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Within twenty-four hours everything changed. The old man kicked me out again so I was back in that twin sized bed surrounded by my mother's boxes & plastic bins my clothes in big piles with the hangers left in, just dying for a home. And the day I got kicked out I got the call the one I didn't think would ever come. It was for a transcription job doing reality t.v. shows typing what the cast members said in the interview room word for word every burp, **** and studder. A foot pedal is used to stop, play, rewind, and fast forward. She asked me to come in for an interview but then the next day she had someone call out sick so she called me back, **** the interview. Do you just wanna start? Like...today?" So I went in that day and got typing. The office was located in a 1960's trailer in the middle of a small trailer park, next to a little house. The boss was a middle-aged Rasta lady with straight brown hair and a very kind face. Turned out she also ran the trailer park. I asked her about one of the trailers with a 'For Rent' sign the only one available in the whole lot of seven trailers. She said it was a one bedroom and less than $500 a month. Two days later I got a few hundred bucks from my financial aid that I had been waiting on. It was my only way out my only way in. After I paid the move-in expenses I only had $13 to my name but it was alright my good luck just kept on rolling I found a $200 balance on my food stamp card. At the end of the day, my face hurt from smiling so big, for so long, I'm not used to all this. I have a porch that's mine Mason jars with ice water good food in the fridge It's only a short walk across the trailer park to get to work everyday. My rasta boss landlord lady has two little boys around my sons age. Ever since we moved in all he's done is play outside with them running around with rocks, sticks, dirt, and random objects the way kids are supposed to play. I almost can't type this can't put into words what this means to me. No more father looming over me or mother yelling my name. To be able to step out onto my porch at night seeing the Gilbert water tower lit up in white light, the scent of Joe's Real BBQ blowing in the breeze or to walk the downtown streets with it's old west, wooden awnings, hanging overhead. the old tyme tattoo shop with it's old style custom flash. the wooden little two window, one door, the front of my Dad's former bar 'The Mustang Lounge', where I watched him sling drinks, while I played the entertainment trivia touch screen, sipping Shirley Temples. But the best part and it's such a simple thing just walking the sidewalks of my neighborhood which are stamped, AA Beardon, 1930. It's everything I've ever wanted but it's just dumb luck. To find a job and a home in one fell swoop like this. I feel like I've run off and joined a commune or something I'm on a writer's retreat where I practice typing all day and then cook myself dinner at sundown. T-Bone Walker's voice fills my little trailer as I take in a sunsets from my porch leaned against the railing a jar of ice water in my hand my stomach full having that after dinner smoke not having a care in the world besides the next cigarette and the next page here. Finally. I can put my feet up and hold my head high.
0
Mar 2, 2012
Mar 2, 2012 at 11:33 AM UTC
A Writer's Retreat Trailer Park
Within twenty-four hours everything changed. The old man kicked me out again so I was back in that twin sized bed surrounded by my mother's boxes & plastic bins my clothes in big piles with the hangers left in, just dying for a home. And the day I got kicked out I got the call the one I didn't think would ever come. It was for a transcription job doing reality t.v. shows typing what the cast members said in the interview room word for word every burp, **** and studder. A foot pedal is used to stop, play, rewind, and fast forward. She asked me to come in for an interview but then the next day she had someone call out sick so she called me back, **** the interview. Do you just wanna start? Like...today?" So I went in that day and got typing. The office was located in a 1960's trailer in the middle of a small trailer park, next to a little house. The boss was a middle-aged Rasta lady with straight brown hair and a very kind face. Turned out she also ran the trailer park. I asked her about one of the trailers with a 'For Rent' sign the only one available in the whole lot of seven trailers. She said it was a one bedroom and less than $500 a month. Two days later I got a few hundred bucks from my financial aid that I had been waiting on. It was my only way out my only way in. After I paid the move-in expenses I only had $13 to my name but it was alright my good luck just kept on rolling I found a $200 balance on my food stamp card. At the end of the day, my face hurt from smiling so big, for so long, I'm not used to all this. I have a porch that's mine Mason jars with ice water good food in the fridge It's only a short walk across the trailer park to get to work everyday. My rasta boss landlord lady has two little boys around my sons age. Ever since we moved in all he's done is play outside with them running around with rocks, sticks, dirt, and random objects the way kids are supposed to play. I almost can't type this can't put into words what this means to me. No more father looming over me or mother yelling my name. To be able to step out onto my porch at night seeing the Gilbert water tower lit up in white light, the scent of Joe's Real BBQ blowing in the breeze or to walk the downtown streets with it's old west, wooden awnings, hanging overhead. the old tyme tattoo shop with it's old style custom flash. the wooden little two window, one door, the front of my Dad's former bar 'The Mustang Lounge', where I watched him sling drinks, while I played the entertainment trivia touch screen, sipping Shirley Temples. But the best part and it's such a simple thing just walking the sidewalks of my neighborhood which are stamped, AA Beardon, 1930. It's everything I've ever wanted but it's just dumb luck. To find a job and a home in one fell swoop like this. I feel like I've run off and joined a commune or something I'm on a writer's retreat where I practice typing all day and then cook myself dinner at sundown. T-Bone Walker's voice fills my little trailer as I take in a sunsets from my porch leaned against the railing a jar of ice water in my hand my stomach full having that after dinner smoke not having a care in the world besides the next cigarette and the next page here. Finally. I can put my feet up and hold my head high.
danny-valdez
Written by
American
Mar 2, 2012
Mar 2, 2012 at 11:33 AM UTC
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