A moving story
Every great story starts with someone doing something stupid. That is a fact.
Over the course of Megan and my move I supplied enough stupidity to craft a truly great story. Forged in a fire stoked by fate, and tempered with a liberal dose of irony, what started as a heavy lump of a day weaponized itself and turned on us.
Part I: When you assume...
I raise early on Sunday the 30th of July ready to tackle a linebacker of a task, moving the entirety of my
My dad arrives at my place a tad late. If I had stolen the light-up sign from the nearby bank and had it set up in my living room it would have been flashing, "1:35 ... 99 F ... get free checks for a year, start a LaSalle Bank checking acct..." That's right, free checks for a year. And it's 99 F outside. Dew point? 95 F. Even the devil is using a battery powered misting fan. The news recommended that we stay indoors, but necessity dictated that we do heavy lifting outside. I started sweating turning the doorknob to greet my dad.
Megan's brother, Tyler, arrives to help. At this point I'm covered in sweat and reek like a hobo. We have been moving boxes for about fifteen minutes. The wicked twosome becomes an awesome trio and we all reek together in no time.
At
An hour later Tyler, my dad and I are double parked outside the new building, trailer in tow, and I am chain dialing the building manager with "embarrassed panic" spelled out in the wrinkles in my brow. After a few minutes of failure I try other numbers. The building emergency contact number says they'll try and call his cell phone for me... thanks. Megan gets a hold of the real estate company and relays our trouble to them. "Oh, he won't his cell phone today, it's his day off." All I hear is the whirring of a fan and a sloppy -plop- sound.
I ended up sleeping out in the suburbs that night. Total amount of stuff moved into the new place at the end of Sunday: 0%
Part II: So this is what siblings are for...
I wake up early on the 31st hoping to offset a little of yesterday's disaster with efficiency. I get a hold of the building manager who apologizes and blames my blunder yesterday on the real estate company. Yeah, damn them! But as I start to feel optimistic about the day, he ends the conversation with, "I'll meet you here at one." *click*
I pick up Kaitlin and Allison, my two youngest sisters, pulling them out of reserve status and sending them to the front with me. They are going to the Cubs game later that night, so they agreed to lend a hand until game time, and then they'd just cab it to the stadium. My mom is taking the church bus in to the city for the game and plans to rendezvous with them before
My sisters and I arrived at the new apartment complex a little after one and unloaded the entirety of the minivan and flatbed. Megan and her brother were busy getting all of Megan's stuff ready to go by what would end up being a much stretched pickup time. But first we need to get another load from my place.
I think scientists may be able to glean a better understanding of the time-space continuum if they would study the "I only have a little bit left to move" phenomena. Somehow as you think you're about to finish packing up all your stuff you find more stuff. And not just a little bit either, but a grotesque amount. And after you finish packing what you thought was five things into eight full boxes, that is when you realize that you forgot to pack the hall closet.
We headed to Megan’s after finally grabbing everything except for a few items that would be headed to storage in the suburbs. It was about
We get to the apartment at about
Part III: Fate says, "Oh no you di-in't."
This is where the story goes around the corner and goes from being a crappy weekend to something more awful and grand. At some point between driving Tyler to the bus and finding the improbable parking spot big enough for van and trailer I had the following revelation: With my dad now out of town and the rest of my family at the Cubs game I had no way to drop off the van and trailer and get back to the city in time for work at 7am. Megan takes a cab to my place after her bro is on the bus and we ponder the situation over shrimp and garlic bread. We decide to call my mom to see if she can make her way to the old place and take the van back to the burbs instead of the church bus. She agrees to the meet us, and after a $30 cab ride and some light loading I'm ready to bid adios to my ex-home. I take all of the keys I have for the place off my ring and leave them on top of the dryer, lock the knob on the way out and head toward the El with my new roommate, Megan.
Forty minutes later its
Megan and I hop in a taxi and head back to Little Italy to retrieve the security key. Once inside I tested each key until I found the lost one. Clutching it in hand with white knuckles we climb back into the cab and head right back the way we came. $40 later we're back in front the new apartment. It's now
I blame extreme tiredness for this next twist. While reaching into my pocket for the bike keys I somehow drop the loose security key. With no streetlights on the corner Megan and I flip our phones open and start combing the grass with our fingers. I start freaking out a little and head back to the front door to make sure I didn't leave it in the lock. The lock is clean, but Megan is standing with the key in her hand and a smile on her face. We could finally go to bed.
Part IV: Oh yeah, we just moved
We get to the apartment and head to the bedroom. Our bed is in still 4 pieces. We slap the frame together, flip the box spring and mattress on top, sheet it and throw a couple pillows down. As much as we both want to just collapse we realize that lying in the bed as we are now would ruin the most likely ruin the mattress for eternity. We have to shower. After showers are over it's
Part V: Epilogue
Megan and I made it to work on time, but we were crabby. I had given Megan the only set of keys the night before since she would be home before I would. As soon as Megan goes home that day, however, she crashed on the bed and didn't wake up when I called. I was locked out of my new apartment for the second day in a row. My friend Jesse lived a few blocks away so I headed to his place and waited for Megan to see her "you have 172 missed calls" message. Eventually I got in.
The cost of taxis that weekend totaled $110
5 comments:
oh man, marty. i can't believe this horrible but true story. hopefully things have settled down. this could be a mastercard commercial, and if i remember right, they are currently having a fill in the blanks contest
you could do cost of boxes, cabs, cell phone calls, alarm clocks etc. MOVING IN WITH THE LOVE OF YOUR LIFE? priceless.
it would be sweet. and i mean that in a genuine way not in a SCHWWEEEEETTT way.
-hillary
Nice little story detailing your struggles. Although, the one part is erroneous because you could've called me since I still had my keys. Or for a ride instead of paying for a cab. Or so that I didn't feel so lonely and spend the day crying in my new room...wishing...hoping...
There must be a quote from Jurassic Park I could use here but I'm not quite sure which one it is.
Jurassic Quote: "Veggiesaurus!"
I think that sums it all up.
Hi Marty and Meagan,
the story is a hoot to read and I enjoyed being a little bit of help in the matter. You both will be missed. love and hugs, Mom
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