plumbing, invasive plants, and the gratitude attitude

July 28, 2004


My bathroom has been leaking into my kitchen for some time now. Years, actually. Back when I was having my condo redecorated, the book-phobic homophobic painter recaulked the tub and patched the ceiling, claiming that the leak was simply water splashing out of the tub when I showered. This repair held for awhile but it eventually became clear to me that there was more leaking going on than met the eye. The pieces of ceiling in Wilbur's food dish were a clue. So, desite my phobia of handymen, who are not all book-phobic and homophobic but I have to be reminded of this, I called one after another after another from the classified section of my local paper. Much like the first three window guys, who failed to show up, each one I called failed to show up. As the basement window was much more annoying to the neighbors, though less important to the integrity of my unit, I forgot about the bathtub and focused on the window.

Sooo, long story short or long story long... the window guy is also a handyman and since he actually showed up and did the work I asked him for an estimate on the bathtub work. At first he also thought it was just splashing out of the tub and said all I needed was to install shower doors, so he did an estimate for that. Then he looked more closely and came to believe what I neeeded was a tub surround -- one of those plastic ones that goes on over the tiles. When he started installing the tub surround last Friday he took the faucet handles off as you would expect and the distribution pipe was so corroded that the part of the pipe connecting to the faucet snapped off in his hand. I'm not talking heavy action with a big plumbing wrench, I'm talking finger pressure. Grrr. So I've got a half installed tub surround and no faucet handles -- I can still shower by using vise grips to turn what's left of the pipe -- until I get a plumber in to replace the distribution pipe. Grrr.

Negotiations with the condo assocation to get the water shut off. Dueling estimates from plumber and handyman. Nothing is simple. The neighbors object to my having the plumber start work at 8:30 tomorrow morning. They called the condo maintenance place and requested starting at a more reasonable hour. Fer the luvva mike they all, except the Russian Parking Space Blockers and myself, are up, showered, dressed, and out of the house by 6:30 AM. And this silly condo place makes us move our vehicles out of the parking lot at 7:15 AM during snow storms and sand removal and landscaping -- but I guess none of these activities require showering first let alone turning the water off. Turns out it's the Russians who are objecting. OK, fine. I actually get along fine with them now since I found out that the Parking Space Blocker in Chief speaks Hungarian and lived in Esztergom for awhile. Small world. Also it helps that I once tried to kick their door down when the Drummer Boy had me blocked in... they got the message. So, OK fine. Mister Plumber will come at 9:00 or a little after. If it's not the same guy who came yesterday the chances are he'll get lost and be here later anyway. My condo is so hard to find even my mother gets lost coming here.... And this was all going to be fixed last Friday. It takes village and it takes a week...

Oh and the crazy lady is upset about having the water turned off at all because she has a doctor's appointment. I can't figure that one out. If she's at the doctor, what difference does it make? Is the doctor coming to her? At 9:00 in the morning? Everything revolves around the neighbors here. This is not your average condo. The neighbors aren't just on top of you, they are in your shorts. Pajama Woman keeps doing things to my windows that I don't want done, not to mention her barbecue guests all stand there with their Miller Lites and look in my kitchen window. And she's on my case for making the place look like "the projects" by not cutting the grass in the common area outside my fence when she doesn't cut hers either it's just a smaller area. Her weeds of the common area impinge on my walk, while mine are nowhere near her walk -- she just doesn't like the way it looks and wants to put big flower boxes there. She wants to put flower boxes on my kitchen and bathroom windows too. So anyway, I made astounding progress against the bittersweet vines in my yard and created a veritable desert and called it peace ("solitudinem faciunt, pacem appellant " -- some Celtic guy quoted in Tacitus -- if it's good enough for Pax Romanum it's good enough for my yard.) However, with the recent rains and the passage of time, the bittersweet is back. So is the sumac. The neighbors will not be amused. For some reason I am particularly vulnerable to other people's opinions at the moment.

What a time to have one of my cat shelter colleagues out of the blue and in the middle of a controversial series of emails ask me a deeply personal question about my recovery. Boy that came in under the radar. No wonder I feel exposed.

Yet with all that I have been walking around in a little pink cloud of gratitude all week . Whatever caused the gratitude attitude to strike me right now is yet something else to be grateful for. I could so easily become one of those people who speaks in slogans and only has one mood... but fortunately I'm still me, defects and all.

I had lunch with two of my Walking Buddies today as one of them is moving to the Pacific Northwest in a couple of weeks. I hadn't seen either of them in awhile and they asked for an update so I told them, among other things, about the Beach Boys' wedding. One of them (not the one who's moving) asked "Is that legal?" I and the one who's moving incredulously exclaimed "Where have you been?" We had a good laugh but I'm a little concerned that my friend has not read a newspaper since before May 17 nor apparently watched the TV news. So the one who is moving regaled her with a tale of a usually totally out of it old guy related to her daughter-in-law in the Pacific Northwest who normally pays no attention to current events but went on a tirade against gay marriage when she told him she was moving there from Massachusetts. So out-of-it old guys in the Pacific Northwest know about this but my friend who lives in Haverhill, which the last time I checked was still in Massachusetts, does not. She used to be very up on current events but now all she thinks about is golf and drinking. It must be the golf, right? It couldn't be the martinis? There but for the grace of iced coffee or whatever my higher power may be... yet more reason for the gratitude attitude.

Today's Reading
Seabirds: their biology and ecology by Bryan Nelson, Birds in the Bush by Bradford Torrey

This Year's Reading
2004 Booklist

Today's Starting Pitcher
Curt Schilling


Before

Journal Index

After


Home

Copyright © 2004, Janet I. Egan