Unfortunately, to get into my BA program, I have to have two 2000-level English courses, and my college only OFFERS two 2000-level English courses. Also, finals are in like three weeks, I might be able to survive FB that long.
PhoeneciaThe Merchant of EsterportSomewhere in Attica
I hate the fact that it's snowing right now. It's April. What happened to the nice spring weather we were having up here just a few days ago? I want it back. It's like the seasons skip straight from winter to summer.
0
AngweI'm the dog that ate yr birthday cakeBedford, VA
It went from hail to being 80 out here in two days.
1
SeirSeein' All the ThingsGetting high off your emotion
Agree.
It was snowing two weeks ago here in Maryland and NOW IT'S 90 DEGREES OUT.
I have to go to the hospital to get an ultrasound for appendicitis tomorrow. I called into work yesterday because I woke up with a fever, vomiting, pain in my stomach and kidneys. I also haven't slept very well the past few days. Anyway, while this all sucks my rage is mostly with my job's call-out policy. I have a doctor's note for both days that I've missed and an order from my doctor saying I cannot go back to work until after my ultrasound tomorrow. I called and went through the proper channels to be told that doctor's note or not the absence against me still counts unless I can get my shift covered. I've called everyone not already scheduled to be abruptly turned down. Feeling really overwhelmed, annoyed, and frustrated.
"To be awkward or unkempt, to talk or move wrongly is to be a dangerous giant, a destroyer of worlds...any accurately improper move can poke through the thin sleeve of immediate reality." - Erving Goffman
Oh my God the bugs stack up by the day, it's killing me...Crashes whenever I try to use the reconnect button after like...an hour of not being connected. Loses everything I hadn't saved. Doesn't log in HTML properly, and I can't get certain table functions working, hnnngh.
Arbre-Today at 7:27 PM
You're a vindictive lil unicorn ---------------------------
Lartus-Today at 7:16 PM
oh wait, toz is famous
Karhast-Today at 7:01 PM
You're a singularity of fucking awfulness Toz
--------------------------- Didi's voice resonates across the land, "Yay tox."
---------------------------
Ictinus — 11/01/2021
Block Toz
---------------------------
lim — Today at 10:38 PM
you disgust me
---------------------------
(Web): Bryn says, "Toz is why we can't have nice things."
@meyvitch - I had this problem one time, when our crackhead neighbors were evicted and the landlord left all their shit in the hallway.
Take every bit of anything that you own that can be stuffed into a washing machine, and wash everything you own. Pillow cases, drapes, washcloths, everything. Dry it all, on highest heat setting, for like x2 or x3 normal cycles. People claim you can do all sorts of remedies, they are wrong. They die from heat, or one type of poison. Your options are fumigation if you get an infestation in your new place, which isn't cheap, or quick, or easy. You can get an exterminator to spray, usually takes anywhere from 3-5 treatments over an extended period of time. Or you kill them with heat. They can lie dormant for years, literally.
I ended up suing the landlord, my lawyer smoked his sorry ass in court, and he paid for my first month's rent and deposit on my new place, as well as a few hundred dollars for the clothes I had to toss out, and I STILL lost far more money than I got four months after I was forced to move. Hell, I had a really nice 3 piece two button black suit that alone cost what he gave me aside from the rent/deposit for the new place.
tl;dr - My advice: Be extremely thorough. You will know if you have them, their bite pattern is typically 2-3 bites in a linear direction.
I could link two dozen rage posts from the old forums about my six-month bedbug experience, as well one research essay and two powerpoint presentations for speeches about the devil-bugs if you would like.
In short, though, Alastair's right - they have to be in temperatures above 120 degrees Fahrenheit for at least an hour. The only other -reliable- cure is DDT... which is illegal.
Thing is, we used concrete powder on my floor after thanksgiving and all over the rest of the apt and vacated for a week. This is the first bug I found since then. I had them last fall, so I know what the adults look like (and haven't seen any before now) and so I'm just freaking out because I can't ensure that there's absolutely no baby bugs living with us and sticking to the stuff I'm planning to move over.
...dormant for years???
