But breathing through it.
Crying too.
Sharing about it.
Letting it go.
Reminding myself that it’s not about me, but that, yes, oh yes, I do have rights.
And quite a lot more of them then I had even realized.
I got up early today, I showered, I prayed and read and wrote and drank my coffee and applied for a Grad Plus Student Loan, since the financial aid I was approved of for my PhD program is shy $3,000.
I got approved.
I don’t know how much that will mean, the school will package the loan for me, but I do know that it will be enough.
I feel quite sure of that.
So with my breath stuck somewhere high up in my chest, I left this morning to go to the San Francisco Tenant’s Union on Capp Street.
I got there five minutes before they were open and there were already four other people in line.
However!
Thanks to being proactive, I actually got to go first, since I had filled out the paperwork online, paid the membership fee, printed everything off and handed it over to the counselor.
“I’ll see you first,” he said and asked me what I needed to know.
I told him about my situation and I got back some straight quick answers.
The notice to leave the in-law is in fact, as I suspected, not legal.
It has to be in writing and it has to be for just cause, like I haven’t been paying rent, or I have trashed the place, or I’m doing something illegal.
No meth lab here.
Just me and my notebooks quietly coexisting next to the garage.
I explained that I didn’t have a signed lease.
“Doesn’t matter, she still has to give you a written notice, she still has to have just cause, and the reasons she’s given are not legally binding,” he continued.
I was relieved and also panicked.
“What do I do now?” I asked.
“Nothing, you stay put, you pay your next month’s rent,” he continued, “you don’t have to move out, just keep paying your rent and lay low.”
Ugh.
That sounds horrible, but doable.
I just hate the idea of living somewhere that I am not wanted.
And I realize that’s also a sort of victim attitude or perhaps a martyr attitude.
Neither of which are very sexy in my opinion.
I asked about relocation money and he said I wasn’t to that stage yet, but that I could get there.
I said what if she raised the rent?
He said, and my jaw dropped, “you have rent control, there is only so much she can raise it, has she raised it since you moved in?”
I said yes, told him the amount, and he said, “that’s too much, here’s the percentage that she’s allowed to raise it, you could sue for back overpaid rent retroactive three years.”
Holy shit.
I had no idea about that.
I chatted with my best friend about it, I’m a bit stupid with math, I’ll write you a Shakespearean sonnet in ten minutes, but maths, bah, numerological dyslexia strikes again, and asked what the raise would have been and figured out that it was raised $30 too high.
I mean it’s not a ton over, but I could reasonably say that another raise in rent is out of the question with that knowledge.
What I basically was told was you don’t have to move, you don’t need to move, make her do the work and get everything in writing.
It feels really big and scary and unpleasant.
I suspect though, that it will be a couple of uncomfortable conversations.
She’s not going to hurt me, she’s not going to change the locks on the house, I really actually can’t see that happening.
It will be uncomfortable conversations, and though I’m not happy about that, I can have them and knowing what my rights are really feels good.
Especially just knowing that I have more time to find a place.
I still intend on moving out, it doesn’t seem like this is a good home for me, it’s been what I needed for this phase of my development, but it is time to move on.
I think what the counselor gave me, though, is time.
Time to find the right situation, time to make sure that I am not desperately clawing at unreasonable housing situations, rent that I can’t afford, or room mates that I’m not really compatible with.
I sense that having the awareness that I don’t actually have to more out in 90 days will help me be more expansive.
I hope anyway.
I am still scared and uncomfortable and the crap its stirring up is big, but I am also a capable adult able to have conversations and find solutions.
I can take this to a mediator if necessary.
Though I suspect that it won’t need to go that far.
I think a buy out is reasonable, especially in this market.
This market is crazy, it still stuns me at times, but I have lived here for almost sixteen years, I can’t imagine being anywhere else.
This is home, not necessarily this little in-law, but San Francisco.
So tonight I will practice invisioning what I want.
I will imagine a big room, hard wood floors, living in a house where I probably have roommates, but I also have access to an entire house, I imagine space and sunlight.
Laundry.
Parking.
It can happen.
I know it.
I just do.
I know it’s out there and I’m ready to embrace the next thing.
I really am.
I can be scared and I can still do this.
“Men of faith have courage.”
Courage is not the absence of fear.
It is walking through the fear, it is doing the actions needed despite the fear.
I am brave.
I will walk through this.
Into the bright sunight of a brand new home.
I just will.