The $435 Bill for a Warm Hallway and Cold Hands
My fingers are currently the color of a cheap blueberry popsicle, clicking rhythmically against a keyboard that feels like it was harvested from a glacier. It is 2:15 PM on a Tuesday. I am sitting in my home office, which is essentially a repurposed walk-in closet with an identity crisis, and I am wearing a puffer vest over a wool sweater. The irony is not lost on me. As an online reputation manager, I spend 45 hours a week curating the perfect digital image for people who have far more money than sense, yet I cannot seem to curate a temperature in my own home that doesn’t require thermal leggings.
Behind me, the vent in the ceiling is sighing. It is a heavy, expensive sound-the sound of a forced-air furnace gasping for air as it tries to push conditioned heat through 125 feet of galvanized metal ductwork. I know that somewhere in this house, a hallway is perfectly comfortable. I know that the guest bedroom, which currently houses exactly zero humans and one very dusty exercise bike, is a balmy 75 degrees. I am paying for that bedroom to be a tropical paradise while I sit here, three rooms away, wondering if I can justify buying a heated mousepad.
I looked at the utility statement this morning: $435. That is a number that demands a certain level of comfort. It is a number that suggests I should be walking around
The $435 Bill for a Warm Hallway and Cold Hands Read More »