FRESH
YARN presents:
Have
You Hugged Your Considerate Neighbor Today?
By Barbara
Weber
When my partner
Christina and I married our house a decade ago, our hearts gazelled through
a champagne-fueled fortnight of believing we'd outsmarted the process
by finding our forever home in the guise of a starter. Casa Chrisbara
had all the earmarks of a perfect nest for us and our burgeoning brood
of four-legged babies -- acres of urine-resistant ceramic tile, a constellation
of skylights, and enough closet space to stash a couple hundred Jimmy
Hoffas. As an added bonus, unlike many of the prospective houses we had
courted, this one didn't greet us with hillbilly vermin races every time
we flicked a light switch.
Our funky
new neighborhood teemed with diversity, offered easy exercise routes,
and brought street fairs and music festivals to our doorstep to boot.
On the downside, the houses, often on postage-stamp-sized lots, were commonly
sited within close proximity to each other. Close as in "Olympic
torch handoff" close. This brings me to the most critical element
in the successful village concept: people. Considerate people. Fences
make good neighbors and good neighbors make good neighborhoods, right?
Roll over,
Mister Rogers.
When the
house next door changed hands a few years after we moved in, we rejoiced.
The schizophrenic semi-Spanish hut boasted a mansard roof that was Superglued
onto the facade, window boxes ala Sound of Music, a failed attempt
of a garden which showcased plants all of a brown variety and, for that
taste of the tropics, a front yard covered in purple and white lava rocks.
But wait, there's more! Black wrought-iron prison bars choked every window
and the relationship between the front steps and their handrail had long
ago disintegrated into irreconcilable differences, leaving the fallen
handrail to sleep on the lava-rock bed it made for itself. SURELY, we
thought, the new owners MUST have grand plans for this hovel (or an unending
supply of Prozac at their disposal).
Hovel, we
hardly knew ye.
At the time
our new neighbors moved in, little did we know just how "at home"
those prison bars must have made them feel. This dwelling is now in the
possession of a family we have affectionately dubbed the Darwin Refuters
-- a 50-ish grandmother, her 35-ish ne'er-do-well son, his three demon-seeded
sons, and an ever-changing supporting cast of characters straight from
the mind of Stephen King. Under their tutelage, the house has morphed
into a little ditty we refer to as "Amityville West".
Many months
after their arrival, a chain link fence was erected along the front of
their property by a motley crew of laborers. The roof disappeared and
the little schizophrenic house was stripped to its bones. And this is
how it sat. Through seasons of pissing rain and sweltering heat, naked
as a blue jay, with unused panels of wood siding stacked in every corner
of the property rotting away, it sat. Huge puddles of water formed where
the bedrooms used to be and exposed electrical wires jutted out from studs
at all angles like the flailing arms of stick people. And still it sat.
When workers
finally showed up more than one day in a row, we rejoiced again. But that
was short-lived. Come to find out, the diabolical plan was to add a second
story as cheaply as possible to accommodate as many inhabitants as possible.
Construction crept along at a Pleistocene clip, and when the house was
half-finished, the owners must have been so entranced by its Frankenstein
vibe, they decided to stop work on it all together and preserve it that
way for posterity.
Now it sits
through the seasons clad in warped, graying, exposed wood panels with
cow-patches of glaring marigold paint that undoubtedly was stolen from
the city transportation department. The effect is flu-like. Our living
room view to the west, which used to feature a lovely stand of bamboo
swaying in light breezes against gorgeous sunset backdrops, has been replaced
by the profile of this crazed behemoth, looming over our house with its
crooked outdoor light rubbing up against a crooked door that leads out
to a matching crooked deck consisting of a plywood platform with no railing.
The "deck" is, in all actuality, a launching pad serving to
ease the disbursement of the various and sundry items the demon seeds
have felt compelled to share with us over the eternal years since they
moved in.
My introduction
to these poster children for the virtues of birth control took place one
afternoon when I was levitated off my couch by a series of crashing sounds
accompanied by maniacal laughter. I stepped out into the side yard to
deduce that "my three sons" were playing supervision-free soccer
with a half-full metal gasoline can on their concrete patio. I sat on
the other side of the fence well into the evening with phone in hand,
finger hovering over 911, hoping to save home and heinie if the game ended
badly. It would be the first of many such days and nights.
Soon after,
they expanded their playing field to include our property. Nails, garbage,
tennis balls, cigarette butts, chunks of drywall, pens, headless action
figures, metal can lids, baseballs, wads of chewed gum, mold-laden citrus
and the like all find their way into our yard on a regular basis. Once
in a while they serve up something more exotic, such as the boulder they
strung up to a plastic grocery bag "parachute." This genius
experiment was pitched in the direction of our driveway and landed predictably
on the hood of our brand spankin' new car, leaving a not-so-grand canyon.
When objects
fall "inexplicably" from the sky into our yard or onto our roof,
we trudge next door to return the offending items to their rightful owners.