Also, I drycleaned my blankets last winter, got rid of my mattress and boxspring, sleep on an air-mattress (they won't live on rubber) and a lot of my stuff has been in plastic see-through bins and space bags ever since (with no intention of unsealing the contents until a full year is up to make sure they starve and suffocate)
If it was just me in the new place, I'd fumigate in a heartbeat. Hell, I'd cross my t's but fumigating the new place too ahead of time. But I'm moving into a house with the dude who already lives there and owns it. I don't want to have to explain to him that I used to have bedbugs and moved in knowing I might take them with me. I'm supposed to be out of here in a week and a half, it's not enough time!
"Little pig, little pig, let me in, let me in. You look tasty and smell like bacon." *LICKLICKLICK*
Well, while they will not live on rubber, they will live in any little cracks and crevices anywhere. In between moulding and the floor, in the stitching of your mattresses. So if you have one of the velour topped air beds, I don't know that I'd be entirely trusting on that one. The best thing you can really do is heat the hell out of them with that dryer man. Bag any/everything you can find that could potentially be contaminated in thick trash bags, with the top facing up as well. I know that allegedly diatomaceous(sp?) earth is supposed to help, but it didn't do any good for us. I just had to move. I was sleeping in my car for two weeks straight, and even though we got our apartment exterminated, they kept returning because the landlord wouldn't pay to get the exterminator to do the apartment that used to belong to the junkies.
CMUD keeps freezing up on me. I have no idea why, but I just can't type anything or see input after a while. I have to restart mudbot, as well, when it happens. It's made for a very frustrating play session today.
Pastes over from the old rage thread while I was going through bed bug misery.
[spoiler] [spoiler] 3/27/2011 Bedbugs. My apartment manager. My apartment complex.
I've been to four doctor's visits trying to figure out what was wrong
with me, why I was having hives all over my arms and legs. One of which
they didn't even charge me for, because two separate doctors said I
have nfc what is wrong with you.
I've already said I have emotional problems. I also am not making it
month to month without begging money off my mother (who is amazing).
Let's add all of this together to see Arbre in full nervous breakdown at
-least- once a week. It's been every day this week!
We found out the whole thing was bedbugs on March 11th. Since then
they've sprayed my apartment three times and done the heat treatment
once. I'm -still- getting bitten. Let's add on to this that for almost a
week they were telling me -I- brought them in and it was -my-
responsibility to pay for their removal. Turns out they came from the
apartment beside mine that was absolutely -infested- and the people
there even knew they had them and didn't report it.
Let's add to this that my cat, you know, the one that's enormous and
can sit and shake on command? Yeah, 80$ vet bill because he got sick
from the chemicals. 9 years old, been around a dozen different cats,
survived four moves, one of which was a non-stop 14 hour car ride and
I've never had to take him to the vet for anything but vaccinations.
Oh, right! I also had to throw out my mattress and couch and beg my
grandmother for money to buy new ones. Bought a 40$ bedbug proof
mattress cover and made them put it on at the store before I brought it
home. Didn't bring the couch home until I thought the bugs were gone.
Guess what! They're not. Now my -new- couch is infested!
And I haven't slept well in over a month. Averaging 4-6 hours a
night. Hence why I'm posting at 2am. There's a word for that, evidently!
Delusional parasitosis! It means everything touching you makes you
think one is on you and you have a difficult time thinking of anything
else!
Had to take all of my clothing, sheets, blankets, pillows, everything
cloth to the laundromat and live out of trash bags in the bathroom and
kitchen for a week. Guess that was 100$ down the drain!
Let me add to that two nights in a hotel while we tried to figure out
a way we could sleep without getting eaten! Still getting eaten!
Not everyone has a reaction to bedbugs. Ansnom doesn't. I'm generally
allergic to everything. Imagine mosquito bites that, if you scratch
them, will grow into a welt well over the size of a silver dollar.
LET ME SHARE SOME BEDBUG FACTS!!!
Picture of a bug, spoilered for both size and disgust. If someone wants to break in and size it down some, that's be great.
Bedbugs can live a year without feeding.
Bedbugs don't know boys from girls. The male bedbugs have 'hypodermic
genitalia' and go around stabbing every other bug it comes into contact
with. This means that by the time they hit the female, they're
injecting her with several sets of DNA.
