Benchly’s Guide to Renting in Burlington

After graduating from college, I decided to do the conforming nonconformist postgraduate thing of cramming my belongings into my car (a Plymouth Colt the size of Plymouth Rock [a rock that’s far less impressive in person than in name]) and promptly heading out of town on the open road to a destination paved in gold where I was sure I’d find a job and, subsequently, myself. I said my goodbyes to my family including Mama Benchly who, because she’s Mama Benchly, morbidly assumed this would be the last time she’d ever see me.

On my trip, I drove through my college stomping grounds, which, because I had graduated two weeks earlier, could now be referred to as my old college stomping grounds. After a quick overnight stop to see my college buddy Hugh, I resumed my trip, serenaded by a seemingly unending supply of cassette tapes, each of which was forever branded with my postgraduate taste in music (read: Dave Matthews and Counting Crows). 12 hours later, I reached my destination: a 2-3ish-bedroom, Wilmington, NC apartment occupied by my friend Scoot and her friend Susan. And then three weeks later, without a job or experiencing anything close to a moment of self discovery, and with ~$30 to my name, I packed up my belongings and begrudgingly headed home. (A side note: if you can believe it, if my car hadn’t died in New Jersey, that $30 would have come close to paying for my entire trip home to Vermont. Oh to be 22 and paying less than $1 per gallon of gas again!)

After a 3-month stint as the Benchly Family Bum, I found a mind-numbing, yet well-paying job at the Evil Empire. A year later, after saving up a small fortune, I bought Inga Beep the Jeep (at $.89/gallon, you would have too), crammed my belongings into my new car, and headed out of town on the open road to my new home: a 2-3ish-bedroom, Burlington, VT apartment occupied by my coworker and soon-to-friend Veronica Japonica. And that’s where I lived for the next seven years. When Veronica Japonica moved to California the following year, I had the pleasure and pain of having to find a replacement roommate, which went something like this:

1. Place creatively-crafted classified ad in the local weekly (read: liberal) newspaper, and do your best not to feel like you’re selling yourself in the personals.

2. Screen 50-75 calls in the next week from interested potential roommates who:

– “can’t believe how cheap your downtown Burlington apartment is”;
– “is a totally laid back and mellow roommate who gets along with anyone, and I’ve called you three times so how come you haven’t called me back?”;
– “is, like, the ideal roommate”;
– “is a quiet, peaceful roommate who should probably mention I’m a recovering alcoholic, and the anger management classes seem to be working”;
– “is looking for a nice apartment for my daughter who is really nice…and…she’s really cute too.”

3. Interview the elite few who survived the screening process and do your best not to laugh when one of them says she loves to sing at home and then volunteers a completely tone-deaf rendition of “Puff the Magic Dragon.”

4. Choose the person you’re going to be living with for the next year, give or take a month-to-month. In this case, I selected Dexy’s Midnight Runner, a UVM graduate student who reminded me of an old friend. One year later, when Dexy moved out, Veronica Japonica moved back in, and one year after that, when Veronica moved out again and in with her boyfriend/now husband Rick Springfield, I repeated the process and selected The Virgin Mary, who, in her phone interview, said, “I’m pretty much a loner who will be out of your hair most of the time, or in your hair if you want, too.” After The Virgin Mary moved out and in with her boyfriend/now husband Joseph (notice a trend?), I repeated the process twice more to first select Closed Bedroom Door Roommate (CBDR) and then ultimately Julia Stiles.

This is the long-winded (read: Benchly) way of saying that I’ve had quite a bit of experience in the roommate search department, and less experience in the apartment search, which explains how unprepared I was when I began my latest apartment search last month. Suddenly, I was the one whose phone calls were being screened, who couldn’t believe how expensive downtown Burlington apartments were, who was a quiet and peaceful roommate, and whose anger management classes seemed to be doing the trick. And remarkably, considering Othello and Burlington’s blatant discrimination of tenants with cats, suddenly I was one of the elite few who survived the screening process and who was doing his best to sound completely “normal” and like the ideal roommate.

My first interview, for a 2-3ish-bedroom apartment close to the border of Burlington and its southern counterpart, was with Speed Guy, so named for his apparent choice of recreational drugs. He was super nice, but talked like he was being paid per character, and ran up and down the stairs like he was a toddler late for Saturday morning cartoons. There was also a photocopier in the living room; an odd decorative choice a roommate might someday regret should a weekend party get out of hand. During the interview, another potential roommate arrived and I found myself conducting the interview for her in the hopes that Speed Guy would pick her over me; that’s how little I liked the place.

