Tuesday, October 4, 2022

Melrose Manor



Melrose Manor Journal

Having lost my job at age sixty-two in 2008, during a recession, I was unable to find another. When I could no longer afford both an apartment and a car, I began a nomadic adventure in a few different states and different vacant homes of friends, including my brother's home in Columbus, Ohio. While he and his wife lived in their winter home in Arizona, I had from October 2010 to April 2011 to find a job and a place to live before they returned. I was unsuccessful at either, until I saw an ad in a newspaper for an open house at an affordable apartment in north Columbus. At the time, I still had my untrustworthy Ford Thunderbird and drove there to see if I could lease an apartment. I had been turned down numerous times in my last six months, because my Social Security was not considered adequate. And clearly it wasn't. But it was all I had. Melrose Manor was a low-income apartment building in a low-income neighborhood, with a fairly high crime rate. When I introduced myself to the young Manager, I told him my income didn't qualify me to rent an apartment, but I would be a really good tenant. He took a chance on me and I will be forever grateful. And here's what happened.

April 7, 2011

One of my new neighbors, Abe from the apartment next to mine, stopped by while I was moving in this afternoon and offered to show me his bedbug bites. I declined. But I can see it's going to be interesting here.

April 17, 2011

My building is like a Moroccan bazaar - noisy and multi-cultural, loud and a little dangerous. The Somalian neighbor across the hall invited me in for a beer. He said, "What's nice womans like you in place like this?"

There's a young, alcoholic woman living on the floor above, who confronted me on the way to the grocery store. She demanded to know where I was going and when I told her, she said, "You're lying! You're going to the liquor store." I think she wanted me to pick up something for her, since she could barely walk.

April 19, 2011

Today, Abe got up and got himself a job returning the grocery carts that haphazardly line our street like drunken sentinels. He started at a dollar a cart and now has worked his way up the corporate ladder to $2 per returned cart. He assures me he will soon pay back the $3 he borrowed from me. Life is just so good.

April 22, 2011

Now I know the last name and age of my nextdoor neighbor at A5, because I received a postcard from the sheriff telling me that Abe Skeen, age 56, is a registered sex offender.

His mug shot. 

He pounded on the door to advise me to get plastic covers for my couch to prevent the bed bug infestation here.

Yesterday, he showed up at my door to announce the dog down the hall was annoying him with barking. I hear the sporadic barking from what sounds like a large dog. So I’m not planning to confront the dog’s owner. I thought about telling Abe, “The dog’s barking doesn’t disturb me as much as the fact that you’re standing there wearing nothing but gold chains and underpants!” 

April 27, 2011

When I had a car I worried about somebody dinging it. Now that I walk everywhere, I worry about somebody dinging me!

May 9, 2011

Met Nick, a security guard in C9 (third floor), who held my hand a little too long. He is a hoarder and the cause of the bedbug plague.

May 17, 2011

Bancruptcy court. Debt discharged. I hope to be able to live on my $689 Social Security benefits now.

May 25, 2011

Abe was sweeping the black rug in front of his apartment door, so that he can tell if anyone comes to his door by the footprints.

The young woman from down the hall came to my door to use my phone, because someone was trying to break in through her window. I called the police and when they came, they asked her if she knew the person breaking in. She said it was a woman who thinks my neighbor is "messing with her baby-daddy". 

My neighbor, Luke, dropped by to share some food from his church food pantry. I was very touched by that.

August 1, 2011

My neighbor, Abe, told me today that he is keeping notes on all the bad people in the world and when he has filled up his cardboard box with them, he will take it to the Attorney General. So, you better watch out.

July 25, 2011

In an interesting twist of fate (IMO), on the day I lost my job three years ago, I have started a new, part-time job in the very apartment where I live! Gotta love the commute to work. I will be the HER Real Estate Rep for the building. Job description: blow up balloons for promo, show apartments to prospective tenants, and the reason I asked for the job, clean! The previous "managers" read the paper and watched TV, so I cleaned my floor.

August 10, 2011I 

When you live in the "hood", you have a street name. I have been informed my street name is Miss C. It could have been much worse, since my reputation for removing trespassers has made me pretty unpopular.

August 24, 2011 

The man sitting next to me on the bus told me he has just been released from prison after 29 years and asked me to have dinner with him at his house. 

