I was excited to move into the apartment on Yotzonot. It was in the coveted east side of Bloomington and just blocks from where my children grew up on Nicki Drive. Yotzonot comes from the Mayan word meaning place of well being or prosperity and it was certainly that for me.
The apartment had nine foot ceilings which makes a place feel much more spacious to begin with. It really only had a living room with a galley kitchen off the end of it, a bedroom and a bathroom, but the closets were big and spacious and there was an abundance of cabinets in the kitchen and bathroom. I was on the first floor of a tan brick building that had apartments built around it and back to back with a sidewalk running three fourths of the way around and a large parking lot right beside it. There was a concrete patio area in front of every apartment. I put my little blue bistro table and chairs and a blooming plant on mine.
I experimented with beds here, trying first my queen size one, then several day bed styles with mattresses that didn't work for me. I finally decided on a twin memory foam bed on a twelve inch metal frame and later bought a XL twin bed on a sixteen inch frame. Since they served as both couches and beds I put one in each room.
The kitchen was very convenient with dishwasher, stacked washer/dryer, and a very large peninsula that I could use for so many different things.
I still volunteered at the elementary school library. I began painting with the acrylics Andy gave me for Christmas. He gave me a keyboard another year that I could play with headphones any time of the day or night. I continued writing My Thots and spent quite a bit of time with the people from Women Wine and Words.
I also began working with miniature doll furniture with a passion here, trying out different ways of displaying it in dollhouses. I had quite a collection of antique replica furniture that was so beautiful. If I had had a house I would have decorated it like I did those dollhouses with Victorian beds and dressers and even a tiny roll top desk. At Christmas I had a tiny tree with lights and little bitty presents wrapped underneath it.
I began my adventures with aging here. Starting out with Bromenn medical and ending up with Bloomington Primary Care, who I thought were very good and easily accessed. I have type two diabetes and stage four kidney disease so I also had to have a kidney doctor. Mine was Dr. Sultan, a tall very distinguished looking young Indian doctor who was easy to talk to. I liked him.
Becky was dating Bryan and they, along with his son, helped me move in. Bryan played men's baseball and he also played in several old fashioned and old tyme baseball leagues that I enjoyed watching with Becky when he played in town. I was sad to see Becky and Bryan move, but happy that they would have better futures in the Phoenix area. Becky had lived in Bloomington all her life so it was a big step to move so far away into such a large city, but I was proud of the way she dealt with it and it has worked out great for them.
Bobby came and stayed with me when his class had their reunion and that was fun too. He played his guitar and sang for me. We went around to all the places where we lived while he was growing up and visited Miller Park where his friend, Joel, has a huge art piece on display.
I began having Christmas dinners with Brooke and Tiffany and Tyler which was fun too.
I was able to get all the vaccines for Covid and survived that, but that was the end of volunteering in the school library. Schools were closed for a while and even after they opened we couldn't allow them to share books. I mostly stayed in my apartment during the quarantine. Becky would come over and we would sit on the patio ten feet apart and talk, or a couple of times we took picnics to Fairview Park and ate at different ends of one of the picnic tables.
My life here was busy and settled and then I made a comment on Facebook on a page claiming to be Simon Baker, an actor I am very fond of. At first it was just casual back and forth stuff like you might expect from an actor being nice to a fan. Later we began to talk about more things and he asked if I wanted to switch to Telegram which would be more private. I guess I should have known better and Bobby tried to warn me, but this is when things started to go wrong.
I mean they didn't feel wrong. They felt very right! He would text me in Australian time at night and little by little our conversations became more personal. We talked about our families and his work and sometimes his life. It seemed genuine and I truly enjoyed it. When it started to become more personal I got leery and blocked him, but I missed him so much. I became ill and my doctor couldn't figure out what was wrong. We did blood tests, and ekgs. We even did a cat scan. Finally it dawned on me that I was just heart sick and missing his conversations so much, so I reconnected. When that first happened he video called me out of the blue and I could see him, but the sound kept cutting out and it was a garbled mess. Yet I really believed I had talked to him.
