Life in a rooming house

Over the last 25 years I have lived in just about every type of living situation. From a one bedroom basement with three other friends, to alone in a one bedroom apartment, to communal living with friends,even pitched a tent in a friend's backyard for 11 months. (yes, through a Toronto winter, in a summer tent) but I have never lived in a rooming house with strangers, so this a real first for me.
It have now been 14 months and things have been very interesting. I am always curious about people and their behaviour and especially where commonalities occur.

What I have come to observe are some of the following: (and of course I am generalizing)
Most of the people I have come to know over the last year seem to be somewhat socially awkward. They also seem to be either without or don't have much contact with their family. A great many display a lack of emotional maturity even some can be characterized as passive-aggressive. 

So, having some theories on human behaviour, I have tested out some of them where opportunity presented itself, and here again a new environment to test out some theories.

What does it take to build community? My theory is that the following components help build the framework.
- FOOD - the way to most people's hearts is through their stomachs. Whether its potluck, bbq, food sharing, communal cooking or communal gardens, food is an excellent way to bring people together. No matter who you are, everyone eats. Sharing is a big part of it.

-HYGIENE - when we all pitch in to keep common areas clean and tidy, it shows that the occupants care about their living space. Part of the "fix the broken window" theory. By keeping the aesthetic looking good, the residents feel better about themselves, have greater pride in their surroundings and therefore are more likely to maintain an overall more hygienic existence,

-COMMUNICATION - Both ways. Everyone needs to feel like they know what is going on around them and have at least one means of communicating back and across. That there are avenues to express themselves and hopefully that expression is met with a response.

-PARTICIPATION - ways to engage with others, to pitch in, to be a part of the whole. The more options that are available, the more likely to get more to join in. Having an appeal to different types of personalities. Say, for the more extroverted type, parties and bbq's and other such events that have a bigger crowd and likely a more intoxicated crowd. For the more shy or socially awkward, smaller, quieter gatherings like book clubs, or cards or pot luck. Also, with today's available technology, one can be encouraged to chat online or text.

So, I have been testing out some theories and the results have been interesting. Some times surprising, but never boring.

When we first moved in, the place was depressing, and a bit dumpy. Why we took that inside, small room, was desperation. We had been having a hard time finding an apartment within our budget and within the area we wanted. Sure we could have found something in Etobicoke or Scarborough, but we wanted to stay central for work and school and of course you pay for location. Anyhow, at the 11th hour, we came across this downtown rooming house and it was at a price we could afford and they were willing to take cash and ask few or no questions. No lease, no credit check, no application. Cash = keys in hand.
So, we took it. The room is really meant for one person and without a whole lot of stuff. In our case it was two humans and a big ol' cat. And all our stuff, full Queen sized bed, kitchen stuff, camping/survival gear, including tents and other such big gear. To say it was crowded, would be the understatement of the year. Let's just say that when the bed was down, one of us had to sit on it and other could sit on the chair. When we put it up against the wall, we had enough room for two chairs and a small side table so we could eat or whatever. Yeah, small, crowded. To boot, it's an inside room without access to the outside. There is a window, but it faces into a skylight lit space (the mail/utility room), no outside air just an air conditioner.
It was the longest July on record. The only minor upside was that on the odd really hot day/night the air conditioner came in handy. Otherwise, I hate air conditioners, they make me sick and in this particular case it was true. There are two other rooms that also face inside and that have just air conditioners and they all share the same stuffy mail room air. So when one sneezes the others suck in their germs and so on.
Luckily for us, in August another bigger, nicer room became available and we moved. We painted it, cleaned it and decorated it. Nothing costly or fancy, but a couple coats of new white paint, a scrubbed clean hardwood floor and some blinds and dollar store sheer curtains, and voila! a nice new living space we could actually see ourselves living in for as long as it took to get our co-op ready in Bancroft.