August 25, 2011

So far, the biggest issues at MM have been, what can politely be called domestic disputes. Or as one tenant recently jailed for assault told me, "You know how married couples are. We're gonna have our little spats now and then." I guess so.

October 4, 2011

Today I saw a man who has been asked to leave this building twice for causing a disturbance and he informed me that it is a well-known fact (and barbershop topic) that I am a man-hater. Perhaps you will not be surprised when I say that I am not disappointed that this may cause the neighborhood men to avoid me.

October 21, 2011

A man came to look at an apartment today and brought his father, who asked me what kind of people live here. Taken aback, I told him people just like me. "Old people?", he asked.

October 25

Oh, Melrose Manor, only nine more days until no one knocks on my door at 10:30 PM to say he urgently needs to borrow $5. 

November 1, 2011

And now the guilt begins. One of the tenants came by my apartment today and saw the packing boxes. She asked if I'm leaving and where I'm going and then said, "How can you leave me? I thought you were my friend. Who's going to help me?" That would have broken my heart if she had been sober when she said it. But she had locked herself out of her apartment and wanted me to let her in. 

November 2, 2011 

Minutes after this picture of my last night at Melrose Manor was taken, four police cruisers rolled up and started making arrests. Farewell.






My one room basement apartment. 

Shortly after moving in, my car was re-possessed and I began my bus chronicles.

The people on the bus.








Thursday, August 11, 2022

The Last Chapter

It is said that people who are as old as I am, are in the last chapter of their lives, the end of the story.

But the last chapter is the denouement, where it's all explained- where the mystery is solved- where the guy gets the girl- or with resolve and determination, the heroine says, "Tomorrow is another day!"

It is the last chapter, but it is not the end of the story.

Sunday, August 7, 2022

The Peace Corps Story

My story begins way back in the middle of the last century, when I was a teenager and John Kennedy was President. The Peace Corps had just been formed and it seemed to me like something both exciting and useful.  But my path took a different direction and after three years of college, I married and had children.

 

Fast forward to September 2009. I was unemployed, like several million other Americans and started to wonder how best to use my time. I started to think about the Peace Corps again and how Jimmy Carter’s mother had joined when she was elderly and had been very successful. 

 

So, I filled out the lengthy online application, got three great references and soon got an interview with a recruiter in Raleigh. He thought that I would be fantastic, despite the fact that I didn’t have a college degree. He felt that I had valuable life experiences, and plenty of them, after raising four children for twenty-five years. He said he would refer me and let me know the outcome. About a week later, I received a call from him to tell me I would be assigned to English-speaking sub-Saharan Africa in January. He knew that I had been to Africa and wanted to go back, so this was great news.

 

He advised me to begin taking my medical exams immediately. The Peace Corps will reimburse for some of the expense of medical exams, but not all. So, when I went to the eye doctor for my vision test, I said “I’m unemployed and don’t have insurance. But I’m applying for the Peace Corps. Could I have a discount?”  And I got one. Then I saw the dentist and repeated my request. And I got another discount. But when I went to my GP for my physical, blood tests, etc., and asked for a discount, he declined. However, when he wrote up my bill, he entered the wrong amount and “accidentally” gave me a 50% discount!

 

After I mailed each test to the Peace Corps reviewer, I would go online to see if I passed.

  • Eye exam – check!
  • Dental exam – check!
  • Physical exam – check!

These teeth have been approved by the government to represent the United States of America in sub-Saharan Africa and possibly other countries, as well.

  • Psychiatric test – check!

Finally, when all my tests had been approved and all the boxes checked, I started looking for my plane ticket to arrive in the mail. By now it was near the middle of January and I hadn’t heard anything. I started emailing my Peace Corps reviewer, then phoning and no one returned my calls or emails. I called the Director of the Peace Corps in Washington, DC, left a message and got no response.

 

Finally, I called my recruiter in Raleigh. When he answered, he said, “Why aren’t you in Africa?” I said, “You tell me!”  He said he would check and let me know. More days went by and finally he called and said I would not be going after all. When I asked why, he said it was because I didn’t have a college degree. I said we had discussed that when I applied and it was clearly stated on my application. Then he told me the application is the last thing check.

 

In 2015 I got my college degree, so I will never be rejected for that reason again!