I literally can't remember how many places I've lived over the years.
My mother in law is an artist. We have a number of her paintings in our home. Luckily, she is quite good and I enjoy having her works on our walls. But, there is one painting of hers that I didn't like, it was of a giant barn in a field of grass. It was one dimensional and pretty boring, I'm pretty sure that it was a painting of an equally boring photo that she didn't take, so not her fault.
Two years ago we moved from Michigan to North Carolina. I rented a moving truck but not the movers. I was determined to save a couple thousand dollars. Here is the crew that came over to help me load up the truck:
As you can see from the photo, it was packed fully. I literally gave away things that day that couldn't fit. It took a lot longer than I anticipated and caused no less than 3 major spats between my wife and I. Moving sucks. Friends rule.
My dad agreed to drive the truck. We had some last minute additions to the truck that my dad threw back there. We all left Michigan at the same time and agreed not to caravan but to go at our own pace. About 30 minutes in to the drive I got a phone call from my Dad. It turned out that he had forgotten to latch the back of the moving truck. Smack dab in the worst part of town, it opened up and a bunch of our stuff poured out on to the street. Our bed, art work, dressers, clothing and many other things were all over the road and sidewalk. Because of the large size of the truck, my dad had to circle the block and come back for the fallen goods. When he returned there were people running off with our stuff and some people were collecting it in order to help him re-pack it. They helped him load it up and he made the rest of the trip back successfully. The one thing that was missing that I heard about for the next year was one of my mother-in-laws paintings. Somewhere, someone has a giant painting of a barn on their wall.
What about you? Any moving stories?
I lived in four different homes in England. Then, when I was 14, we moved across The Pond. Our first home was a Residence Inn in Vestal, NY (the one next to the Fox 40 WICV TV station), where we lived for 2 weeks pending the settlement of buying our new home in the sticks of Binghamton. It was right next to where my dad worked and swung his H1-B to get the rest of us into the promised land. And I'd never seen so much snow in my life. It actually stuck to the ground! And it stayed there for months, year after year, for about 5 years. In England we'd lived on the south coast, where the submarine jet streams carried warmth from the tropics and moderated the weather. It was wet, it was often cold, but it rarely froze like this. In '95 or so, after my dad had lost his job in the wake of the company's collapse, we moved to a rental house down the road from the former IBM headquarters in Endicott. The town had been polluted, Erin Brockovich-style, from a chemical spill in the 80s, and we were a block from one of the permanent pumping stations that IBM had set up in the middle of a row of Victorians. Endlessly pumping water into the ground, sucking it back out, filtering the gunk from the spill, and cycling it all back in again. One of these days the town will let them tear it down and stop paying its multi-million dollar utility bill. A few years later we lost that house and, thanks to a favor from a family friend, moved two more blocks away to an apartment building. Someone strange moved into where I'd once lived, and because we were still so close I got to see them every day, occupying a home we'd been too poor to afford. I landed a job with an independent dial-up Internet Service Provider on Long Island less than a year after that, and packed my things to move into the back of someone's garage. It was an illegal apartment, chopped out of the corner of someone's house in Levittown. The history of Levittown is: WWII ended, lots of GIs laid their honeys the minute they got off the boat, and a couple of entrepreneurs called the Levitt Brothers purchased some old potato farms in Long Island and ramped up the construction of some of the first production-line homes to absorb the baby-boom of the 1950s. The couple I rented the hovel from had moved in on Day One and never moved out. They were anchored, and growing spectacularly old. The ISP was owned by the son of a rich couple, who financed the whole operation until they discovered that their engineering-oriented progeny hadn't billed customers for nearly 2 years while he worked on the Best Ever Perl Module For Producing Postscript Formatted Invoices (tm). Then a software company next door wiggled their accountant's fingers and "acquired" us. I think they just liked having a bigger office, and thought the cost of the acquisition could be financed with subscription income. This wasn't Silicon Valley, see. This was Long Island. I lived in Levittown until this acquisitive company--always one contract away from starvation--ran out of cash in the payroll account. While I went freelance for a while, I moved out of Nassau County the moment I got a steady job further east. Nassau County is, to me, a shanty town. Take the Hempstead Turnpike, for example. Imagine a scar you've been picking for the last