i crashed hard this afternoon after yet another absurd day down here...
as
mentioned here repeatedly, the situation has been clearing up over the
weekend, although not decisively. and, while the smell seems to be gone
now, it may take a while for the apartment to clear out completely and
me to get my head back. i remain oozy, but am a little better than
yesterday (which was a little better than the day before). i am
convinced that something was fixed, at least, and believe it was a
consequence of my tactics to draw attention to the issue. if the issue
reappears, i will not hesitate to repeat.
but, what happened? i glossed over this in the vlog, but i'll be more detailed, here.
there
was rattling upstairs on friday afternoon. the smell became noticeable
on saturday morning; the headache hit before noon, and i fell asleep. i
opened the windows on saturday night and actually mostly left the heat
off (except when i was up to eat). the initial goal was to try and get
him to turn the heat back on upstairs; given that i believed that the
cause of the leak was turning the heat off the other day, getting him to
turn it back on would at least put him face to face with the device,
and have him see if he damaged anything. i sent the email out on sunday,
which explicitly pointed to the likelihood that something was knocked
loose on friday. it was not until monday morning that i gave up hope on him turning his heat back on, and turned mine up to 30.
late
on monday morning, i heard another rattling upstairs followed by the
liberal use of a spray bottle. about an hour later, a "gas inspector"
that looked a lot like the new property owner showed up in construction
gear. he walked around a little and concluded there was no sign of a gas
leak, but agreed, when pressed, that the fact that i've had the windows
open for several days would make it hard to get a good reading.
i
gave the guy upstairs a chance to be honest, but i didn't expect that
he'd take it. in the few years that i've been here, i've experienced
nothing but dishonesty from him. he wouldn't admit to why he wanted to
let dogs down here, for example. and, his own brother has asked me to
not give him checks because he, himself, doesn't trust him. if your own
brother does not trust you at 60-some years, there must be a serious
problem, right?
but, i've been clear - repeatedly - that i do not think that he can be held legally liable and ultimately
elevate responsibility elsewhere. the way you want to think of it is
like this: suppose you told a six year-old that you think he
accidentally broke the furnace. six is maybe a tad young, but you get
the point. if that six year-old is home alone, and you told them this
over email or phone, what would the six year-old do? well, first, it
would check to see if it could fix the situation, and then it would
destroy any evidence (such as spraying the area - and i don't actually
know if febreeze would mask natural gas). then, it would deny
culpability in any way possible by blaming others or making things up.
if you asked the six year old directly, the six year old would lie. if
eventually caught, the six year old would admit that the reason it lied
was that it didn't want to get in trouble.
now, this
might seem a little outlandish, but the evidence i've gathered around me
has led me to conclude that this is the psychology in front of me. i've
been operating this way for quite a while, now. i mean, you might ask
the reasonable question: if you think there's a gas leak upstairs, why
not just knock on the door? and, the answer is that the person that
opens the door is incapable of dealing with the situation in an honest
or adult manner, and needs to be directed from outside.
the
reason that i glossed over this is that - given the situation, more
broadly - it doesn't matter. i need to do what i did to get a reaction.
and, i got the reaction i wanted. hopefully, the experience is enough to
act as incentive for everybody to be more careful with the furnace.
as
mentioned, the gas guy looked a whole lot like the property owner.
again: i didn't ask questions (except when i did, and he shuffled
nervously). i mean, if he were to go to the absurd point of putting on
construction gear to try and convince me of something...
he
admitted his device couldn't pick much up in context, and instead tried
to blame the smell on the baseboards. i guess the solution is another
furnace, right? lol. i set this up to demonstrate that this idea does
not make sense. but, i wanted an analysis, and not an argument, so i
just let him walk out.
as mentioned: the smell (which, as has been the case previously, was localized in the bathroom) has lifted. they did something. they might not be telling
me what they did. but, i got them to do it. and, hopefully the threat
of expenses will have them behave more carefully in the future.
i'm
going to get something to eat. the vlogs should be done rendering by
then. and i should be back at it when the sun comes back up.