positive, though, that it wouldn't be good for me spend the rest of my life with someone who evidently could not stop drinking to excess.
So I plunged ahead and got him out of my house, mostly out of my life. There is the pesky little detail of actually divorcing him, but we're over.
Since I married late, at 40, I figured I'd just kind of go back to what I did before I had a husband.
Yeah, right.
Nothing is the same as it was, not me, not the economy, not the fields in which I have decades of experience. Desperate times call for desperate measures.
Since Ed's been gone, I've found new homes for more than half of my pets, gotten a roommate, tapped my precious retirement account (and am about to do so again), and I failed to get jobs as a waitress (no experience), in retail (plenty of experience), as well as in public relations, publishing, and journalism.
So what am I to do? Something completely different, apparently.
Probably something I don't want to do.
I may have to find homes for the rest of my animal family. I may have to sell my house — if I can find a buyer. Either of those options is heartbreaking, but as my friend Curtis says, "It's all on loan."
Even if I manage to hold on, neither my dogs nor my house will go with me when I leave this life. But I will die knowing I was able to get myself out of a disastrous situation, even though it hurts a lot in ways I wasn't expecting.
Remembering that doesn't make me feel any better, but it does kind of put things in perspective.
After 10 months in my new apartment, I finally had a housewarming party! Sheesh. It took me long enough. But as soon as the first guest stepped over the threshold, I knew this was the moment my...