ten years, so the flesh is dark pink and rubbery, and translate that--in your mind--to the blistered asphalt of a suburban boulevard rimmed with the clotted curtain of telephone poles sagging with orphaned utility cables, shopping malls with a supermarket as their anchor store, squat buildings, and what rumor says is Billy Joel's "Mr. Cacciatore's down on Sullivan Street, across from the Medical Center." Getting out of there to Suffolk County was, at first impression, bliss. But I'd leapt from the frying pan into the fire, because I'd moved into a "house share" situation with some new friends. As the highest wage-earner, I found myself the Lender of Last Resort for things like utilities, because if I didn't pay for the oil, we'd all freeze. We enjoyed some choice blackouts until I got electricity in my name. A weird thing happened two years later. The owner of the house we were renting had, apparently, financed the mortgage through his grandfather in order to land a better interest rate. We wrote rent checks to the landlord, and he wrote a check to his grandfather, and the grandfather wrote a check to the bank. Then one day we were informed by a nice man from the bank knocking on our door and attempting to serve papers, and then in more detail from the landlord, that Grandpa had a gambling problem and hadn't been paying the mortgage. I went to the Internet and found another house nearby, like 3 minutes drive away across the town border, that was big enough for all of us. As a whopping bonus, the rent was hundreds of dollars less than we were paying for Foreclosure House. In a delusional state, I took my financially questionable friends with me, and the situation went from bad to surreal. On the first night that we moved in, a cold day in mid February, we took advantage of the hot tub in the backyard. I put on swim shorts, turned up the bubbles, and jumped in. My muscles were full of the kind of "ouch" you get from lugging furniture and boxes for two days, and the hot water was a miraculous contrast to the frost on the ground. Then my house-mate jumped in, followed by one of his lady friends. He was wearing shorts. She was wearing a smile, and nothing else. A few hours later the new neighborhood we'd moved into was pitted in an epic struggle of Good-versus-Riff-Raff. We didn't even last a whole 2 months. The gate to the back-yard was damaged before we moved in. Ah-ah-ah! Ordinance violation! Swimming pool with unlocked gate! $250, please. We didn't know what the garbage pickup schedule was, and on the first day we had several sacks of garbage from unboxing our stuff, more than could fit in a single can. Ooopsie, garbage outside of a container. Your neighbors helpfully reported this twelve seconds later and another $250 fine. They spread a petition around the neighborhood. Convinced that we were drug dealers and pedophile rapists, I watched my sensible neighbors escort their children to the curb every morning to get on the school bus. Then there was the Town Hall meeting. I showed up. I shouldn't have, because the rest of the street had, too. I sat at the back and watched people look over their shoulders at me, and I vibrated with adrenaline. My turn came up and I walked to the front, asked the town council to address the audience (a packed house), and laid it out with a shaky voice. Someone stood up and accused me of calling it a witch hunt, and I don't remember much of what I said to them. I remember mostly the imaginary rebuttals, the righteous ones you imagine in the sleepless nights after the fact. L'esprit de l'escalier. We retreated, weeks later, to a farmhouse in the middle of nowhere, hastily rented. It was the most gorgeous property I have ever lived on. I'm not kidding. Here it is: A farmers market across the road. A bar within staggering distance. A pond with ducks and geese. I had to move again last year, this time alone, and to a corporate managed apartment complex, and I don't care anymore. I moved because all my friends who were splitting the rent with me found other threads of their lives, followed them, and moved out. I couldn't afford it anymore. My father had a heart attack, which he survived, and I decided to move closer to him. Now I live in a Big Hotel Room, and it's exactly what I need right now. I hate moving. Oh, and that place we got chased out of because of le femme au naturale in the hot-tub? One of my house mates got violently sick after moving in. After we moved out, the landlord found another family to take our place. They also got violently sick. The entire house was rotten to the core with Stachybotrys. Toxic mold. It's presently spreading to the neighbors who chased us out, or else devaluing every abode on the street by simply being there. Karma. What a bitch.
Wenham, you're here too! It's Apollo Junior... err, Dante. I'll remember my name someday. Context: cwenham and I were on a trivia show back in the mid-Nineties. Every Wednesday evening was a chance to... umm... get Chris to speak his Brighton accent to the Southern Tier. He sounded like an adult compared to the rest of us. One of the famous bits was getting him to read from the Canonical List of Weird Band Names. I have kept those segments on my iPod because they always help me feel better.