Chris shut down my brief solo stint in this capacity when I bolted toward
Amityville toting a baseball bat and a face not unlike Jack Nicholson
in The Shining after they shoved sticks through the fence and into
our dog's face. During these interactions, the grandmother invariably
becomes Marcel Marceau's mute, motionless, saucer-eyed other self, while
Chris and I seethe our way through show-and-tell, then proceeds to channel
Pinocchio when it's her turn to speak -- I had NO idea this was happening.
It doesn't sound like something THEY would do. I will tell their father
and it will stop IMMEDIATELY.
We
went through this charade almost weekly at one point.
And the police
show up just as often, but on different business. Judging from the traffic
over there, we hypothesized that if you taped that family's rap sheets
together, you could wrap an island and give Christo a run for his money.
Yes, we've become jaded. It's a sad state of affairs when you turn the
corner of your street to find police cars parked in front of your house,
and your heart doesn't miss a beat.
Adding to
the serenity of our household is the hollow plywood skateboard ramp the
lads hobbled together to grace the middle of the street. Of course, the
best way to approach the ramp is by starting in front of our house and
kicking their boards along like mad flamingos. Ad nauseum. The faster
you go, the louder you land, as they say. Want to finally sit down on
your front patio with a cold one and enjoy the plants you spent your entire
Saturday bedding? Krrr-Krrr-Krrr-THUNK-BAM! Want to sip coffee
and read the Times quietly with your sweetie on a Sunday morning? Krrr-Krrr-Krrr-THUNK-BAM!
Want to have your parents over for hors d'oeuvres so they can enjoy
your peaceful fountain after facing life-threatening illness? Krrr-Krrr-Krrr-THUNK-BAM!
Other snippets
from the must-see Suburban Terrorist highlight reel would have to include
the lively game of hit-the-power-lines-with-the-football, the indoor pyrotechnic
display, and the long day they converted their gate into a Disneyland
ride, swinging wildly on it until the fence post we shared headed south
and our gate became unusable.
On the bright
side, ne'er-do-well-son and his ex-wife provide such good entertainment,
we cancelled cable for a while there. She routinely drives up to the front
of Amityville West where he stomps out to meet her and they proceed to
act out refrains from the worst country songs one can imagine while her
junker idles. She must have a thing for idle junkers. Their marital travails
are broadcast for the neighborhood audience at large to enjoy, and sometimes,
as a parting gift, we all get free tickets to their wee hours encore performance,
too.
But, to be
honest, the Darwin Refuters are in good company in our little corner of
the world. Also in our vicinity is a man who insists on parking his truck
on his front lawn and has elevated yelling-as-the-primary-form-of-communication
to an art form; the stucco contractor who chains his cement mixers to
a phone pole in front of his house; and a family who has converted their
front yard and the street in front of it into an outdoor showroom for
hollow, rusted automobiles from the Eisenhower era.
And let's not forget the tribal-tattooed, belly-shirted, twenty-something
couple who live behind us. Bless their hearts, they have embarked on a
solitary campaign to prove that disco is, in fact, not dead. Mandatory
music appreciation hours usually start at midnight, and don't fret if
you live a few blocks away, believe in the awesome power of woofers
and tweeters, pagans. Up until now, we've done our Buddhist best to resist
cuing up our Steve and Eydie CD and firing a volley of This-Could-Be-The-Start-Of-Something-Bigs
over the back fence during these sessions, but the day is nigh.
There are
also anonymous benefactors to our community beautification effort whose
selfless contributions cannot go unheralded. One angel docked their fishing
boat on our street for weeks, finally marking their departure with a flourish
by dumping a large pail of ripe chum at the curb. Then there was the stealthy
soul who heaved an expired hot water heater into our rented construction
dumpster in the middle of the night. And how about that tall, dark stranger
I surprised while he was smearing his wandering dog's manure into our
trash can with a philodendron leaf.
Friends who
lived in the house across the street from Amityville West grew so weary
of having the Munster aesthetic force-fed to them day in and day out,
they sold their house and headed to the promised land, Anywhere But Here.
Chris and I have engaged in many a wistful conversation about the logistics
of divorcing our beloved house from its slab, and wide-loading it over
to Eden, but we love a few of our neighbors and like a few more than that.
And we would miss out on the characters such as the elderly lady who steals
fruit from people's trees and uses it in her baked goods, which she tries
to sell to the unsuspecting raped-tree owners. Or another enterprising
woman who surreptitiously steals plants from front yards then sells them
on the sidewalk for 10 bucks a pop. Then there's the gentleman who has
Beatles CDs hanging from his trees, the woman who strolls the avenue with
a toothbrush dangling from her mouth, and the peacenik gardener who creates
political statements out of junk and hand-painted signs. And last, but
certainly not least, the intriguing/terrifying duo who cruise the streets
side-by-side on motorized Rascal scooters, dressed in full clown regalia.
Maybe we
belong with our tribe. Sleepless nights are a small price to pay for this
kind of camaraderie. Five years from now we just might still be gritting
our teeth in this very living room. As for the Darwin Refuters, last week
as I was investigating the piercing screeches of the youngest seed's new
electric guitar, I found the cap to a can of turpentine lying in our side
yard. Hey, maybe they're going to finish painting!
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