Dear Landlords Of Vancouver

This was originally posted to the Vancouver Craigslist. It is by someone known only as kxvng-2875427096@hous.craigslist.org and the original post got yanked, so I felt absolutely compelled to preserve this marvelous gem of satire on my blog.

Hope you enjoy it!

Dear landlords of Vancouver:

I know it’s difficult for you. You are all just hardworking people struggling to maintain your right to have someone else pay the mortgage, and trying to avoid the unfair situation of having your second home or investment property unoccupied for a month. I feel your pain, truly. However, there are a few things that I think might be helpful in your noble endeavour, and I’d like to pass them on in solidarity:

1. A closet is not a den. If it doesn’t have a window, a door, a wall, or more than ten square feet of space, it is not a den.

2. A den is not a bedroom. Even if your second, clearly demarcated room is so expansive as to be able to fit a table and chair, if it cannot fit a bed, it is not a second bedroom.

3. “Separate entrance” is not a selling feature of an apartment. If it does not have a separate entrance, it is not an apartment. Ditto “ceilings over 7 feet”, “full bathroom”, and “full kitchen.”

4. Burnaby is not Vancouver. It is not East Vancouver. It is not Commercial Drive, or Trout Lake. It is Burnaby. Coquitlam, Mayne Island, and Assmunch, Arizona are also not Vancouver. Most prospective tenants will clue in to this when you give them the address.

5. It’s logically impossible to be 5 minutes’ walk from Renfrew Station, *and* from Commercial Drive.

6. Granville Street is not “right next to” or “just west of” Main Street.

7. If your rental space is within ten feet of a major artery, like Broadway, 12th Avenue, or Kingsway, it is not quiet. Can’t hear what I’m saying? It is NOT QUIET.

8. “Cozy” and “small” and “cramped” all have different definitions, which might be helpful to review.

9. A basement suite is a basement suite. A garden level suite is a basement suite. A ground floor suite is a basement suite. An “almost above ground” ground floor suite is a basement suite.

10. Laminate flooring is not hardwood. Laminate is plastic. Hardwood is wood. Hence, hardwood.

11. You can have ONE damage deposit, and it is completely refundable. You can’t have two, and you can’t have a handful of nonrefundable cash to hold a place for 2 hours.

12. A “bathroom” is a place with a toilet, a sink, a shower and/or tub, *walls*, and *a door*. If you are tempted to call something that does not meet this definition a “bathroom”, take a moment to clarify in your ad that it is a toilet in the middle of the bedroom, or using more traditional phraseology, an “open pit latrine.”

13. If one cannot see the mountains/ocean or other advertised geographic features by looking out the window, the apartment does not have a “gorgeous view.” If one has to crane one’s body out the window and dangle precariously in order to try to see the horizon, it is not a “peek a boo” view of the North Shore. It is a latent lawsuit.

14. There is no such thing as “one mouse, that one time” Ditto cockroach or bedbug.

15. Landlords, I know you are very busy collecting money and trying to earn interest on it, and you barely have two cents to rub together in this harsh economic climate, but please know that it is not your tenants’ responsibility to paint or repair your rental space. This is part of your job, because you collect the rental income. It’s a new concept to you, I know, but should be fairly easy to remember if you consider the logic of it. When the happy day comes that your tenant owns her own living space, *then* she can do her own repairs and maintenance.

16. “Old” is not “heritage.” It is not even “character”, really. While the Vancouver Special style of housing arguably *forms* part of Vancouver’s heritage, it does not in any way meet the criteria for heritage designation and the attached rent premium.

17. Try to keep your word about showing times. If you make an appointment with prospective tenants, and then decide to rent the place to the first person with cash in hand, please use your phone skills to let your other prospective tenants know that they no longer have to take transit across the city to view your place.

18. No means no. If I have decided not to rent your poorly maintained, possibly “one-mouse” infested, heritage, gorgeous almost-top-floor basement suite, with two bedrooms and a den, with peek a boo views, just next to granville island at the quiet intersection of hastings and boundary, *please* do not contact me again by email or phone to persuade me that your rental suite is amazing. I am not looking for a new friend who collects rent, I am looking for a decent place to live.

sigh Coe there rap pee

If it’s Tuesday, this must be my big deal post therapy session diary entry, right?