Next came the common spaces, the hallway, kitchen, bathroom. First was to clean it to my standards. Next was to make it a bit more pleasant aesthetically. Again, nothing fancy or expensive (thank heavens for China) just dollar store items like print pictures, air freshener in the toilet room, scrub the bathtub clean, etc. (Keep in mind I did this for myself, because I want to have a more pleasant living space. If others enjoy it or benefit in some way, that's just gravy.
So, small changes, reusing what resources I found laying around. Cleaning and tidying up the common spaces, re-purposing items left behind or forgotten.
As it turned out, the landlord took notice and hired me to keep the place clean and tidy. So, now I pay my rent by cleaning once a month and bug spraying twice a month. As an added bonus, when someone moves out, I get paid extra to clean and prep the room for showing. Win-win.

Next was the outside common space. There is a small deck in the back and it was so depressing. The smokers would just throw their butts and the rain would pool in certain spots and it was a gross pool of old butts. The super is not someone who will do one ounce more work that the minimum. For example, he is supposed to take the garbage and recycling out daily. More often than not it is every two or three days. Anyway, so we cleaned up the deck, put ashtrays upstairs and downstairs and a note asking them to please discontinue pitching them over the upstairs balcony. It worked. People it turns out, like to live in a clean, pleasant place.
It is also my theory that "birds of a feather" will flock together. And it's true. When the super shows a prospective new tenant around, he makes a point of showing them the back deck and mentioning how it's a tenant lead initiative. I figure either the prospective tenant is of similar mind and will be attracted to the place and hopefully they will be a nice clean house mate or they will feel out of place and look for something more dumpy. Here is the before and after:










Also, it seems to attract more female tenants, which is great. Women overall are cleaner and tidier. So we went from the two of us and one other female resident, to now 6. Not bad. Hopefully more future tenants will be female. It really does improve the overall feel of the place.
(Sorry dudes, but by in large, you are smelly, dirty creatures that don't mind living in your own filth - I know, I clean your rooms when you move out.) 

So, bit by bit, we started improving the place. Baby steps were needed, because the odd long time resident would get a bit put out by the changes, so they had to be made slowly to allow them time to adjust. I know, you're thinking, "who would have a problem with their environment being changed for the better, cleaner, nicer smelling?" A totally valid question.
Here's an example of a socially awkward person, passive aggressive and really has issues with change - even in a space he doesn't even utilize.
So, one of the first things I did when I got the job as the resident housekeeper, was to put air freshener and liquid soap dispensers in the each bathroom. (The place in divided into four sections and each section has a kitchen and bathroom - 21 rooms overall). So, four bathrooms and four kitchens.
Within two - three days, one set had disappeared from one of the upstairs bathrooms and someone (Greg) had put the set from one of the downstairs bathroom in our bathroom, as if it to say "here, don't want this". Now again, you are right to ask yourself, "who would have a problem with having soap in a washroom?" Well, Greg. He has lived here for over a decade. He is one of two people that actually have a lease. He is also a passive/aggressive drunk that blacks out and forgets what he did and said (or so he claims - personally I think it's a cheap excuse at best, a lie at worse.) But, nonetheless, when I discovered the set in our bathroom, I went and asked the two possible people if they had an objection to the items and if either one of them put them in our bathroom, both denied it. So, fine, I put them back.

Next, we cleaned up and re-purposed the messy, crowded and airless mail room. Threw out a whole bunch of left behind crap, put in some tables that weren't being utilized and created this.

It actually looks even better now with the books and other such library type materials - I will take pictures and upload them when I can. But compared with what it was before, it is a much better space now.
I have also put in a door jam to hold the door open and let some fresh air sneak into that space.

Next, I wanted to give people an opportunity in a safe space to come together and chat, mingle, play cards, board games, whatever, just have the option of hanging with their neighbours. So, I created a small pole, distributed little chits to each room and gave them the option to either reply anonymously or sign their name/ room number. Got three positive responses and this from Greg (he signed it) "I know you're trying to create community, but it won't work." Now maybe his skepticism comes from having lived here for so long and seen all sorts of changes, maybe not always for the better, but was strikes me about this type of person is that they are not content to be miserable in their own space, but it really seems to twist their nickers to be surrounded by those that haven't given up on life and like to create a nicer living space.
Nonetheless, I proceeded as planned and seeing that overall there wasn't an overwhelming positive response so I wasn't going to go to any trouble.

