Sir Fuzz-butt, The Sparkinator |
At o'dark-hundred this morning when Sparky and I headed out for his first walk of the day, I noticed a young woman standing outside the main entrance of the south tower in our complex. She was holding a charming, and judging by the size of his or her feet, a soon-to-be much larger, black puppy in her arms.
“I forgot my keys,” she explained.
December in Canada is dark and chilly. Luckily today’s
temperature was not the bone-freezing cold that we can get, but was too cold to be
stuck outside.
“My fob will get you inside the lobby, but I don’t
think it will work for the elevator,” I said, as Sparky and I crossed the
driveway to her building.
My electronic fob unlatched the main door, and we
continued across the lobby to the elevators hoping that maybe, just maybe, I
could activate the elevator for her floor.
December morning |
Nope! It wouldn’t open the stairway doors either, so she had to hang out in the lobby until another resident from her building arrived and activated the elevators. It’s the downside to living in a moderately secure complex. No electronic fob. No access.
It’s happened to me, and a few others.
“Do you know any of your neighbours? Someone that you
can call on the intercom, and ask for help?” I asked.
“Not really,” she said.
And that isn’t surprising in a city, even a small-ish
city of 40,000 residents. It’s easy to just nod a greeting and keep walking.
But, I’m a small-town girl at heart. Many of the
places that I have lived were less than 5000 residents and I knew enough people
that I could get whatever help I needed. Beatty St before condo conversion
Even when Lawrie and I lived in a
converted warehouse on Beatty Street in downtown Vancouver, we made a point of
getting to know the other residents. It started with a building-wide roaming
cocktail party that turned into close friendships that lasted for many years.
Close friends, Isla Mujeres |
Trish, Tina, and me, wine-touring |
Many people live on their own in this
complex, people of a variety of ages, and a variety of backgrounds. It’s nice
to know that some of those folks are watching out for me, and I am also
watching out for them.
Wherever you live, you should get to know the other folks living near you. You could make a lasting friendship.
Merry Christmas! Seasons Greeting! Happy New Year to all!
Lynda
Sparky sends his woofs!
Sparky, one of the main characters in my novels |