Bedbugs are attracted to carbon dioxide (yay, my breath) and heat (my body).
CONCLUSION
I'm going Monday and telling the apartment manager that it's been now
over six weeks that we have been fighting this. I can't move anywhere
else, because I'll just bring the bugs with me. So I'm trapped here with
the parasites until they're killed. I'm not paying rent again until
they're gone for good. Want to push me on this? Really? I've already
spoken with an attorney. I'm sure the local news station would be
interested in the story. And I can sure as hell park my ass outside the
leasing office and tell anyone coming in that there's bedbugs and
they're not being taken care of. I'm sure SOMEONE won't mind and will
still sign a lease!
[/spoiler] [spoiler] 3/28/2011 In addendum to my previous post. I just told my apt mgr that I'm not
paying for rent again until the bugs are gone. She started out with 'I
understand where you're coming from', which is more than I expected, but
continued talking about how they're doing everything they can and every
time I've complained they've been back in there and it's not just me
they're losing rent from, it's the apt next to me that they can't rent
out until they're sure it's clean etc. I told her the other problems are
not my concern. So tired of her bullshit. [/spoiler] [spoiler] 4/8/2011 Made it about ten days in the clear. Today more bites show up. FML At
least I feel confident now in my decision to not pay the rent. [/spoiler] [/spoiler]
My English Comp 2 research paper. [spoiler]
A
Returning Nightmare: Bed Bugs in the 21st Century
“Goodnight! Sleep tight! Don’t let the bed bugs
bite!” Nearly every child has heard this
phrase when going to bed, yet it is only recently that the meaning behind this
saying has become known, sometimes devastatingly so. For someone living with bed bugs, it can be the
most traumatic experience one can go through, as the parasites are costly and
difficult to get rid of. History has
show a wide range of curatives for infestations, from the obscure to the
downright dangerous, and even after centuries of efforts, extermination efforts
are imperfect. In group living
situations, such as apartment buildings, the bugs easily spread from one dwelling
to another, leaving a myriad of questions about whose responsibility it is to
finance their extermination. Tenets have
the right to live in a healthy and pest-free environment and should not have to
pay what can easily amount to tens of thousands of dollars in pest control
fees; it is the sole responsibility of the landlord.
Family Cimicidae
consists of a group of bugs that are highly specialized for feeding on
blood. Within this family is Cimex
lectularius, commonly known as the bed bug.
Though the bed bug has proven to thrive on birds, bats, and rabbits in laboratory
tests, their primary hosts are humans (EOL).
Bed bugs are small, wingless insects, growing up to four to five
millimeters long. Their rust coloring
and flat bodies has given them the nicknames “mahogany flats”, “red coats,” and
“cinches.” Their body is wide and flat,
easily allowing them to hide in crevices such in headboards, floor cracks,
under carpets, and along mattress seams (Orkin).
Bed bugs are
nocturnal parasites, coming out at night to feed from their victims. Using a sharp beak to pierce the skin, they
inject saliva that contains an anticoagulant that allows them to easier suck
the blood of their victims. The young
nymphs will become engorged with blood in three minutes, where the adult will
feed on the person for a full fifteen minutes (Orkin).
Female bed bugs can lay
up to twelve eggs a day coated with a stick substance to allow them to adhere
to the cracks and crevices. It takes
between six and seventeen days for the nymphs to hatch, immediately beginning
to feed on their human host. Temperature
and abundance of food greatly affects the development time of the nymphs. In temperatures averaging 86 degrees
Fahrenheit, adulthood can be reached in only 21 days; lower temperatures delay
this, developmental time taking closer to 120 days. Nymphs require a meal of blood to molt, and
reach maturity after five molts.
Scarcity of food will delay this process even further, the bugs able to
survive for months without feeding (Jones).
Adult bed bugs live up to eighteen months, and each year, three or more
generations can occur. At a conservative
average of six eggs a day and a lifespan of twelve months, a single female bed
bug can explode the population by over two thousand parasites; with their eggs
reaching adulthood in two weeks, this explodes the number of insects
exponentially (Eisenburg).
