August
1, 2013 8:24pm
This is the end of my second day
homeless. I thought yesterday was going
to be what made me crumble, but I am still here today. Looking back there is a lot of reasons I am
in this predicament, but mostly it was love.
It was the love of two small girls with
big eyes and curious minds. It was the
love of one tall broken rugged man with ocean eyes, and the end of a marriage I
didn’t want to let go of.
I do not tell my story than for any
other reason than to tell it. I will
write a book about the past year of my life, but for now I will just document
the events of homeless.
This morning I was chasing
butterflies. It was a large beautiful
black butterfly with majestic blue tips.
He taunted me by landing just long enough for my iPhone camera to be ready
then fly away. I don’t have phone
service anymore on the phone, but at every McDonald’s there is free Wi-Fi and
everything else on the phone works. It
also has a pretty good camera.
When I rounded the front of the
truck when we finally decided we needed to go to the closest McDonald’s for the
Wi-Fi and the dollar menu the butterfly rest calmly on my door handle. With excitement I fumbled with my camera and
managed a picture. Today was a nature
day. I have pictures of the butterfly, a
huge spider with a man face, a bunny, turtle, and alligator.
Just yesterday my handsome
counterpart, the Goat Man was sitting at the picnic table. It is now the centerpiece of our humble
abode. As he sat at the picnic table a
gopher turtle of medium size ventured near.
The turtle stopped sized up his six-foot frame and decided it was the
better of the two. The turtle charged at
the speed of a sloth (high gear for a turtle) and attempted a low blow to his
toes. The Goat Man countered with a
swift movement of his foot resulting in a kick moving the turtle back and a
chuckle, but the turtle was not giving up.
He waddled in high gear in for a second attack. Again the Goat Man used his previous strategy
leaving the turtle a few feet away and beaten.
The turtle would have bowed his head as he passed in a wide circle
around the Goat Man sitting at the picnic table if turtles could bow their
heads.
We are camping in a campground
called Crews Lake. We can only stay for
seven days, but it is someplace we can call home for now. We have a very small tent that even my short
body cannot stretch my legs out and the Goat Man is a foot taller than me. Eventually after much bickering and
complaining he slept in the tent and I slept in the truck cab. I was not okay with being alone, but I felt
safer in the truck.
I am not an outside kind of
gal. The bugs are bloodthirsty and they
do not understand boundaries. There are
some places I don’t want them to see. I
don’t want to be scratching those places!
It seems are cards are stacked
against us. We are both unemployed and
today Labor Ready turned me away and would not even let me put in an
application. We called ahead because gas
is very limited, and money is even scarcer than that, and they said they had
tons of work. They had work posted on
their walls that I am more than qualified for, but they wouldn’t even take my
application.
I’m starting to get concerned, but I
haven’t lost my fight yet. I worry about
the Goat Man. On the outside he is
holding it together, but I can see the stress and worry in his eyes. But tomorrow is a new day.
I don’t like the nights here. In just the few minutes it took me to pull
out the computer and begin this first entry the sun disappeared leaving only
pitch black and bloodthirsty bugs. The
night is cooler than last night, but the sticky stays on you. It is a general feel of uncomfortable and all
your thoughts turn to a nice hot shower.
I do not know when I will get the next nice hot shower.
This morning I sat at the picnic
table still wet from last nights rain and tried to pull the black smudge from
under my fingernails when I realized I had no way to contain the growth of my
unwanted chin hair. Now embarrassed to
even be in the woods. Soon I will be
smelly, greasy haired, bug-bite welted with a full beard. I’m pretty sure unemployment will be here to
stay then.
The Goat Man came back down the
trail from getting the dog some water and demanded my camera. I enquired but his only response was, “I
think you better stay here.” I was
convinced it was a snake. However, when
he came back with a picture of a very beautiful spider with long elegant
stretched legs. The spider had what
looked like a blue face on its back. The
Goat Man said it reminded him of the monkey with the cane in The Lion King. I had to agree.
This spider was just the
beginning. Later after all of our
options for gainful employment and a respectable life left us we went on a walk
in this beautiful wood. Suddenly I found
myself face to face with a spider easily the size of my hand. Thank God my hands are small!
He had built a majestic castle web
between two trees, crawled to the center of his masterpiece and then patiently
waited for the next nose to come his way.
Maybe he wasn’t blood thirsty like the bugs, but more interested in the
snot in my nose. He almost hit a
jackpot, but at the last minute I saw him.
I began to back away fully ready to
turn and run. I am not an outside kind
of gal! The Goat Man put his arms around
me and interfered with my retreat. I
fought, of course, but all he could say is, “I got you.” All I could think is, “So what! Get the hell
out of my way!”
After successfully avoiding the
elusive spider we continued our walk out onto a long wooden pier. We took a short walk on a long dock and at
the end we watched a four-foot alligator float across the Lilly pads without a
care in the world. One can only have so
many pictures of one boring alligator before they must move on, so move on we
did.
For an unknown reason this
campground has a tower with four levels to stop and gaze at the beautiful
Florida swampland. The Goat Man says the
levels are about twelve feet apart spanning up to fifty feet in the air. I of course know the tower as tall.
Our cute little very selfish needy
and annoying puppy had been pulling on the Goat Man’s arm the entire walk so he
let her go as we climbed. By the second
level the energy filled puppy no longer twisted around our legs in attempt to
trip us. We called her name, but she
would not come up the stairs. After much
coaching she finally went to the base of the stairs on the third level. She was obviously uncomfortable and scared of
heights. I did not know dogs could be
scared of heights since they see the world in two dimensions, but she most
certainly was.
But I remain hopeful and hold onto
the good moments. I was chasing
butterflies this morning….
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