On Sunday, our painter came over for a final look at the house and to discuss colors and types of paint. After that, I worked in the yard, and in the evening, I had my weekly conversation with Lisa M. on the phone. I’m enjoying my “gardening” so much that by that evening, I had again decided absolutely to buy the house. I asked our realtor how long it would take for me to become its official owner, arrangements with my sisters aside (which should be simple), and she said only a week or so.
My parents had a whole gardening store’s worth of yard tools in the garage, which had its upsides and downsides. My sister said that every time Dad wanted to use a given thing, even just the lawn mower, he had to move a whole bunch of other stuff out of the way, like a Rubik’s Cube: If I move this bucket full of spare plumbing parts, I can get a foot closer to the air compressor, and so forth.
Most of those tools are gone, but my sister helped me pick out a basic collection of implements. I kept two small clippers, one with a curved blade and one with a straight blade. I used the former for several days and hesitated to try the other; the curved blade just looked more effective. In the name of science, I forced myself to try the others one day, and they are considerably better. They are noticeably more powerful and they make a much more satisfying snick-snick sound.
I have been using Google’s Gemini to identify plants to very good effect. These wonderful clippers had no brand name on them anywhere, but when I took a photo of them and asked AI what they were, I immediately learned that they are the Knipex Anvil Shear (model 94 55 200), and they are not even intended for gardening but rather to cut things like rubber, leather and hoses.
One of these days, I might even use them to cut hoses, as there is a whole system of interconnected garden hoses snaking almost entirely around the house, no doubt installed by my father.
So my antipathy toward AI data centers has cooled. I am now going to call the City of Ypsilanti and demand that they install one right in my back yard. Ypsilanti Township is still vigorously fighting one that the University of Michigan wants to build. I had mentioned being worried about a possible low-frequency hum, though I guess that is a well-known problem at this point and so they are devising other ways to cool the equipment, but it also finally occurred to me that I hear a hum all the time, anyway—from EMU’s heating plant, which is right smack across the street. It’s not that annoying throbbing vibrating hum, but there is a sound 24 hours a day.
Many parts of Eastern Michigan University’s campus are truly gorgeous. There are many lovely obviously very old buildings. However, the heating plant isn’t necessarily one of them. I had never thought it was desirable to have something like that in plain sight and had even wondered why it hadn’t caused my parents not to buy this house, but my sister lately pointed out that it is a total selling point as regards privacy: There aren’t peering human neighbors right across the way. (It had actually occurred to me that it could be good for safety. There is probably someone there all the time, should a mugger come along as I am pulling into my driveway in the dark.)
Delighted with Gemini’s success at identifying the Knipex shears, I went ahead and asked it if I should move to Ypsilanti. Its thoughts went on for several screens, but the lead paragraph was this, bold type Gemini’s: “Whether you should move from San Francisco to Ypsilanti depends heavily on whether you prioritize dramatic cost savings and a community-oriented college town lifestyle over a fast-paced, high-income global tech hub with perfect year-round weather.”
Well, when you put it that way …
It concluded by saying I would need to consider my own primary drivers, so it ultimately left me in the same boat as before. It clearly had very strong feelings about Ypsilanti being way more affordable, but that is not really true in my case. The property tax + two kinds of utilities + home and auto insurance almost exactly equal what I pay in San Francisco for rent + utilities, though of course there is the enormous difference between renting something and owning it, and of course the instability of being a renter, though I have been squatting in that exact spot for 28 years now.
San Francisco’s high prices and income inequality are well documented and far from new. Apparently that is about to become astronomically more pronounced because of an estimated 200 new AI billionaires. Is it horrible to live in a weird bubble with the ultra-ultra-ultra rich, who are almost all white, or is it nice to smirk that I get to live in a place designed to suit the ultra-ultra-ultra rich (a really nice place!) on a very modest annual salary, thanks to rent control?
A slight factor in this whole thing is whether my apartment building will be sold one of these days, though I am unlikely to be evicted, thanks to being old and having lived there for so long. The owner of the building died more than a year and a half ago. Her daughter, whom I like a lot, has not yet decided whether to keep the apartment building or not, and I am unfortunately not in the position to object to someone taking forever to make up their mind about something.
So, to recap: Sunday: Definitely buying the house.
But then Monday rolled around! On that day, my boss in San Francisco returned from a trip to Africa and a video popped up on our group chat of his extravagantly decorated office, with sparkling streamers and things covered in cheery polka-dotted wrapping paper and, all over his office, images of each of us represented as superheroes or musicians or what have you. There was a beautiful photo of our boss’s smiling face with this text: “There are three ways to ultimate success. The first way is to be kind. The second way is to be kind. The third way is to be kind.” Another image of our boss showed him dressed like Mr. Rogers and had the text “It’s a beautiful day in this neighborhood.” The one of me showed a heavy metal magazine featuring a cover story on Kiss with the center image replaced with my face. I texted the group that I could feel the love.
If the most important thing is love, how can I leave this remarkable group?
(But maybe it’s not! Maybe the most important thing is the eradication of weeds.)
I noticed that cold air was coming out of a ceiling vent in the kitchen even though it was below the temperature the air conditioning is set to, so now I am going through a whole thing with the Mitsubishi heat pump and the Ecobee smart thermostat, in particular the eco+ feature, which is synced with the utility (DTE). I will not bore you with the details. This has generated miles of notes and is not resolved, but, since the actual cooling seems to be working as desired, I told the vendor that if they want to sort this out after I return here in late July, that would be fine; that would give them time to undertake some research. I am definitely learning a few things myself.
I stayed up way too late Sunday night talking to Lisa M., and so did not wake up until 1 p.m. yesterday, when I saw the outpouring of love in my work group and saw that something was amiss with my Ecobee thermostat. The actual heat emergency hadn’t started yet—that was today at noon—but it was revving up. I went out to Arbor Farms and ACE hardware, and found the combination of heat and humidity to be nearly unbearable. Regarding today and tomorrow, The New York Times said, “Most of Wisconsin, Ohio, Michigan and Illinois will be under the service’s most extreme and rare warning level, reserved for long-lasting extreme heat that offers little to no relief at night.”
Because of that, I made sure to cut up my pile of garden clippings yesterday evening. Right after that, I created another huge pile of the same, but put it all in bags before I came inside. The final thing was to lie in the grass in the dark under a hawthorn tree for a bit, watching the fireflies flicker and the leaves flutter in the breeze. Some light-footed insect scrambled over my face, its little skittering legs going up one side, down the other, and off into the grass before I knew it.
Last night I had a series of bad dreams, including that I returned from a trip to find I had left a window wide open and that, while Duckworth was still there, Marvin was gone. Also that I was sitting next to someone high up who fell to his death on the concrete below. I had the presence of mind to cover my ears so as not to hear the horrible wet splat, but I could still hear the screams of the onlookers.
(Once upon a time, one of my sisters was meditating in the spacious atrium of a downtown San Francisco hotel, which was her custom so as to avoid having to go all the way back to where she lived in the Sunset neighborhood between work and evening plans. She heard a horrendous crash: Someone leaping to his death from a high-up floor.)