Don't Let Me Die In A Motel 6 or One Woman's Struggle Through The Great Recession (14 page)

BOOK: Don't Let Me Die In A Motel 6 or One Woman's Struggle Through The Great Recession
10.88Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

A question I’d often pondered:
what was the difference
between
feudalism and
U.S. capitalism?
As a serf, you
had a job for life
; as an employee, you
had the “Work
At Will” clause, which meant
you could be
shit-
canned
at anyone’s will
.
Serfdom
was probably preferable, since you
didn’t have to deal with
sterile
state agencies like this one
: s
creaming children, wasted
time
.
I
stepped into
my
outlaw’s
truck.
Christ, I was tired.

The depression that had been trailing me
hitched a
permanent
ride, and no amount of Paxil could
dispel it
.
I had always been prone to black moods –
can you tell
?
– but
since I’d gone on SSRI

s
, a numbness had
replaced the sadness,
and that was OK
by
me
.
Now
,
m
y
anesthetized
self
tore away in strips,
leaving
only
panic
.

I started to feel worthless.
No
one
wanted me, after all
.
Was I good enough?
Did I
even
have any skills?
Was I kidding myself that at fifty, I was still
viable
in the workforce
?
There were no Banks
left
to work at
– they were either gone or gorging at Uncle Sam’s trough.
There were no studio jobs –
the industry
was
closed tighter than
Rupert Murdoch’s
asshole
.
I wouldn't have minded
a temporary slot
– making latt
é
s at Starbucks; taking inventory at Target – but these jobs, too, were un
attainable
, with lines of hundreds round the block, fray
ing suits on aging bodies, pain
etched
on once-happy
faces.

For once, I couldn't thin
k my way out of
this impasse
--
invent
some
clever
plan that would make
everything
right.
I started to fantasize about
crime:
could I
become the Bernie Madoff of wire fraud
?
Episodes of
American Greed
reran
in my
head
,
but
always with
the same finale: jail.
Then
came the
more insidious thoughts:  of suicide.

I hadn’t
considered this since my
twenties
,
when I’d been
bouncing off the ceiling at Fox.
But
now, in the dark
days of November ’09
, s
pent lying on
my
inflatable bed
, sending
résumés
into an Intervoid
where keyword
s were currency and
replies were almost quaint
,
my DSM took a plunge: toward
suicidal ideation
.

Was there any
way
that was truly painless?
You
could
run
your car
in a closed garage, but that would take an hour:
besides, I didn’t have a garage.
You could light an indoor Hibachi and go out on a cloud of
BBQ
, but that might blow up the block
.
You could jump off a building in
defiant
flight
, but
what if you landed on someone? Or God forbid,
in this town, dented a Mercedes
?

What about guns, America’s pastime?
I had once owned a Ruger
revolver

a
.
38
/.357, double-action,
six-inch barrel
– but Nigel, being British, had made me
give it up
.
Still,
blowing your brains out could
not
be
construed
as
painless.
What about a barrel in the mouth?
Something
told
me that would be painful
too
, and pain, as we know,
hurts.

My black thoughts of self-harm rolled th
emselves into a ball, colliding
and
adhering to
an even darker mass
:
raw
hatred
of
my
sister
.
Where was
s
he,
you ask,
Dear Reader, while I was pl
otting
my end,
filing for food stamps
,
and shambling
toward
certain homelessness?

As I said,
s
he’d paid for the bankr
uptcy; allowed me to
stay in
her home
for the non-extendable
eight
week stint
.
In the past,
to help pay credit cards,
s
he
had
given me money, and for that I was
certainly
grateful.
But
s
he’d decided, in October, that
s
he wanted to go
off
and think about our relationship.
For the first time in h
er
life,
s
he
actually
saw a therapist.
Ostensibly
, I’d driven h
er
to it.

The problem with her
absenc
e,
and
its
concomitant
silence
, is that it came
just
as my life
blew up
.
I had fantasies, daylight dreams, where I shot myself on h
er
front lawn, a sign hanging from my neck:
“Don’t Be A Victim.”