I just want to add that I'm wondering to what degree nonchalance is a defense mechanism for astonishment. You saw it right here, ladies. The summbitch above and I hung out, beginning around 16-17 years ago, and I don't think I've seen Dante for maybe 13 years, now. Now he's replying to my posts on Hubski and I'm, like, "I shall choose to spend about 12 hours to reconcile this information." There was me, Apollo Junior (pseydtonne), Nighthawk, Don Cerebro, Consuela, Toasted, Buzzbomb, the guy with the guitar who's name I've misplaced for a moment, Seventh Trimester, and The High Mistress of Mosh. (Or more specifically, a bunch of anarchists given a few hours of airtime on WHRW 90.5 FM on the campus of Binghamton University.) Now about 4 years ago I was at an unmentionable social gathering where I was oxidizing large amounts of ethanol prepared by Maker's Mark. And I look across the room, and I see someone. I stare, and he stares, and I cock my head to the side, and he does the same, and I say: "Don Cerebro?" And he was, like, "Phox?" It was like the scene where everybody's Data figures out which Enterprise Worf belongs on and he snaps back into the parallel universe he belongs to. In some other reality I've continued without seeing Andy in that room, and in that universe the Borg are EVERYWHERE.
"the guy with the guitar who's name I've misplaced for a moment" = Reginald Spothmeister I cannot believe how much of my life has involved the documentation of that show. Way, way too much...
I can't really ad much to this, but just wanted to say that I appreciated reading this. I look forward to some more cwenham blog posts :)
The first apartment I lived in was a three bedroom basement apartment in Boston. The floor was so warped that it was impossible to walk in a straight line. We never had to worry about the heat though, since the hot water return for the whole building ran through the place and kept the apartment at a consistent 80 degrees F. This also meant that we had mosquitoes in January. Needless to say, it was a party house. It was also located across the street from the bar where everyone in the apartment worked. By the end of that year, everyone was a little sick of each other. Two of the guys got into a massive fight and both of them decided to split before the lease was up. The other guy and I were then left with the task of getting the security deposits back and moving. This meant cleaning up a year's worth of broken glass and dried beer and spirits from the floors and wiping down walls that had seen chimney levels of all kinds of smoke every single day. We also had to spackle the ceiling, replace the bathroom door and fill in the gouges left by the cat. Oh, and we had to make sure we wouldn't get fucked over because there was sewage leaking into my room for three days and the super wouldn't do shit about it until I got her drunk, on me. Time was also of the essence, because I had to fly out for my study abroad the day that the lease was up. Finally, we had the place all cleaned up except for one thing: the massive sectional sofa we had all helped to lower through the ground-level windows. After staring at the couch and coming up with no solutions, I had an idea. "Let's go to REI (an outdoor sporting goods store) and get an axe. We'll just chop this fucker up." My friend looked at me from the corner of his eye. We'd been told that we'd be charged for anything we left behind that needed to be removed when the new tenants arrived. "Yeah, let's do it," he said. So, we got the axe and a crowbar and went to town on the sectional. In the depths of the sofa we found two lost remotes, about $25 in loose change and something like 11 lighters. In the end, the axe paid for itself. After that, all we had to do was push all the debris into trash bags and then into the dumpster. My roommate then dropped me off at the airport so I could make my flight. On the flight over, I was sat next to a girl in the same program. She had never flown before and was terrified. She kept screaming every time there was turbulence. I grabbed her hand to shut her up and fell asleep with my head on her shoulder. Fortunately, I didn't drool as much as I normally do. When I woke up, we were making our descent into Amsterdam.
Your sofa gave me flashbacks. When me and my friends moved into the farmhouse (the gorgeous one I described in the other comment), they brought a full sofa, plus a loveseat, and used magic to get them into the basement. I went to Home Depot to buy sheets of plywood and bricks to prop them up so the occasional--mmm... not too soggy--puddles from rainstorms wouldn't get into the upholstery. You know how it's supposed to be mathematically impossible for a bumble-bee to fly? I think it was mathematically impossible to get that couch into the basement. That couch is the reason that I still doubt Euclidian geometry today. My former room-mates abandoned this furniture when they moved out, and when I finally moved out, several years later, me and my friends attempted the shorter loveseat first. It had a security system which was designed to inflict bruises and pinched fingers whenever anyone tried to move it through a door, even if you take the door of the hinges. When we came back for the sofa, we looked at each other, frowned, looked at the sofa, rubbed our chin, and I said "let's go to Home Depot and buy a crowbar and hammer." Problem solved.
