Let me tell you
the story of how a mouse can make you homeless.
Back in 2015 I was living in Thanet with my 14-month-old baby and my 6-year-old daughter. I was also hosting my mother and my sister with her son. So, my kids and I were sleeping in the living room on a mattress on the floor. One night, while I was breastfeeding, I heard a squeaky noise and I saw it staring at me. I jumped up, with the baby still hanging from my breasts, and started googling ‘how to get rid of a mouse.’ Apparently, the options are quite limited and ineffective, with a crawling baby who puts everything in his mouth.
The next day I
was informed by a local friend that the area has issues with mice. Some years
ago, there was a fire at an abandoned storage house and mice spread everywhere
around. I guess that explained why our property was the only one we could find the
year before, after three months of actively looking for a flat, while being
hosted by my sister’s British partner. All other properties wanted a UK based
guarantor, with a high income. That was impossible since we had just arrived in
the country. I was even quite surprised how easy it was to get that flat. Well,
my sister was not so surprised to be honest.
‘All the
immigrants live there. Maybe you should keep looking. Although... I think you’ve
stayed here way too long already and you can’t still be here when the baby comes.
I hope you understand that...’
‘I thought that’s
what we are here. Immigrants. I can’t afford to be picky at the moment. I am
due next month.’
‘Mum, can’t we
find a house near these pink trees, on the way to the park?’ My daughter asked.
‘No sweetie. This
is a very posh area. We can’t afford to stay there.’
When I asked for
help from the Council, they offered to keep my kids in the country and send me
back to Greece. (Thank you very little.)
Yes, I was
grateful for my flat. I could see the sea on one side if I stretched my neck
out of the window and I could see the moon from my living room. OK, the lady
downstairs was a bit... how can I put it nicely? As if she had never seen kids
before. She kept knocking on our door to be quiet whenever my kids were
playing. But inside that living room my son was born. I loved it. It was mine.
We were finally settled, or so I thought till that mouse came to mock my sense
of stability.
The house hunting
started again. Same story. Still no guarantors. Still no fairy godmother. Till
one day my mother came home with a new friend. She had found her in the
neighbourhood. Heard her speaking Greek on the phone and approached her. She
came full of promises. She said that if we gave her some money to secure a
house, she will find us a property. My mother gave her £250, and she showed us
a beautiful flat, in front of the seaside. She said she knew the estate agents
and she would arrange everything. She even gave us a moving date. My current
flat agency said that if we wanted our deposit back, we would have to let them
know a month before that we were leaving. So, we gave our notice.
The weeks passed
and we started packing. Mum thanked God for that miracle. It was years since the
last time I ever believed in a God. But I was grateful to the Universe.
‘Don’t worry
about a thing. I will take care of everything. You just prepare your stuff and
be ready for the moving day. We have to help each other when we are in a
foreign country. You were lucky to find me. I’m sure it was because of your
mother’s faith.’
The lady said that
and we believed her. I admit something didn’t feel right, but I thought I couldn’t
afford to not believe her. I could still hear the mouse every night. I couldn’t
get the thought out of my head (when the baby was waking up to be fed) of it eating
our ears, in the middle of the night. So, we just kept packing.
One week before
the moving day the truth was revealed. Apparently, it wasn’t really the mouse
that would make us homeless. It wasn’t the Council that wanted to keep my
babies and send me back. It was our compatriot who would send us to the streets.
The new estate agents asked us for a guarantor. No, they did not know the lady
in person. Yes, they had already told her from the beginning that they want a
guarantor. No, they couldn’t do any exemptions.
My mum went to
the Greek community priest.
‘Why didn’t you
consult with me first Maria?’ The priest said to my mother. ‘That lady is well
known to the community for finding ways to scam people. I’m afraid there is
nothing I can do now.’
So, the miracle
was a scam. God was a scam. As for us? We were naive, and about to be eaten by
a mouse in our sleep.
I went to my
flat’s agency to tell them that we were cancelling our departure.
‘You can’t do
that. You signed a paper that you will leave. We have rented the place already
to someone else. You need to go in a week.’
‘But...’
‘The most that I
can do is give you another week.’
At work that day
I was crying my eyes out. I was working in a school as a cleaner. I had my most
depressing music on my headphones and was avoiding everyone, so they wouldn’t
see my red eyes. How could I be so stupid? How did I manage to make us
homeless? It was all my fault. I was the one responsible and no one else. I and
my need to believe. As if I wasn’t supposed to be over with all that. Nietzsche
was clear. God was dead. It didn’t matter whether we killed him or he never
existed. He was dead and I was stupid.