EXT. WEALTHY NEIGHBORHOOD

DAY

A
GUN
SHOT RINGS OUT

People POUR OUT
of various mansions, the architecture eclectic.

Rich Neighbor #1

There’s a fat woman lying on the Goldstein’s grass.

 

Gardener #1

Ella está muerta.
(She’s dead)

 

Rich Neighbor #2

Oh, that’s too bad. Can they call someone?

 

Nanny #1

They say that’s the sister.

 

Rich Neighbor #2

What an appallingly dented truck!

 

Rachel’s Maid

(knowingly)

She hasn’t made a payment in months.

 

All

(
together
)

Tsk, tsk. . .

 

I started to plan my own funeral.
Mentally counting, I figured I would have
a crowd
of eighty, from all parts of the country:
California,
Arizona, Nevada,
New Mexico,
New Hampshire
,
Washington.
My in-laws from England
might even
fly in.

The service
would be held at Hillside,
next
to Al Jolson’s
monument.
As with Jolie, there would
be a mosaic
of Moses
propped
above my tomb. Harold
Schulweis would
preside
since
he was
a noted
rabbi and technical expert for
The Simpsons
.
My
second
cousin,
a
prominent Congressman
’s wife
, would make a poignant speech.
There would be no tears – only jokes.

The USC Marching B
and would escort my coffin gravesi
de
, and Rachel – known for
elaborate parties
– would have my face lasered on M&M’s,
as she’d done for my
nephew’s Bar Mitzvah.
Rachel would sing, in her Streisandish voice, “The Way She Makes Me Feel.”
Jay
the cantor would
recite Kaddish
, and
doves
would be thrown to the sky.
In other words, nothing
fancy
:
just a simple, tasteful
affair.

17176 ESCALON DRIVE

 

Things only got worse.
Some days, I would sleep until five (P.M.), narcotized by the heaviness creeping over me.
I would rail that Jerry’s Deli
was no longer open all night so
that
I coul
d get a bagel and cream cheese.
One
evening
– for some reason – Aurora
had
locked me out
.
I drove to an Internet c
afé
and actually sent the following email to
a
contact at
Megalith
Pictures:

Dear Ellie
:

I see that you've posted the
Manager’s
job, and I know that the intent is to promote from within.
I just wanted to put this before you:

Since being laid off from
WaMu
and
Vectron
this year, I now have all of $150.00 in this world.
Unemployment is a whopping $
180
/week.
I have no health insurance, car insurance, phone

nothing.
I can't pay rent and I can't support my 14 year old daughter.
Call me the poster girl for the New Depression.

The other people at
Megalith
have jobs and a semblance of something.
Honestly, I have gone from making $110,000.00 last year to virtually nothing.
It wasn't from profligate spending, but
supporting
an ex-spouse
(
Ed’s Note:
I wish!)
in Seattle.

I am a really smart, skilled person

ask
Tom
at Fox.
I know
distribution, IT
, the trial
balance

all of it.

Being a Jew from Encino South, I never thought I would end up h
ere, but trust me Ellie
, it can happen to any of us.

Thank You,

Amy

 

These
are the depths to which I
s
unk
,
swimming by the side of monsters
along the
Marianas Trench
.
Pride meant nothing.
Dignity
was passé.
The only
thing that mattered was
getting
a job – any job – so I
didn’t end up
at
the Post O
ffice with the crazy lady
in the wheelchair
, drunkenly begging for change.

Believe it or not, I scored
an interview from that email.
A real,
face-to-face
interview where I showed up at
Megalith
Pictures on
the
lot where I used to
work.
I
entered
my old building.
I had
n’t been here since
1990
,
but
the
floor tile was still the same.
It
was the day
before Thanksgiving, when even s
tudio
masters
allow
drones to leave early.
So the fact that
they would see me

at
4
P.M., no less

was
encouraging.

Other books

Holding the Zero by Seymour, Gerald
Angel by Elizabeth Taylor
Slipknot by Priscilla Masters
Absorbed by Crowe, Penelope
Us by Nicholls, David
The Roguish Miss Penn by Emily Hendrickson
Home to Stay by Terri Osburn