Bed bugs cannot
tell the difference between males and females, so the male bed bug simply stabs
any it comes across with its hypodermic appendage. When it finally finds a female to impregnate,
it injects her with the DNA of every male it hit before her, making the genetic
tracking of the bugs nearly impossible (Amyx).
The bite of the bed bug
is painless, and symptoms do not show up for several hours afterward. Fifty percent of people have no reaction to
bites, assisting in the difficulty of pinpointing infestations (Orange
Environmental). For those who do react,
the bites initially resemble mosquito bites, small, raised, and itchy. These welts can produce severe itching and
swelling, the symptoms lasting for days and exacerbated if scratched. Though bed bugs do not carry infectious
diseases, scratching the bites can lead to infection and scarring. Welts commonly appear in rows of three or
more, and differ from flea bites in that they do not have a red spot in the
center (Jones). Victims of bed bug
infestations can undergo great periods of stress, leading to anxiety, insomnia,
and even nightmares.
The history of bed
bugs stretches back to the beginning of recorded time. As people began to settle into villages and
cities, infestations became more commonplace than in the hunter/gatherer
civilizations that moved frequently.
Archeological dig sites dating back more than three and a half centuries
ago carry the fossilized bugs (Potter).
They have been
used in many different cultures as curatives, such as the Greeks and Romans,
who burned them to make leeches loosen their hold. They believed that the parasites could cure
many diseases when ingested with beans, eggs, or wine. Just over a hundred
years ago, the fifth edition of the American
Homeopathic Pharmacopoeia gave directions to cure malaria by making a
tincture from the bugs (Potter).
As civilization
expanded in Europe, the warmth provided by sleeping and cooking fires allowed
bed bugs to infest the homes of the wealthy and working class. The poor, however, suffered the most; unable
to afford the constant changing of bedding that the wealthy could, the bugs had
a must more established breeding ground.
This precedent is remains true today, as the impoverished lack the means
to exterminate an infestation (Potter).
Common household
pests until World War II, early colonists are to blame for bringing bed bugs
over in the 1600s. After the war, dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane,
or DDT, as it is commonly known, was accredited to the eradication of bed bugs
in the U.S.
prior to the ban on its use (Jones). In
1942, the USDA Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine in Orlando, Florida
declared DDT to be “the perfect answer to the bed bug problem.” In the 1950s, however, the U.S. began to
ban its use because its carcinogenic nature to humans could damage the nervous
system. DDT remains in mammals for long
periods of time, dissolving their body fat.
The chemical can travel far, condensing in water or vaporizing in the
air, causing problems in places where it has never been manufactured or even
used. The indigenous population of the Arctic has never touched DDT, yet they have the highest
levels of concentration in their food and bodies. In 1972, DDT was banned in the U.S. by EPA
administrator William Ruckelshaus. Use
of the chemical slowly became unknown in the world after the U.S.’s ban, and
no industrial country currently uses it (Martin).
In 400 B.C.E, the
Greek philosopher Democritus instructed hanging rabbit or deer feet at the foot
of one’s bed to deter an infestation and in the 18th century, The Compleat Vermin-Killer recommended
one place gunpowder in the cracks of the bed and light it on fire. In the 1800s and early 1900s, a tonic created
from arsenic and mercury was commonly used to apply where the bugs hide with a
brush, oil can, or even one’s own finger (Potter). Though the current methods of extermination
are quite a bit more complicated than that, they are also much more
effective. Unfortunately, they also run
the side effect of being extremely costly.
All cloth,
including clothing, blankets, towels, backpacks, rugs, pillows, and more, must
be thoroughly washed and dried at high temperatures. Exterminators suggest immediately placing
clean items in garbage bags when they come out of the dryer and placing them in
bathrooms and kitchens. These are places
where humans do not linger and give less hiding places conducive to the
parasites’ growth. The cloth contents of
a small, one-bedroom apartment taken to a laundromat can run a bill in excess
of a hundred dollars (Amyx).
Though not always
feasible, exterminators also recommend that all cloth furniture such as
mattresses and couches be thrown out; this gives one less item for the bugs to
hide in and speeds up the process of their removal. If such action is taken, the items need to be
defaced beyond use to help prevent others from picking up the used furniture
and spreading the infestation further (Maestre).
