The doorbell rang at midnight. I was awake, heating up a late night ramen. It’s someone I haven’t seen for maybe 6 years. He announces himself by first name only but I suspect immediately he won’t be in a good way.
I was living alone last time he saw me, the dynamic is very different now. I have other people and cats to factor in. But he clearly needed a sleep. I let him in. Of course I did.
He’s skinny and very very twitchy. There’s a hospital tag still on him. I almost immediately sit him down and feed him most of my ramen. He’s monologuing but it isn’t making a lot of sense. “Do you need the sofa for a night?” “Oh God please.” “I’ve got flatmates now. They aren’t home but I should run it by them first.” I message them but they’re out. I am kinda partly hoping they’ll play bad cop here but they keep out of the decision making process entirely. So I make a call that he needs it tonight and put him to sleep on the sofa. Otherwise he’s gonna be on the street for a night – another night? He crashes like he hasn’t slept in weeks. He’s asleep before the light is out, like he’s just been switched off.
This place is a safe haven and always has been. I keep it that way and I like to be able to help people out. But… he’s really odd energetically. I don’t have a lot of experience with crystal meth but I have a feeling he’s tangled up with something along those lines. I don’t like the energy of it, whatever it is, at all. And it’s not fair on Brian and Maddy. They don’t know him either, and even though I know he’s harmless I don’t like him like this at all.
This morning was a Buddhist study group in my district. I’ve been avoiding going for weeks but I first met him at Rita’s in maybe 2016, chanting Nam Myo Ho Renge Kyo. Getting him there will kill two birds with one stone, in that it’ll get him out of the flat before he settles in and will send him to compassionate people who know him as well as I do. I don’t feel great about the sensation that I’m fobbing him off, but for me it’s about the drugs. One time I had a blazing row with someone who was about to do heroin in my living room, and I kicked them out. Believe it or not, I do actually have boundaries. They’re just … in a different place from many.
Now I’m about to run around the flat with sage. Feels odd to be put out by it all – twenty years ago that was just a normal Friday. But… I’m twenty years older now, I’ve got nice cats, respectful flatmates and slightly better calibrated boundaries.