Rubbing the
nursery’s toilet tiles, with eyes blurry from tears after a cover of ‘Where is
my mind’ by Puddles Pity Party, my phone played his ‘All The Small Things’
cover.
‘Say it ain’t
so. I will not go. Turn the lights off. Carry me home...’
‘That’s what I
need. Someone to carry me to a home. Away from mice. Away from scams’
I said out loud
to no one.
‘It’s a shame
that miracles are a scam. I could really use one now. I won’t even have tiles
of my own to clean next week, or a bed, or even a mouse...’
Right then I
remembered the ‘law of attraction.’ A new-age idea that Rudolf, an old friend, spoke
to me about many years ago. I thought I was as naive as my mother. A terrifying
thought indeed. More terrifying than the mouse. More than homelessness.
But what if my
mother and Rudolf had a point? What if sometimes faith is the only option? No.
There is no Father Christmas. There is no hope. Hope was just the last evil
left in Pandora’s Box. Hope is actually the easiest way to end up homeless.
But what are the
options when... there is no option?
‘Hope.’ I heard
me whisper. ‘Hmm.’
Well, I suppose
at this point a last faith experiment won’t hurt. What did Rudolf say?
Something about gratitude.
‘Don’t just ask.
Change your concept of faith. Don’t wait for what you need. Convince your brain
that you already have it.’
‘That’s totally
crazy’ I shouted in the empty bathroom.
Well. I’ll definitely
go crazy if we end up in the streets, I thought. I stopped my depressing
playlist and put ‘What a wonderful world’ on repeat. It really sounded ironic
in the beginning. But I love this song and soon I found myself humming it. My
tears stopped. While I kept rubbing the tiles, I made myself believe they were
my tiles. The tiles from a new house. My house. I kept rubbing and humming and
dreaming.
When I finished
the nursery, I went to change the water in my bucket to go to the other
classrooms. In the corridor, I met the only colleague that I was OK with meeting.
Lucy, a sweet girl who I spoke to sometimes during break times.
‘You alright?’ she
asked mechanically, as she was dragging the hoover in the big corridor.
‘Not really.’ I
replied, with eyes still red.
‘What happened
sweetie?’
‘We are about to become
homeless in a fortnight.’
I briefly
explained everything to her. The mouse. The Greek scam lady. The monthly notice
that we couldn’t take back.
‘Hmm. I might be
able to help actually. I have a childhood friend that is renting a property
next to my father’s house. I also live near there. Let me get back to you tomorrow.
Don’t worry. We’ll find a solution.’
‘...’
I was astonished.
It didn’t take half an hour for the gratitude ‘spell’ to have worked. No. That
seemed too good to be true. It can’t be true. I did experiment with
visualisation when Rudolf first mentioned the law of attraction and no miracles
happened then. Why would it work this time?
Because now I
really need it? Because this time I managed to stop my self-pity thoughts for a
while? Because last time I was asking and now I was actually visualizing? Because
now there is no other option?
I went back home
and told my family the good news.
‘What good news?
This is no news at all. Just another promise. Actually, a much vaguer one than
mum’s scam miracle was.’ My sister said.
I couldn’t sleep
at all that night. By the next afternoon, when I went to work, I was exhausted
by sleeplessness, anxiety, and the fight I had all night with myself and my
faith.
The next day at
work Lucy said that she had spoken to with her neighbour and he was ok to rent
the house to us. It was actually happening. I couldn’t believe it.
The day after
that Lucy helped me clean the house. Yes, it was a house, not a flat. With a nice
yard, and parking. Not just that, but the tiles were black and white chessboard, my favorite kind of tiles. Plus,
Lucy was nearby.
Soon we were finally settled. The winter came and
passed and then the spring started to bloom, and we started exploring the area.
‘Mum look.’
‘What?’
‘Look.’
‘I’m looking. I see a roundabout. What about
it?’
‘Don’t you see?’
‘I don’t understand.’
‘It’s the pink flowers. Remember?’
It was the pink-flower-trees. Just because we
were new to the area, I didn’t realize all these months (what? I had too much
in my mind to google-map, ok?) that we were living just a block away from these
trees. The ones that I had told my daughter about two years ago that were ‘too
posh’ for us. Rudolf’s visualization-with-gratitude and Lucy had brought us
where my daughter had dreamed to be. In a house with the kitchen tiles that I had
always dreamed of having.
‘What do I make of all this and faith?’ I asked
one of the trees hugging it as tight as I could, and then I kissed it. I was
going to hug these trees and be grateful every day for as long as we stayed there.
Maybe faith and hope are not the way. Maybe you can’t ask for a miracle. Maybe you have to create it yourself. With gratitude and a bit of madness. Convincing yourself you already have it. Maybe it works only when you really need it. Maybe it was just luck.
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