My second interview, for a studio a few houses down from The Virgin Mary and Joseph, went well until I entered the studio. I’m serious. I was charming. I sounded responsible and like the ideal roommate. And the studio was mine for the taking, and I would have taken it too except that it was essentially a kitchen hallway with closet space. Maybe I’m naive, or at the very least, way too influenced by Hollywood, but I’ve always envisioned a studio apartment as a large square room with hardwood floors, high ceilings, large windows, a loft bed, and enough room to distinguish between bedroom/dining room/kitchen. The one that I checked out was essentially a basement with carpeting and the kind of kitchen you’d find in a college’s temporary housing built to accommodate hundreds of students displaced by renovations.

My third interview was for a promising 2-no-wait-3-bedroom apartment in the south end on the hill. The ad was misleading; I entered the apartment expecting a 2-bedroom living arrangement and was surprised to find 3 bedrooms and 2 roommates. Strike one. Strike two was the huge dogs who growled, barked, and showed their teeth at me the entire time I was there; the same dogs their owner, Clancy Brown assured me would be friendly toward Othello (I imagine Othello will end up rooming with another dog at some point in his life [he roomed with one when he lived with Montana Girl] but I think I’d rather he live with a dog his own size). Strike three was the kitchen with dishes piled in the sink up to and above the faucet. Strike four was when Clancy pointed out an extra room and said, though we would be paying equal rent, that this extra room was his and could be used only if I was quiet and didn’t disturb his stuff. Strike five was Clancy pointing out that on a street with minimal parking, if the apartment received a parking pass, it would be his to use. Strike six was Clancy saying he’d get upset if his roommates made noise after 10 p.m., but that he tends to make a lot of kitchen noise at 5 a.m. Strike seven was that Clancy and only Clancy would be on the lease. He offered me the place. I declined.

After Clancy, I was discouraged to say the least. I replied to quite a few Craigslist ads and received only a handful of responses, most of which thanked me for my time but regretted to inform me that the apartment had been filled…in the 15 minutes since the ad had been placed. This is when I gave up hope. And that’s precisely when a woman responded to my email and asked me to check out her apartment later that day. I recognized the woman’s name and quickly realized that we shared a mutual friend: Sarah the L. Score. Mama and Papa Benchly were especially generous in letting me stay with them for a month, but as a 31 year old, I needed my own space or else I’d risk having my sanity go the way of the dodo bird. And that’s why I wasn’t above exploiting this connection.

When I looked at the place, a residential gold mine by Burlington’s standards (front and back porch, huge yard, off-street parking, a large bathroom, rooms with character), I discovered that this woman wasn’t looking for a roommate, but rather a tenant to share her downstairs apartment with another woman who had already been chosen to live there. Essentially, she was playing roommate matchmaker for the apartment she owned. And when her first choice backed out, I was offered the place. I gladly accepted and last week found myself yet again cramming my belongings into cars.

I can’t say that this process has taught me much in the way of how to find an apartment in Burlington. If anything, it taught me how screwed up this town’s housing situation is, and how lucky a person has to be to find a safe, clean, decent, affordable home. For every landlady like mine, there are 15 who end their ads with “sorry, no pets.” And for every safe, clean, decent, affordable home like mine, there are 20 broken-down, dirty, overpriced holes in the ground owned by deadbeat landlords (you know who you are, JL). And no matter how hard you try, sometimes you end up finding a great home for a reason you never even considered.

After moving in, I learned that my new landlady had specifically chosen me because of my described personality traits but also because of Othello. As the proud mother of her own cat, she knew how difficult it was for kitty owners to find decent housing. Consequently, as Othello settles nicely into our new home, I’ve made sure to smother him with hugs and kisses for helping us get here. Not one for PDA, he then pushes me away, licks his paw, walks to the window sill, sits down, and keeps an eye on his new neighbors.

I don’t want to grow up

This morning, Sister #1 sent me pictures of Nieces #1-2 proudly displaying their ballet outfits. I blinked. Evidently, sometime in the last year, my nieces became old enough to walk through the young child’s rite of passage into ballet class. I showed the pictures to Freckles who, after seeing how adorable they were, as well as the Barbie dream house in the background, declared her jealousy. I asked her if she was jealous of a 4-year-old’s life and she said, “Life was a lot easier when I was 4. Although it is all relative, so it probably seemed tough at the time.”