Finally he began saying that since his divorce was final we should get together and that he was coming to the states and we should meet. We set a date. That day I had a manicure and pedicure in anticipation. I bought a lovely outfit and waited for his to come get me, but that never happened. Hours later he texted that they had arrived in Los Angeles and his assistant had been picked up by immigration for some kind of passport violation. He claimed he was trying to work things out, but his money was tied up because it was in Australia. Again I should have known better. Simon Baker basically raised his children here in the US, but I ended up sending this person money and that was the start of all kinds of promises and plans that cost me a fortune. He sent me beautiful flowers and a cute teddy bear. He sent me candy and pictures of the house we would live in when he finally got things situated. He made plans for us to spend the weekend together at a nearby place that he claimed had to be kept secret because of security concerns. We had "our" song, which was Ed Sheeran's Perfect. There was always something wonderful coming up and lots of loving words and promises, but something always happened. By the time I came to my senses I had given him my entire 401k! My bank dropped my account of twenty five years when I began depositing such large amounts in my checking account and then withdrawing them. Of course I had a certified check for over two hundred thousand dollars we were going to deposit the moment his plane landed here, but when my new bank checked it out, it was worthless! I had been scammed.
It was the most glorious five months of my life followed by a broken heart because I had really believed we were in love. I was in love, but with an idea not the real man and now I had no money for emergencies and no longer got dividends from my money every month to live on. When my bank dropped me they gave me a check for twenty five hundred dollars that closed my account and wouldn't let me cash it at their bank! I went to another bank who accepted the check, but wouldn't let me touch it for three weeks. My direct deposit bills began bouncing even though I had the money. It was a mess!
I didn't even have enough money to open an account somewhere else until my sister loaned me $150 so I could go to Morton Hometown Clock Tower Bank. They were the ones who really helped me. They made copies of all the money I had wired or Bitcoin interactions I had made and helped me go to the police to file a report. I even filed with the FBI online and talked to the Illinois Department that handles scams. The truth was I would never see that money again.
I did actually text with the real Simon Baker and he put a paragraph on his Instagram account warning people about people using his name to get money. He said he would never ask anyone for money for any reason. He didn't need to. He asked his people to see if they could help me, but in the end they couldn't either. We texted a few more times politely and that was the end.
Without my extra money every month and with my rent going up I knew I could not stay in this apartment. My daughter suggested I go back to work. I looked around for jobs that I thought I could do. I was walking five miles a day and I was at my lowest weight in forty years, but I was still almost 74 years old. I probably would never have tried going back to work, but there was an opening at Katie's Kids Learning Center and their philosophy was basically the same as mine. I applied and got the job as a part time teacher's assistant. It was perfect! The kids ate two meals a day there and it was all real food that was carefully chosen from reputable places and cooked on site. They used real plates and glasses and silverware and ate at small round tables of about five with an adult at each table. The ratio of adults to kid was four or less per teacher when I started and could not go over 18 children with 4 adults in our room. They had a fantastic play yard with climbing equipment, swings and even a porch swing for the 3-5 year olds and another one geared for infants and toddlers next to it. Behind this playground was a pond with geese and swans! Inside, our rooms had a trampoline, a cozy couch thinking and reading corner, a floor area for movement or building with different kinds of blocks, or any open play actually, and tables for puzzles, coloring, drawing, whatever else there was. The children were encouraged to follow their interests and we supported them. We had two bathrooms with Dutch doors so the children were always visible to us and the staff was amazing. In my room there was me, a fourth year elementary education major, a two year early childhood teacher and a fully accredited and experienced full time teacher at all times.
The only problem for me turned out to be my difficulty getting up and down off the floor. I could sit in the tiny chairs and hold three children on my lap or next to me on the couch and help set the tables at mealtime, or clear them, but it turned out to be really hard on my back. Then one of our students caught Covid and we didn't know he was sick until nap time. Two days later I came down with Covid on Christmas Eve in spite of all the vaccines.
For weeks all I could do was move from my bed to my chair and blow my nose. I was very very sick and because of my kidneys I could not take the medicine that was supposed to make it easier. I missed weeks of work and ultimately had to quit.
Now I was right back where I had started nine months ago. My rent would go up in July. Significantly. I was weak, fragile and at a loss.
My sister and her daughter-in-law, Lakeisha, found an apartment building in Taylorville, near where they lived. It was for people over 52 with limited incomes. Basically you paid a portion of your total income to live there. I applied and got my name on the waiting list. The problem was money. I couldn't pay their rent and down payment while still paying rent in Bloomington, so the dates had to connect just right. And they did!
That along with a very generous check from my friends, John and Connie, made it possible for me to move one more time. I had lived on Yotzonot for seven years, the longest times I have ever lived anywhere except Nicki Drive. Moving was a necessity, but it was hard. I had to give up everything I loved in Bloomington-Normal after living there for nearly fifty years. The things I miss the most are my Women Wine and Word friends, our coffees, our games, and our walks. I also miss the good places to eat out in that area, but there is a reason for every move.