Today’s session went quite well, actually. There was a bit of funny business at the beginning because I arrived a little early, but then discovered I really needed to pee, so I had to get the key from the receptionist, and it wouldn’t come back out of the lock, and then I could not get my zipper to go back up, and basically, it was all a comedy of minor errors fueled by my two needs : urinary relief, and not ever being even a little bit late.

But that all resolved itself, and the session began. I have to admit, I am finding my therapist’s slight hearing loss to be increasingly annoying to me. I have to repeat myself, louder and with exaggerated enunciation, quite often, and it really is a drag. When you are deeply intent on baring your soul and spilling your guts and sorting through all the fiddly little painful squidgy bits, it is very wearying to have to repeat your harrowing confessions.

The deep and irrational part of your brain can’t help but feel like this means the person is not really paying attention to what you are saying.

It doesn’t help, either, that his office has a lot of ambient noise because of the two enormous fish tanks. Plus tomorrow, he was making his own coffee via a French press, and so you had the noise of that percolating added to the mix, and he kept having to go check how that was going, so he would move further away from me periodically. And that’s also not good when you are slightly deaf and the room is full of burbling fish tank noises.

I like the fish, mind you. I especially like his enormous carp-like algae eater. It’s a lovely share of dark purple, and it’s easily twelve times the size of all the other fishies, so it makes for quite a striking visual presence in the tank.

But given the deficiencies of my therapist’s hear, I could do without the burbling of the filters.

Anyhow, aside from that, it was quite a fruitful session. We covered a wide range of things, and most importantly, we came up with an immediate and fruitful plan of action that should yield useful results and yet I felt was entirely and comfortably within my capabilities.

It goes like this. I had been talking about my desire to write my father a letter getting everything off my chest that I needed to get off my chest. I mentioned that I had tracked down an address that I thought was probably his, but I didn’t know for sure, and from there, we got into my problems with my siblings.

This is little complicated, but I will try to make it clear.

Basically, the logical way to get my father’s current address would be to email my three siblings and ask them. Surely one of them has it, right?

But here is the thing. If I do that, they are going to immediately suspect that I am not dropping him a letter just to say hello. They will recall the letter I sent Catherine a long while back, and the big ripple effects that had (that’s where I told Catherine that Dad has abused me when I was young, and she told Anne, Dave, and my mother) and think “Oh no, he wants to upset the applecart again, we better not give him that address. ”

It says something about my family dynamic that their response to the revelation of my early childhood sexual abuse was “wow, you really dropped a bombshell all of a sudden!” and not “you poor thing!”.

But then again, I am not supposed to exist, or at least, not exist in a way that bothers anyone.

In fact, preemptively, my brother told me, after that letter to Catherine, that if I had a similar letter for my mother (they live together) he would intercept it and destroy it rather than have my mother read it. Isn’t that just warm and fuzzy? Does not matter how much telling her might help me because I have absolutely no value. All that matters is what might effect him.

I told all this to my therapist, and after talking about it for a while, he helped me decide to send the email anyhow, which I did shortly after coming home. Very simple and neutral, just “Do any of you have Dad’s current mailing address? I want to write to him. ”

And now, I await their replies.

Best case scenario, all my dire, bitter predictions are for naught, they happily give me the needed info, none of the bad stuff even comes up, and they wish me luck. That would sure be nice.

But even if things go badly, I think it will be a good thing in the long run. There is a lot that needs to be said, and discussions that really need to be had if I am to stand a chance of recovering from mental illness before I die, and so if some kind of argument happens, that will probably do a great deal to clear the air.

It might not be peaceful and they might end up really mad at me, but nevertheless, it should prove fruitful. At least I will know where I stand with them, and how much they value me.

It will likely take them a while to reply, because they are all pretty busy people and do not check their email very often. So for now, I will try to put it out of my mind. I have done what I can to start the ball rolling. Whatever happens, happens.

It is not like they are a big part of my life right now anyhow. Just birthday and Xmas gifts, which admittedly help a fellow like me a lot, but still.

We were never all that close, you know?

We will see how this plays out.