No, I’m still single. (Nine and a half years. It’s a streak
I’d love to end.)
The title refers to my house. After three realtors and three
years of putting up For Sale signs and taking them down when each listing
became stale, I don’t expect to have the house on the market for the foreseeable
future—five years, maybe more.
What changed? I gave up workday ferry rides and the five
hours of daily commuting I endured just to collect a paycheck. With a week and
a half remaining in the school year last June, I was offered a job at a new
site. Get this—it’s four blocks from home.
Yes, that still makes me giggle. I smile the entire walk to
work—not that I’ll add any smile lines to my face; commercial breaks last
longer.
Five weeks in, all is wonderful at work. How could there be
anything for my inner Eeyore to mope about? Ah, but there is. Sometimes enticing
promises of immediate pleasure/relief come with lingering side effects—the apple
in the garden of Eden, the one-night stand that begets an STD (or worse), the
refreshing rise of Lindsay Lohan only to be followed with a decade of media
burnout.
For now, I have gained free time and I have reinstated
weekday workouts. I have even reduced the dark rings under my eyes. It all
warrants a robust WOO HOO! But the reason I first listed the house wasn’t
because of a job. At the time, I was on a writing sabbatical. The deadly quiet
of my environment proved perfect for slogging through a couple of manuscripts,
but my social needs went unfulfilled. As fresh-faced as I may be, I remain in a
hamlet on the outskirts of a sleepy town, separated by mountains and water from
the rest of civilization.
How dead are things? The big events today in town are
Teatime in the Preschool, Okie Doki Karaoke and a workshop called Build a
Willow Tunnel. This is why I lock my doors.
The lead story in the local weekly paper is about scaring
sea gulls off the library roof. In next week’s issue, there will be a half
dozen letters to the editor, passionately squawking on either side of this bird
brouhaha. Shoot the birds. Feed the birds. This could be the talk of the town,
stretching into November. I am not kidding.
A year ago, the town’s McDonald’s shut down. That’s no loss
to me as a vegetarian, but it’s a sign of a stagnant economy and dormant social
network. More telling, I drove to the single-screen cinema tonight, daring to
appear solo at a movie on a Saturday night. Two months after its premiere in
metropolitan areas, Woody Allen’s “Blue Jasmine” finally arrived for a weeklong
run. I was the only one to show up so they cancelled the show. Folks around
here love the woods. Woody? Not so much. We’re a long way from Manhattan.
It’s not just that I am the only single gay man in these
parts; I have nothing in common with the locals. I would posit that Okie Doki
Karaoke drew quite a crowd.
As gleeful as I was when I accepted my new job over the
phone, I felt a rush of angst the moment I hung up. Oh, god, what have I done?
For the moment, I am content. I know, however, that the same
question will haunt me more menacingly in the years to come. What have I done?!