But as the weather slowly got warmer and the back deck became another opportunity to get people out of their rooms and provide space and opportunity to gather, we started fixing up the back. As you will note from the pictures, it is a small space with limited sunlight, so not optimal for growing many things, but enough to provide light for tomatoes and such. By the way, the flowers are not my doing, that's Winston. Again proving my theory that if you show you care, others that are similarly inclined will join in. I will take up-to-date pictures soon as fall is fast approaching and we will be cleaning up for winter, because you have to see how nice it is now. Winston has slowly added enough flower pots on that fence to make a very colourful display and little dollar store solar powered lights that really make the place look great at night.
So, while the idea of an organized gathering might not have taken off, creating this space, gave people the opportunity to come out and sit, have their coffee and smoke and coincidentally meet up with their neighbours. Now we have had 3 bbq's, and a birthday party. Not everyone came out of course, but slowly people are coming out here and there.

Now of course, we are not without our challenging personalities and conflicts. There seems to be a drunk in each section. We have Anita, across the hall there is Greg, upstairs there is Peter. And they each present their section mates with different challenges.  But overall, the makeup of this rooming house is made up of decent, clean(ish) people, working people, student people, new immigrant people.

The latest improvements I have made is the aforementioned library with different types of books I find on the curb or in the laundry mat. CDs, DVDs, audio books, bins for used batteries and e-waste, community information, events calendars and other such community information. And in the last few weeks I have also taken to leaving canned and packaged foods in the mail room. And yes, they have been taken. Nothing fancy or costly, mostly I find a good sale on soups ($.77) or pasta and sauce ($1) or sometimes I come across samples from different events (sunblock, razors, beauty products, etc.) or often when people move out and leave usable items behind, I figure why fill a landfill when someone can use it?) Result, people as using it and sharing here and there things they have. Another theory proven right.
As well, I have taken to creating a quarterly newsletter. Just a way of communicating some information about our home, reminders about cleaning dates, reminders about the rules and providing an avenue for everyone to interact and communicate. The super and the landlord have nothing to do with it, and so far seem to have no objection.

So, here we are, a year in and many theories proven correct. Yes, it is gratifying, but mostly the purpose of this experiment is to learn what works and what doesn't and apply to helping create out community in Bancroft. 
I will take up-to-date pictures soon and post an update.


Open letter to Frankie Macri

I didn't want it to come to this, but your endless harassment leaves little choice.


You have wasted enough of my time over the last decade and I won't let you waste one more second.

So, Frankie Macri of Toronto, Ontario, I want nothing to do with you. You have nothing to offer me but lame excuses. I have been with two wonderful people in the years you have wasted, and you have proven to be a person of little substance and even less character. Your endless lies, stupid stories and shallow perspective make you very unappealing on many levels.



So, here it is for the whole world to see and maybe when you need a reminder, refresh your memory.

Stop texting, stop calling.

Go away, stay away.

Too little of a good thing.

Washington 'pot shops' hit by shortage http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-us-canada-28214706

Sleep is not a waste of time

Sleep's memory role discovered http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/health-27695144

Time to face facts about pot

http://www.alternet.org/drugs/12-biggest-myths-about-marijuana-debunked?page=0%2C3&akid=11794.202354.6vSebS&rd=1&src=newsletter990986&t=3

The paradox of growing old

The paradox of growing old http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/magazine-27342341

Life goes on...

Trying out the blogging capabilities on my new tablet.


Bold
Italics
©②❇

There can be a tomorrow - if you're prepared.

I don't mean to panic you or freak you out, it's just that I can't help but see the writing on the wall. And no, not just the short film "There's no tomorrow". All the signs point to a steady decline in our western civilization. So, my family and I have decided to do as the movie suggests (though the idea came long before the viewing of it) and we're moving out of a our megacity to a smaller more rural town and living as sustainably as our meager income and budget will permit us. For more info on what and how we're doing it, go to www.dreamworx.ca

Your Canadian Income Tax refund

After filing their personal tax returns by April 30th, many Canadians will again receive a tax refund.

This is indeed a very exciting program, and I'll explain it in a Q & A format:

Q. What is a tax refund payment?
A. It’s money that the federal government will send to taxpayers.

Q.. Where will the government get this money?
A. From taxpayers.