Pyrethroids can be used
to treat the small crevices where bed bugs hide, though using repellent
formulas is discouraged as it causes to bugs to spread out. The chemical in a dust form works well with
hollow areas in walls and in attics.
Chemicals can only be used every 7-10 days depending on poison
legislation, so it is recommended that treatments be repeated every two weeks
until all signs of the bugs are gone (Amyx).
In lieu of DDT, the
best recourse against the bugs is heat treating the dwelling, though the cost
can quickly become astronomical. A
single heat treatment of a building consisting of ten one-bedroom apartments is
in excess of $10,000 dollars. The
process requires homes to be sectioned off into smaller areas and the
temperature raised over 140 degrees Fahrenheit for four hours (Amyx).
The high cost of
bed bug extermination in apartment homes is the sole responsibility of the
landlord. Several states have already
passed legislation about it, setting a precedent for current and future laws.
“No man shall be
required to pay rent for a house infested with bed bugs” declared a Chicago jury in 1895
(Potter).
In August of 2010,
former New York
state Governor David Paterson signed legislation that requires all landlords
must disclose any history of bed bugs within the past year to prospective
tenets. This law applies only to New York City, in which
there were 11,000 complaints issued about the parasites in 2009 alone (Journal
of Property Management).
On 12 July 2010 a
law took effect in Maine
that not only required landlords to disclose information of past infestations,
but also set regulations on who had to pay for the removal. In this instance, landlords are required to
cover the costs of extermination, however a clause exists that can move the
responsibility to the tenets if they do not cooperate with extermination
efforts (Journal of Property Management).
In New Jersey, a state-wide
bill passed in February 2010 requires landlords to pay for removal or face
fines of $300 per bedroom and/or $1,000 per common area. They must also provide resources to tenets on
the insects and preventative methods (Journal of Property Management).
The state of Massachusetts decreed
that infestations fall under the current statute requiring landlords to
“maintain the dwelling you own without insect infestation” (MA: 105 CMR
410.550). Property owners are
responsible for inspecting each unit and financing any required extermination
(Journal of Property Management).
Several other
states have pressed for legislation about bed bug infestations. In Illinois,
pending legislation would require landlords to take responsibility for
infestation. Additionally, discussions
have been ongoing about petitioning the federal government to allow banned
insecticides to be used in treating bed bugs in residential units. Ohio
has already petitioned the federal government to use the chemicals, and also
has pending legislation to create an awareness and prevention program. The matter has also been brought before the
U.S. House of Representatives in a bill that would give grants to assist
individual states in inspecting hotels for the parasites (Journal of Property
Management).
Once considered an
anecdote of the past, bed bug infestations are making a furious comeback. History tells a story of imperialistic
expansion and chemical warfare against the parasitic bugs with the
extermination companies the only victor.
Traumatic and costly, they destroy property and cause victims both money
and grief. Though many landlords make an
effort to press cleanup costs off on their tenets, precedent set over multiple
states demands that the cost of extermination lies solely in the hands of the
landlords.
Works
Cited
Amyx,
Bob, Pest Solutions Specialist for Schendel
Pest Services. Personal interview. 11 Feb. 2011.
Jones,
Susan C., Ph. D. “Bed Bugs.” Ohionline. The Ohio State University, n.d. Web. 17 Oct. 2011.
Maestre,
Ralphe H., BCE. The Bed Bug Book: The
Complete Guide to Prevention and Extermination. New York: Skyhorse, 2011. Print.
Martin,
Ashley K. “The regulation of DDT: a choice between evils.” Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law Mar. 2008: 667+. Academic OneFile. Web. 27 Nov. 2011.
Orange
Environmental Services. Bed Bugs. Orange Park, FL: Orange Environmental Services, n.d. Web. 17 Oct. 2011.
Pinto,
Lawrence J.,
Richard Cooper, and Sandra K. Kraft. Bed
Bug Handbook: The Complete Guide to Bed Bugs and Their Control. New York: Pinto &
Associates, 2007. Print.
Potter,
Michael F. “The History of Bed Bug Management – With Lessons from the Past.” American Entomologist. Entomological
Society of America,
2008. Web. 17 Oct. 2011.
Terminix.