I know that Sarah the L will agree with a shout out to rival any southern-Baptist “amen!” when I say that I’ve been working at my current job for far too long. For awhile, I rationalized my immobility with a number of valid-only-on-the-surface reasons (read: excuses) such as, but not limited to, my love for Vermont, the mostly-unheard-of comforts of a well-paying editorial job in Vermont, and my desire to accumulate valuable years of publishing/printing experience. In all honesty, like a man paralyzed by his metaphorical and/or literal cement feet in a zombie dream, I was too scared to move; afraid of the unknown world of lesser-paying jobs and the chance that this was as good as it could possibly get.

A few years ago, I read an interview of a co-writer for the TV show, The Simpsons. He talked about the sense of accomplishment he bathed in every day because of the commercial and creative success of the show. And he expressed aloud his bewilderment at the decisions of some of his former coworkers to leave the show for a better opportunity elsewhere. “Don’t they realize that it doesn’t get any better than this show?” he asked. Stupidly, when rationalizing my decision to stay at my job, I silently cited this writer when asking myself the blindly rhetorical question, “Don’t they realize this is a great Vermont job?” More coworkers than I can remember have come and gone since I began working in my department and only recently did I begin to think of their departures in a different light than that shown by the writer for The Simpsons. Only recently did I begin to consider that my position at this company, though a decent job for Vermont, was not worth the pain its mind-numbing work and soul-sucking executives inflicted upon me. This year, I began to come to terms with my fears and actively seek other employment. At this point in my search, I’m considering leaving the state, and/or applying to graduate schools. In the mean time, I’ve decided to stay at my current job.

Like the ghosts of this company’s past who were stuck with the company until their dreams of leaving it came to fruition, I have begun to question management (who, from now on shall be known as Darth Vader) with questions that ring in a lack-of-trust tone. Due to a great moment of idiocy on my part that can be blamed on my apathetic history with this company, Darth Vader’s overly defensive, bitter, pretentious, and passive-aggressive responses actually shocked me. But of course! While Vader’s answers were caked with professional-speak icing, the underlying tone screaming at me at the top of its lungs said, “Who the hell do you think you are and where the f#*k do you get off questioning anything I say?” Vader’s point that I shouldn’t dare question her authority, driven into my heart with a rusty spike, reminded Freckles of Madison and his belief that, if left unchecked, power bred corruptness. Showing my less-intelligent side, Vader’s response reminded me of high school.

While it could never be argued that Darth Vader ever resembled the popular Plastic Girls of high school (a phrase I coined in college, which was subsequently stolen by Tina Fey), her recent display of “I’m better than you” authority-flexing elitism did. This resemblance was so evident to me, in fact, I wouldn’t have been surprised if she convinced the Geek Squad (aka, the IT Department) that it was their privilege to do her work, or if she gave an employee a compliment, only to take it back two seconds later with a cruel, sarcastic rolling of the eyes. And while I could have a field day with comparisons between Vader and the people in high school I resented the most, my loyal (and starved) readers will not be surprised when I instead veer seemingly off subject for an unclear but good reason.

One of my coworkers showed up to work today with her face beaten into a pulp by, I’m suspecting, her “loving” husband of many years. I guessed spousal abuse because, according to what Veronica Japanica told me many years ago, this was not the first instance. While she smiles and stands proudly by her man who I’m guessing, in her abused mind, is the victim, I cannot help but notice the similarities between this coworker and Kara Beth Borden, the 14-year-old Pennsylvanian girl whose boyfriend murdered her parents. Both have been abused in some way, both are assuredly confused by the pain that has accompanied what they thought was love, and both continued to stand by those that hurt them out of fear and shame (though, in Borden’s case, it may have been involuntary).

These similarities, coupled with the resemblance between Darth Vader and the Plastic Girls, have got me wondering: aside from the obvious change in responsibilities, is there really that much of a difference between adolescence and adulthood? Or, as Freckles put it, is a 4-year-old’s life just as tough as an adult’s? Relatively speaking, in terms of emotions, is there any difference between how you felt when your fellow kindergartners kicked you out of their clique because your Dukes of Hazzard car wasn’t authentic, and the resentment employees feel as they do the Lay-Off March by the desks of those who survived the cuts? Maybe there is no difference save our abilities to express our emotions in ways other than crying in a corner; though, come to think of it, as an adult, I’ve done that, too. I submit that there is no real difference and maybe, in our rush to grow up, we overlooked that fact.