Q. So the government is giving me back my own money?
A. Only a smidgen of it.

Q. What is the purpose of this payment ?
A. The plan is for you to use the money to purchase a
high-definition TV set, thus stimulating the economy.

Q. But isn't that stimulating the economy of China?
A. Shut up.


Below is some helpful advice on how to best help the Canadian economy by spending your tax refund wisely:

* If you spend the stimulus money at Wal-Mart, the money will go to China or Sri Lanka.

* If you spend it on gasoline, your money will go to the Arabs.

* If you purchase a computer, it will go to India, Taiwan or China.

* If you purchase fruit and vegetables, it will go to Mexico, Honduras and Guatemala.

* If you buy an efficient car, it will go to Japan or Korea.


* If you purchase useless stuff, it will go to Taiwan.

* If you pay your credit cards off, or buy stock, it will go to management bonuses and they will hide it offshore.

Instead, keep the money in Canada by:

1) Spending it at yard sales, or

2) Going to hockey games, or

3) Spending it on prostitutes, or

4) Beer or

5) Tattoos.

(These are the only “truly” Canadian businesses still operating)

Conclusion:

Go to a hockey game with a tattooed prostitute that you met at a yard sale and drink beer all day!




A very special Valentine

Can I just say what a gift to thoughtful people Jon Stewart is?
I have been an avid viewer of The Daily Show, and Jon Stewart in general for a couple of decades and I have to say that he is getting better and better.
I realize that he doesn't do all the writing himself, and I extend a "Thank you" to his writing staff, they are witty, bold and pithy. My kind of people.


Where's the honour?

Religion makes people do insane things. Makes them believe incredibly insane things.

Now don't get me wrong. I am not picking on any one religion. To my way to thinking, they are all equally insane making.

Go ahead and tell me that religion doesn't make people insane.
The headlines are daily and endless, and I don't even have to research anything, they're everywhere I turn.

I would like very much to find just ONE religion that doesn't fit this stereotype. Anyone?

It gives our male dominated society an excuse for their antiquated, outdated and misogynistic attitudes. Things like gender of the child. Science has taught us that it is the male that determines the gender of the child, but still, in this day and age of advanced medical technology, women are still blamed if they birth a daughter.
When they are born into this world, they are treated like chattel. Told both in their homes and in their communities, that the only value they have is to breed. And if they know what's good for them, they best produce a male. Especially some cultures (Muslim, Chinese, Asian overall) seem to be seriously stuck in the 13th century. When will they acknowledge that they are certifiably insane? They kill their women, mutilate them, abuse them in ways that are too grotesque to fathom, all in the name of some "God". Nuts, just plain wacko.

Tired of the politically correct that do as much harm by not speaking up as those that perpetrate these abuses.

The world as you know it, is about to change.

Those words are batted around a great deal of late, mostly in connection with the Mayan calendar, 2012, etc. But I ask you dear reader to stop for one minute and think about those words carefully and logically. Because to my way of thinking, it comes down to where you're sitting when you hear them. What I mean is this: If you have lived a life of hunger, need, want and abuse, and someone comes along and says "Life as you know it will change forever", you're probably thinking "Finally this shit will be over!!" That's the hope, anyways, that things are changing for the better. And if you're sitting pretty with mommy and daddy and your lapdog named "Mr. Tickles" and someone says the same thing, you're no doubt going to think the worse and freak out and do everything in your power to maintain the status quo. So really, it's not bad or good, just a matter of perspective.

But where a shift is concerned on a global scale and a paradigm alters the consciousness of a species is concerned, matters get a bit more complicated. I think that with 7 billion people on the planet now, it will take some culling before we're able to evolve onto our next level of existence. Now those who read the above and translate it into "genocide" or something of the sort, and try to use me as a target for their misguided fear. I often hear things like "so, my husband and I have 7 children, which one of them would you have killed?" Now when Jacque Fresco is asked such an assinine question, he takes the high road and answers that "we need to educate people about living within the carrying capacity of the earth". Me, personally, I wish I could answer them honestly like "All of them, and I would line up your husband and yourself and have you shot on live TV to make an example of you and your selfishness." But that would not be politically correct.

