Ten years ago, I packed up my stuff in boxes and bags (some of which, yes, were trash bags as I couldn't afford anything fancy), and moved from Treasure Island to my place on Nob Hill. I remember the last trip I made hauling my stuff to the new apartment, I took the 108 Treasure Island bus across the Bay Bridge and to the Transbay Terminal. I think I had less than ten dollars on me, so I took a cab from there, but had to stop about a block or two from the apartment so I could afford the fare and a dollar tip.
It took awhile before the apartment felt like my own, since I, in essence, inherited it from VPA. I've had a total of seven roommates in that ten years time, the last of which was Tina, who moved out yesterday. Although the additional rent I'll have to pay will pose a bit of a burden, I was in all honesty excited about having the place to myself, even if only because I can have a wank with my bedroom door wide open, and walk to the bathroom naked in the morning to take a shower.
It's the little things.
I used to refer to the apartment as Casa Fiesta, particularly during the time that J-Co lived here, and she would have friends stay over the weekend. Friends who would eventually become my friends, like Tina. Now I refer to it as My Very Own Buddhist Temple or My Little Shoebox in the Sky. When I tell people I live in Nob Hill, I quickly have to qualify it by saying, "but not the nice, ritzy, upscale part." I may live a stone's throw from the Fairmont and the Mark Hopkins hotels, but these are not posh digs, just a place I call home.
I remember when I first arrived at the apartment to do roommate interviews, it seemed so small. But such is the case with most apartments in SF. And it's not like a boy and his cat need a lot of room. Plus, less space means less to clean.
As the dot-com 2.0 wave has hit the city, and new luxury apartment building are being built on every other block, I have sat back and realized my little rent-controlled chateau is something to treasure. I've always told VPA that if I met someone and he wanted to move in to a place together, I would have him sign an air tight palimony agreement reimbursing me the significantly increased rent I would end up having to pay if I moved into a new place and had to pay market for it. I love this apartment probably more than I ever could another person. It's the longest I've ever actually lived in one place in my life. And with the nominal rent increases every year, I could conceivably live here until I die, and I plan to do so.
So from age twenty seven to thirty seven, I've lived happily ever after here, and hope to forevermore. What an amazing decade. Here's to several more.
Sunday, August 2, 2015
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