Thursday, July 18, 2019

Won't You Be Our Neighbor?


No, we aren't moving again (thankfully). And to the best of our knowledge, nobody on our street is selling their home. But the next time we do move, there will be some pre-interviews to find out what we're dealing with before taking the plunge.

Ryan and I have moved 4 times in the nearly 8 years that we have been together, and it wasn’t until recently at lunch with friends that we realized just how bad our luck with neighbors has been. As we were reminiscing, the stories really started piling up. Join me on a walk down the strange avenues we have lived on:

The Stalker
When we moved into the first home we purchased, a man was standing in our driveway when the moving truck pulled in, waiting to introduce himself. How long he had been there or how he knew what day we would be arriving is, to this day, a mystery. After exchanging pleasantries, our new neighbor handed us a SEVEN page poem he had written about a Bible story, along with a letter detailing how he enjoys reading these poems to small children he meets while running errands. As if that isn’t creepy enough, there at the top of the first page was our engagement photo and our names. OUR ENGAGEMENT PHOTO! That you can’t find on Google….trust me, I have looked.

The Swingers
At that same home, the couple across the street owned a snow blower, and a couple times each winter, would snow blow our double sidewalk and dig our fire hydrant out. As a thank you, I always prepared some kind of homemade goodie and we would walk across the street to deliver them. Like in a movie, after we knocked on the door, we could hear several locks being undone on the other side of the door, before the husband opened it just enough to stick his head out the door, grab the treats, close the door, and lock all 7 locks. I would see the same couple pretty often at our neighborhood nail salon, always with another couple, always sitting in pedicure chairs in every other person fashion, always holding hands and putting on a PDA show with the other couple.

The Witch
Most neighborhoods have one of these, and ours was a real doozy. Our backyard was in a valley, and this neighbor was up on top of a small hill. She would constantly point her gutter drain hose directly INTO our backyard, so it would routinely flood. We thought maybe we could have a civil conversation with her about it and see if she would kindly put it on her own property. Which would have been a great plan if she would have EVER spoken to us, but even when we said hello, she would look right through us and refuse to speak, but she did make sure to flip us off every time she drove by.

The Dog Owner
Before we lived in a house with a fence, we had to take Mia outside on a leash to do her business. One afternoon, Ryan was outside with her when a small dog wandered directly into our yard and walked right up to them. Ryan told Mia to sit and to be a good neighbor. The two dogs sat down, facing one another, and things seemed to be going well until the small dog (it’s ALWAYS the small dog, isn’t it?) reached a paw right up and booped Mia’s nose. Now, I wasn’t there, but Ryan assures me that in a split second, Mia took one paw and had the small dog pinned to the ground, letting it know that it couldn’t come into our yard, start a fight, and be welcomed. Ryan handled it quickly and told Mia they were going inside until the rude four legged neighbor left. Approximately three minutes later, there was a knock on the door. Ryan opened it to find SOMEONE WE WENT TO CHURCH WITH, asking if we had seen his small dog that got loose. Oh, the one that assaulted our dog and that our dog could have torn to pieces in five seconds had Ryan not been there? Nope, haven’t seen her.

The (Alleged) Drug Dealer
Our next neighbor was one for the books. Picture a half-naked (always), nice, but way too loud character who stood outside and argued with his wife who was inside. Now imagine that for 10 hours a day, every day, a slew of shady looking cars pulled into the middle of the street, left the car running, and had one person jump out, run inside the house, emerge three minutes later, and speed off shortly before the next arrived. I always said I don’t believe they were smart enough to cook meth, so I’m pretty sure it was only a misdemeanor. Really, the nicest guy though. He always invited Ryan to go fishing, and offered up his wife as a babysitter for us. It was of course a hard pass from us, but he really did try to be our friend. And after a quick tally, we both voted him in as our favorite, which should really tell you something about our luck.

The Driveway Patrol
For a very brief period of time, the street we lived on was having work done and we could not use it. Clark was very small and I had just gotten out of the hospital after an episode of a racing heart and fainting. Our only options were to either park 3 blocks away, or to use our backyard. We decided to use the backyard since it would only be a day or two. Up until that point, our neighbors were very friendly and we would always speak to one another. In order to access our backyard, we had to put two car tires on the corner of the very end of said neighbor’s driveway. Thinking it wouldn’t be an issue, we drove two tires on the last square of driveway that touched the street. We were very wrong. The next day, we awoke to find a lengthy note on our windshield about respect and our lack of it. We half considered leaving him a note about walking through our yard to place the note on our car, but chose to be the bigger people and never speak to them again, and then move.

The Hot Mess
The first time I met our current neighbors, they were plastered and snuck up behind me while I was getting Clark out of the carseat, and drunkenly asked me if he was just getting home from daycare…at 8pm. The second time I saw them, the boyfriend was being taken out of the house in cuffs. The third time, she was being taken out of the house on a stretcher. The fourth time, I saw her half-dressed at midnight with a firetruck outside. And the fifth time, she arrived on our front porch needing to use a phone. I gave her mine, she struggled to dial, and then looked at me and said “I forgot my mom is dead. I can’t call her.”