What these people fail to understand is that not one person is going to make such decisions, no group of people are going to decide that another group of people should be wiped out. It will happen naturally, organically, but make no mistake, it will happen. The earth is only capable of providing life for a limited number of species, and like a big furry dog, it will shake off the fleas (humans) that are troubling its existence. So, please stop trying to blame me or Jacque or anyone else that is simply pointing out the obvious consequences of our actions. Instead, try to recalibrate how you think about yourself, the world around you and the relationship you have with it.

Nobody speaks up


I think someone said that all evil needs to exist is for good people to say/do nothing.






So it seems in our modern "politically correct", "non-judgemental" society, that no one is ready to speak up no matter how small the matter might be. A slight course correction now, might have saved us all a great many heart and head aches. But noooooo, we're too concerned about "rocking the boat" or "I don't want to cause trouble".


To my way of thinking, this is the reason we're in this mess we're in. Because someone saw what Goldman Sacks was doing and said nothing. Because someone saw what Bears/Sterns was up to, but "didn't want to be a whistle blower".


So here we sit in a big smelly pile of manure and we're all trying to pretend like it doesn't stick to high heaven. That the methane that the pile is emitting is just a nice evening glow. That somehow if we just repeat our actions again and again, we'll somehow get out of this mess. Economic, social, environmental, ethical, moral, personal decay.


So, here it is people. If we don't speak up when we see something is wrong, we have no one to blame but ourselves when the excrement interfaces with the rotating blades.


Therefore, to those on public transit, here is the proper etiquette:



- When using a napsack/backpack - be considerate and practical when travelling in public transit during rush hours and carry it when not walking to/from your destination. You'll have a great fewer people cursing you under their breath.


- When walking down the side walk and you are in a group of 3 or more, you can't all walk abreast, two by two at best. Think of it like driving, you wouldn't get into the oncoming lane when there are other cars coming at you. Again, be considerate of others around you. You don't own the sidewalk and I will not move over to accommodate you. Yes, I will let you bash into me and give as good as I get and if you want to follow that up with your "entitlement" attitude, be prepared to deal with th backlash.


- When getting into an elevator, let the people out first. Simple I know, but you'd be surprised how many people don't.


- Same goes for when you're getting into a public transit vehicle. Let the other people out first.


We'll leave it at this for now, but suffice it to say, it is proof positive what happens when a whole generation is left to be raised by Barney and the mass media. Parents should teach their children common sense and common courtesy instead of giving them money and a sense of entitlement and sending them off into the world.