Bed Bugs. Memphis: The Terminix International Company
Limited Partnership, 2009. Web. 17 Oct. 2011.
[/spoiler]
Dear god please let these spoilers work.
2
AngweI'm the dog that ate yr birthday cakeBedford, VA
Got a laggy system. Someone else took it over. Payed for an update to system. Updated system is even worse, and neither of us know why.
I'm considering quitting Aet simply because I can't get my system situation in check. I remember this is why I stopped playing my first character too.
@Illidan The messed up thing is that other people use the same system on the same OS and (maybe a different distro) as me and have no issues! I'm the only one it does this with and there's no reason we can divine. Not sure if I need a programmer or a priest.
Being bipolar and switching from depression to mania too quickly. I always like to think the inbetween phase is when I can get the most done and have the soundest of minds. Now I'm really unsure of anything I do, damn you chemical imbalances.
Edit: Also I rage that I was using the ECC function when I wanted CC, damn you typos. If I wasn't so sure of myself I wouldn't have let you live!
My rage is that no one can seem to make up their damn mind. I've had an ultra sound (where they couldn't find my appendix), four pressure exams, a CAT scan, 2 blood works, and 3 urine tests. I've walked away with separate diagnoses...at first it was acute appendicitis and I got antibiotics, during tonight's visit I was diagnosed with a severe bladder infection, dehydration, and an infection resulting from a rupture of a cyst on my ovaries. I understand that diagnosing can sometimes be a long, complicated process but I really just want this figured out. They gave me medicine for the nausea, stronger antibiotics, and strongly suggested if I feel any more pain to come in again.
"To be awkward or unkempt, to talk or move wrongly is to be a dangerous giant, a destroyer of worlds...any accurately improper move can poke through the thin sleeve of immediate reality." - Erving Goffman
Comments
There's no cure for facebook.
It was snowing two weeks ago here in Maryland and NOW IT'S 90 DEGREES OUT.
STAHP IT, MOTHER NATURE.
"To be awkward or unkempt, to talk or move wrongly is to be a dangerous giant, a destroyer of worlds...any accurately improper move can poke through the thin sleeve of immediate reality." - Erving Goffman
I ended up suing the landlord, my lawyer smoked his sorry ass in court, and he paid for my first month's rent and deposit on my new place, as well as a few hundred dollars for the clothes I had to toss out, and I STILL lost far more money than I got four months after I was forced to move. Hell, I had a really nice 3 piece two button black suit that alone cost what he gave me aside from the rent/deposit for the new place.
tl;dr - My advice: Be extremely thorough. You will know if you have them, their bite pattern is typically 2-3 bites in a linear direction.
In short, though, Alastair's right - they have to be in temperatures above 120 degrees Fahrenheit for at least an hour. The only other -reliable- cure is DDT... which is illegal.
Thing is, we used concrete powder on my floor after thanksgiving and all over the rest of the apt and vacated for a week. This is the first bug I found since then. I had them last fall, so I know what the adults look like (and haven't seen any before now) and so I'm just freaking out because I can't ensure that there's absolutely no baby bugs living with us and sticking to the stuff I'm planning to move over.
...dormant for years???
Also, I drycleaned my blankets last winter, got rid of my mattress and boxspring, sleep on an air-mattress (they won't live on rubber) and a lot of my stuff has been in plastic see-through bins and space bags ever since (with no intention of unsealing the contents until a full year is up to make sure they starve and suffocate)
If it was just me in the new place, I'd fumigate in a heartbeat. Hell, I'd cross my t's but fumigating the new place too ahead of time. But I'm moving into a house with the dude who already lives there and owns it. I don't want to have to explain to him that I used to have bedbugs and moved in knowing I might take them with me. I'm supposed to be out of here in a week and a half, it's not enough time!
Good luck man, I hope to god it's just a fluke.
[spoiler]
[spoiler]
3/27/2011
Bedbugs. My apartment manager. My apartment complex.
I've been to four doctor's visits trying to figure out what was wrong with me, why I was having hives all over my arms and legs. One of which they didn't even charge me for, because two separate doctors said I have nfc what is wrong with you.
