By Rhonda Hansome
Despite the fact that obsessive compulsive disorder behavior
is frequently associated with above average intelligence, I don’t have OCD. After I lock my door, I push it to check
that it’s securely locked. While
at my door I check my bag for my wallet, water, tablet and cell phone. Noticing my cell absent from its
designated purse pocket; I unlock the door, trudge to the bedroom and unplug my
elusive phone from the wall outlet, where I charge it nightly. On the trudge back to the door, I dismiss
irrational thoughts about the possible negative side- effects of regular
exposure to the radio frequency radiation emanating from the multiple
electrical devices that surround my bed in an orderly arc. I make a mental note* to google the
radiation blocking properties of silver mesh curtains as I lock the door and push
it to check that it’s securely locked.
I pause before the locked door just long enough to confirm
that I did indeed make a pre-travel bathroom visit. Satisfied I’ve preempted a race between my bladder and the erratic
MTA schedule, I quickly unlock the door to confirm that the bathroom light is
off and securely lock the door again.
Don’t get it twisted. My
electric bill is no joke! Two
months ago my bill did an Olympic style $10.00 jump that was supernatural in
timing. How could my bill from the
previous month, two weeks of which I’d spent trolling for guest spots in the
comedy clubs of LA, be so high? My
letters, 22 in all, to Con Edison board members, vice –presidents, several
CEO’s and the Consumer (non) Protection Agency demanding an explanation of how
with a two week absence from home my bill was higher than ever, elicited the
same response; which coincidentally echoed the reply of the utility
representative I harangued for an hour and a half: “You were notified in
writing of the scheduled rate increase.
To save on your bill always unplug your appliances when not in use to
prevent costly vampire electrical loss.”
Dear Reader** I eat by candle light not for romance, but to
save on my bill. I sweat through
non-air conditioned New York summers to save on my bill. I say I don’t have a microwave because,
much like a long gone heart throb, it warms while stealing your soul. Truth is I don’t have a microwave, say
it with me now: to save on my bill! Con Edison raised my electric rate to legitimate rape and consoles
me with vampire tales??!! Did I
digress? I say all that to say I don’t have OCD. I do have a helpful routine around
locking my door, in which I engaged just before leaving for Israel almost two
weeks ago.
Much to my delight, the September 19th
performance of The Rhonda Hansome Comedy Divorced & Bitter Tour in Tel Aviv
was a tremendous success!
The post-performance reception lingered way into the night as I was showered
with congratulations and duo-cheek kisses. I rubbed elbows and took photos with the (English speaking)
audience whose diversity included the struggling owner of a three table
restaurant, doctors, the Israeli predecessor of Madonna, “security” specialist,
a vineyard owner, artists, actors, musicians of every type and the Israeli
successor to Martha Stewart – a handsomely flamboyant tall drink of water.
Delicious details of my first trip to Israel lurk in a future Thursday
blog.
Suffice it say I returned home safe and as sound as you can
be after rising at 4:00AM for an 11 hour flight and a transcontinental time
change. I gathered my mail, lugged
my suitcase up three flights of stairs and addressed my door. “Hello Door!” What’s this?
The door looks (almost) closed…
Hmmm. I touch the door and the engaged lock grins mockingly
as the door swings open. How
could the lock be closed without the door being locked? Am I hallucinating from jet lag and
dehydration? OMG, have I
been robbed? Since the
brownstone in which I abide changed owners (two months ago when I was the only
tenant left in the building) my clean organized apartment has been denied any
and all storage space in which she previously luxuriated. She now appears to be auditioning for the
TV show Hoarders.
Stifling a rising sense of WTF, my tired eyes probe every
room, seeking signs of tampering among my islands of clutter. My TV and other non-portable
radiation emitting devices are in place.
I check my closet. No one
has absconded with my clothes.
Maybe they noticed the patches and repairs needed and went for my jewelry. A quick perusal of my dusty box
(insert your own dirty joke here) revealed that all that glittered was the
gaudy oversize costume jewelry I’d left there.
Then it hit me.
My new landlord - make that landlady, when informed I was leaving for a
trip abroad, requested my key, in case of emergency. I thought, in spite of my nit picking boundary issues, don’t
antagonize the broad. So I gave
her the emergency key to help establish rapport. Now with zero signs of emergency - two texts and a
phone call later, I had shredded bits of rapport whirling through my brain. I spoke to her without yelling “Were
you in my apartment and left the door unlocked?” In my head that last sentence was in bold all cap letters
followed by several exclamation points. Yes, she’d opened my door for some reason that sounded
like Charlie Brown’s teacher talking and was surprised the door wasn’t
locked. Yeah, tell me about being
surprised the door wasn’t locked.
*I love making mental notes because they don’t have the guilt
inducing staying power of an actual hard copy “to do” list.
**BTW I thank all three of you for your support and
insightful comments on my blog.
You have islands of clutter too? I like you more now.
You should have seen the letters I sent to Dell! I wish I had the cleaning OCD instead of the "I'll just lay here and the work will do itself OCD"
I agree...i make mental notes all the time. You can always deny having made them in the first place. And then when you actually accomplish that thing which you have made the note about..albeit ten times before..you can then get the full benefit of the self praise.
Very funny stuff! I am jealous that you're in NY doing what you love. I was living in NY doing what I could to survive until I couldn't survive anymore.
I'll be back to read more... even though I'm seriously jealous right now! ;-)
Dreams do come true! You finally own your own 'island.' I'm jealous! But happy for you at the same time.
On a more serious note, I can't believe your landlady did that --such an invasion. BTW: Look forward to reading more about your tour in Tel Aviv.