Yesterday ended up
not being my free day after all, as a last-minute errand came up that took me
out of the area.
Upon returning to the
complex, I cut through the Community Room, on the way to the mailbox, and saw
an announcement for a celebration of life scheduled for today for one of our
long-time residents.
Her passing was a complete
surprise to all of us, as she’d just a few weeks ago celebrated her 95th
Birthday.
I’m not exactly sure
what transpired after that, but it all seemed to have happened in rapid
succession in the span of two weeks … one day she was in the Community Room chatting,
having fun, watching television, next thing an ambulance picked her up and took
her to the hospital. Then her daughter put her in a care facility and began
cleaning out her unit -- inviting residents to come to the unit this past
Saturday to take anything they’d like saying our long-time resident would not
be coming back. When residents arrived at the unit Saturday, the daughter
announced our long-time resident had passed that morning.
Once they leave the
community and all their friends, they just don’t seem to have the will to go
on.
Asked to post
information about the celebration of life on our facebook page, I
headed upstairs, located a photo I’d taken of our long-time resident, posted
the photo and announcement with the title “We say goodbye to a Dear Friend”.
I won’t be attending
as the service is out of the area, we weren’t that close that I feel compelled
to attend, plus I’d made arrangements to meet up with daughter, while she's in the area at the nail
salon, to hand over the blankets for what she calls her “outside neighbors” --
which is a nice way of describing the homeless people in her area.
I’m kinda amazed that
both my girls are devoting time and energy to serving outside neighbors – one cooks
and takes meals and clothing to those living in a nearby park, the other is involved
with an organization that weekly takes food, clothing, essentials to those
living in the Skid Row area.
That’s a worry
because Skid Row, if you’ve never seen it, driven through there, is worse than
anyone can image -- filthy to the umpteenth degree, highly volatile, dangerous. In fact, just this last
week, daughter returned to her car after providing for those outside neighbors only
to find an ungrateful outside neighbor in that area had poured milk all over her car.
It could have been
worse.
At any rate, after
turning the blankets over to the daughter serving outside neighbors in the park,
I’m off to get the car smog tested, with the hope today will be a slow day with
folks focused on plans for New Year’s Eve, rather than getting their autos smog checked, so I can be in an out quickly.
We shall see.
While I was out
yesterday, I ran into the resident who, like me, had been blessed with a
windfall from a job she’d long since left behind. Unlike me, however, there was a
question as to whether she could remain a resident because she was living in a
unit as caretaker to the resident on the lease – technically not a resident herself
and the windfall made her ineligible to become a resident now that she can
afford her own unit.
Long-time readers
will recall this was the woman whose only income was from living here with and
caring for her mother. When the sister took mother away and placed mom in a
care facility, the woman lost her income. Gripped with fear as to how she’d
survive, she ended up in hospital with bowel obstructions … twice.
No surprise there … cause
and effect, gripping fear = bowel obstruction.
With the help of her
son, the woman was able to remain in that unit for a little while but, when
that played out, she signed on as live-in caregiver to an older lady in the
complex.
Suffice it to say,
the woman has been through a lot in the last few years, supplementing what
little she derived as caretaker by dumpster diving here on the complex, and
I’ve often run into her dumpster diving at the University when I was there
hunting Pokémon.
This windfall was a much-needed
miracle for her.
At any rate, she was
telling me yesterday that she’s outa here -- she bought a truck and, instead of
the trailer she’d planned to buy, she’d found a little house not too far away.
I’m really happy for
her, said so and felt a hug coming on – an urge rising up in me to hug her,
sensing her moving in to hug me, at which time I quickly turned away, wished
her well and took off.
Why?
Her name came up in
the Community Room this past Tuesday. Maybe folks were jealous of her good
fortune and wanted to say something to bring her down, maybe it was the
Universe giving me a do not touch warning, but it was said that management had
gotten on the woman about dumpster diving because those activities had brought
bed bugs and roaches to the unit she was occupying with the resident on the
lease. That the unit had been treated twice, but still had an infestation.
Thank the Lord, that
unit is far away from my building.
I don’t know. She
looks clean to me, but just the thought she might have cooties … well, you
know. I had to resist the urge to hug and back away.