Yeah, I used to move furniture on the side (after I moved out of the aforementioned apartment) and I swear, sometimes furniture is just like this experiment.
Great story. What's with the axe obsession? Destroying your own property, especially something large like that can be a lot of fun. When I was in highschool my dad bought a home that was built during the civil war and over time renovated it. After living in a shit-hole of a room for a year, my dad finally decided to remodel the room my brother and I were sleeping in. He gave us both sledge hammers and let us go to town on the room. We demolished it but not before spray painting "graffiti" on all the walls. It was a blast.
Comm Ave over by Packard's Corner, I assume. Context: my last apartment in Boston was in Brookline, between Washington Square and Cleveland Circle.
In the fall of 1975, I moved 25 miles north of Whistler B.C., to live and teach on a First Nations reservation. There was a shortage of homes, so teachers were moved into mobile homes that the band had bought from a logging company. Two stairs led up to the door at the side of the trailer. If you entered, you'd see a kitchen to the right, a small living room in front of you, and a bathroom and bedroom to the left. It was cosy, but it slanted quite steeply towards the bedroom. I asked the band council to level it and went south to Vancouver for the weekend. When I came back on Monday, it was level, but I couldn't open the doors to get in. They had to come back and reslant it.
Lils indian name: Stands With Complaint Just kidding, I would have wanted a level playing field too. But wanting to get in to your home through the door? Now that's just being picky!
Did you ever get an explanation as to why the doors wouldn't open when level?
No explanation. The mobile home did look similar to the one in the picture. I assume they simply added more bricks underneath the sagging end. This would have raised the bottom of the door frame maybe, without alligning the rest of the door. Maybe there's an engineer out there in the hubskiverse that can confirm or deny this supposition. Doesn't JakobVirgil live in a mobile home? Maybe he can offer some wisdom.
most likely they over corrected when they leveled it.
I did move across the country to be in the same city of a girl I had been long-distance (1000 miles) dating for three years at that point. I was 19, first time driving that kind of distance (and with all of my worldly possessions in the vehicle with me). Pretty scary. That was 2010 and we're happily living together now. Just made pasta.
That's great that you guys are still together, especially given that you moved so far to be with her. I remember the days when all my worldly possession fit in to a car. Basically, pre-marriage. Enjoy the pasta and welcome to Hubski!
Thanks! This place seems pretty cool, I'll try to contribute where I can.
I welcomed you before knowing you were from Columbus. Ann Arborite here :) If you have any questions about the site, let me know. You can PM people by clicking on their name and then "send mail." Great photos in your other post, I was just driving through Columbus a few weeks ago and I saw the oddest looking building from the highway. Brightly colored and just really, really ugly. Any chance you know what I'm referring to? edit: Nevermind, it was the Wexler Medical Center
That's right down near where I live, they just built it recently. Seems to have those colored glass panes that stick out, and when the sun is at a certain angle, it paints the glass color over the white of the wall at an angle. I believe it houses a lot of machinery and stuff like that.
It could be that I just caught it on a bad day. It's certainly more interesting looking in this image:
Yeah, it's a good thing it's just housing for mechanical stuff for the hospital and not working/office space though. It'd be weird having a big purple tint over your window for a part of the day.
I have heard that my father is arriving soon from the work abroad. Never had good relationships with my mother. Impulsively took fathers car, picked up some box, loaded everything I had in there, went to the flat and unpacked everything. Two weeks later stuffed my small, vintage cardboard suitcase with all my least valuable possessions - shirts, trousers, everything I wanted to get rid of, and went volunteering to Romania. Now a month to move back to my flat, I have no idea what to put in my suitcase. Only few articles of clothing left, have a diary, some diplomas and medals, tourism guides.
Good luck with the move and with deciding what to put in that suitcase. I would imagine there is a liberation that comes with knowing all you have to carry about is a suitcase. Reminds if that George Carlin bit about "stuff".
Listening to my demos, showing up to shows, giving me feedback and bouncing ideas off of each other regarding the projects we were working on. Those things made me realize the friendship, the moving sealed the deal. Now if we could just get you, gq and R to move down here... Probably more realistic for us to move back there though. You can fly down and help me pack up in 3 years.