The G20 (Toronto) nightmare continues for some




GROUP STATEMENT BY 17 PEOPLE CHARGED WITH CONSPIRACY DURING THE G20REGARDING A PLEA DEAL



November 22, 2011 -- As people across Turtle Island look towards theglobal wave of protests against the austerity agenda, the memory of the2010 G20 protests in Toronto looms large as both inspiration and caution.We are seventeen people accused by the state of planning to disrupt theleaders summit – the prosecutors call us the G20 Main Conspiracy Group. This alleged conspiracy is absurd. We were never all part of any onegroup, we didn't all organize together, and our political backgrounds areall different. Some of us met for the first time in jail. What we do havein common is that we, like many others, are passionate about creatingcommunities of resistance. Separately and together, we work with movements against colonialism,capitalism, borders, patriarchy, white supremacy, ableism,hetero/cis-normativity, and environmental destruction. These are movementsfor radical change, and they represent real alternatives to existing powerstructures. It is for this reason that we were targeted by the state. Although these conspiracy charges have been a big part of our dailyreality for the past year and a half, we have been slow in speaking outcollectively. This is partly because of the restrictive bail conditionsthat were placed on us, including non-association with our co-accused andmany of our close allies. In addition, those of us who did speak out havebeen subjected to a campaign of intimidation and harassment by the policeand prosecutors. We are writing now because we have negotiated a pleadeal to resolve our charges and to bring this spectacle to an end. The state's strategy after the G20 has been to cast a wide net over thosewho mobilized against the summit (over 1, 000 detained and over 300charged) and then to single out those they perceived to be leaders. Beingaccused of conspiracy is a surreal, bureaucratic nightmare that fewpolitical organizers have experienced in this country, but unfortunatelyit is becoming more common. We can't say with any certainty if what we didwas in fact an illegal conspiracy. Ultimately though, whether or not ourorganizing fits into the hypocritical and oppressive confines of the lawisn't what's important. This is a political prosecution. The governmentmade a political decision to spend millions of dollars to surveil andinfiltrate anarchist, Indigenous solidarity, and migrant justiceorganizing over several years. After that kind of investment, what sort ofjustice are we to expect? We have not been powerless in this process; however any leverage we've hadhas not come from the legal system, but from making decisionscollectively. This has been a priority throughout, particularly in thelast several months, as the preliminary inquiry gradually took a back seatto negotiations for a deal to end it. The consensus process has been attimes a heart-wrenching, thoughtful, gruelling, disappointing, andinspiring experience, and in the end, we got through it together. Of the seventeen of us, six will be pleading and the eleven others willhave their charges withdrawn. Alex Hundert, and Mandy Hiscocks are eachpleading to one count of counselling mischief over $5,000 and one count ofcounselling to obstruct police, and Leah Henderson, Peter Hopperton, ErikLankin, and Adam Lewis are each pleading to a single count of counsellingmischief over $5,000. We are expecting sentences to range between 6 and 24months, and all will get some credit for time already served in jail andon house arrest. Three defendants in this case had their charges withdrawn earlier and onehas already taken a plea to counselling mischief over $5,000 that involvedno further jail time. This means that out of twenty-one people in thesupposed G20 Main Conspiracy Group, only seven were convicted of anything,and none were convicted of conspiracy. The total of fourteen withdrawalsdemonstrates the tenuous nature of the charges. This system targets many groups of people including racialized,impoverished and Indigenous communities, those with precarious immigrationstatus, and those dealing with mental health and addiction. The kinds ofviolence that we have experienced, such as the pre-dawn raids, thestrip-searches, the surveillance, and pre-sentence incarceration happenall the time. The seventeen of us have moved through the legal systemwith a lot of privilege and support. This includes greater access to"acceptable" sureties, and the financial means to support ourselves andour case. While the use of conspiracy charges against such a large groupof political organizers is noteworthy, these tactics of repression areused against other targeted communities every day. There is no victory in the courts. The legal system is and always has beena political tool used against groups deemed undesirable or who refuse toco-operate with the state. It exists to protect Canada's colonial andcapitalist social structure. It is also deeply individualistic andexpensive. This system is designed to break up communities and turnfriends against each other. Within this winless situation, we decided that the best course of actionwas to clearly identify our goals and needs and then to explore ouroptions. Within our group, we faced different levels of risk if convicted,and so we began with the agreement that our top priority was to avoid anydeportations. Other key goals we reached were to minimize the number ofconvictions, to honour people's individual needs, and to be mindful of howour decisions affect our broader movements. Although we are giving up someimportant things by not going to trial, this deal achieves specific goalsthat we weren't willing to gamble. Our conversations have always been advised by concern for the broaderpolitical impacts of our choices. One noteworthy outcome is that there areno conspiracy convictions emerging from this case, thus avoiding thecreation of a dangerous legal precedent that would in effect criminalizeroutine tasks like facilitation. Taking this deal also frees up communityresources that have been embroiled in this legal process. We emerge from this united and in solidarity. To those who took us in while on house arrest, to those who raised moneyfor our legal and living expenses, to those who cooked food, wroteletters, offered rides and supported us politically and emotionallythroughout, thank you. To those in jail or still on charges from the anti-G20 protests, to political prisoners and prisoners in struggle, we are still with you. To communities and neighbourhoods fighting back from Cairo to London, from Greece to Chile, in Occupied Turtle Island and beyond, see you in the streets.



--Pat Cadorette, Erik Lankin, Paul Sauder, Meghan Lankin, Bill Vandreil,Joanna Adamiak, Julia Kerr, David Prychitka, Alex Hundert, Monica Peters,Sterling Stutz, Leah Henderson, Adam Lewis, Mandy Hiscocks, PeterHopperton, SK Hussan, Terrance LuscombeIf you would like to issue a solidarity statement, please emailtoronto.g20resist@gmail.com and let us know.