I've already said I have emotional problems. I also am not making it month to month without begging money off my mother (who is amazing). Let's add all of this together to see Arbre in full nervous breakdown at -least- once a week. It's been every day this week!
We found out the whole thing was bedbugs on March 11th. Since then they've sprayed my apartment three times and done the heat treatment once. I'm -still- getting bitten. Let's add on to this that for almost a week they were telling me -I- brought them in and it was -my- responsibility to pay for their removal. Turns out they came from the apartment beside mine that was absolutely -infested- and the people there even knew they had them and didn't report it.
Let's add to this that my cat, you know, the one that's enormous and can sit and shake on command? Yeah, 80$ vet bill because he got sick from the chemicals. 9 years old, been around a dozen different cats, survived four moves, one of which was a non-stop 14 hour car ride and I've never had to take him to the vet for anything but vaccinations.
Oh, right! I also had to throw out my mattress and couch and beg my grandmother for money to buy new ones. Bought a 40$ bedbug proof mattress cover and made them put it on at the store before I brought it home. Didn't bring the couch home until I thought the bugs were gone. Guess what! They're not. Now my -new- couch is infested!
And I haven't slept well in over a month. Averaging 4-6 hours a night. Hence why I'm posting at 2am. There's a word for that, evidently! Delusional parasitosis! It means everything touching you makes you think one is on you and you have a difficult time thinking of anything else!
Had to take all of my clothing, sheets, blankets, pillows, everything cloth to the laundromat and live out of trash bags in the bathroom and kitchen for a week. Guess that was 100$ down the drain!
Let me add to that two nights in a hotel while we tried to figure out a way we could sleep without getting eaten! Still getting eaten!
Not everyone has a reaction to bedbugs. Ansnom doesn't. I'm generally allergic to everything. Imagine mosquito bites that, if you scratch them, will grow into a welt well over the size of a silver dollar.
LET ME SHARE SOME BEDBUG FACTS!!!
Picture of a bug, spoilered for both size and disgust. If someone wants to break in and size it down some, that's be great.
Bedbugs can live a year without feeding.Bedbugs don't know boys from girls. The male bedbugs have 'hypodermic genitalia' and go around stabbing every other bug it comes into contact with. This means that by the time they hit the female, they're injecting her with several sets of DNA.
Bedbugs are attracted to carbon dioxide (yay, my breath) and heat (my body).
CONCLUSION
I'm going Monday and telling the apartment manager that it's been now over six weeks that we have been fighting this. I can't move anywhere else, because I'll just bring the bugs with me. So I'm trapped here with the parasites until they're killed. I'm not paying rent again until they're gone for good. Want to push me on this? Really? I've already spoken with an attorney. I'm sure the local news station would be interested in the story. And I can sure as hell park my ass outside the leasing office and tell anyone coming in that there's bedbugs and they're not being taken care of. I'm sure SOMEONE won't mind and will still sign a lease!
[spoiler]
3/28/2011
In addendum to my previous post. I just told my apt mgr that I'm not paying for rent again until the bugs are gone. She started out with 'I understand where you're coming from', which is more than I expected, but continued talking about how they're doing everything they can and every time I've complained they've been back in there and it's not just me they're losing rent from, it's the apt next to me that they can't rent out until they're sure it's clean etc. I told her the other problems are not my concern. So tired of her bullshit.
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4/8/2011
Made it about ten days in the clear. Today more bites show up. FML At least I feel confident now in my decision to not pay the rent.
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My English Comp 2 research paper.
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A Returning Nightmare: Bed Bugs in the 21st Century
“Goodnight! Sleep tight! Don’t let the bed bugs bite!” Nearly every child has heard this phrase when going to bed, yet it is only recently that the meaning behind this saying has become known, sometimes devastatingly so. For someone living with bed bugs, it can be the most traumatic experience one can go through, as the parasites are costly and difficult to get rid of. History has show a wide range of curatives for infestations, from the obscure to the downright dangerous, and even after centuries of efforts, extermination efforts are imperfect. In group living situations, such as apartment buildings, the bugs easily spread from one dwelling to another, leaving a myriad of questions about whose responsibility it is to finance their extermination. Tenets have the right to live in a healthy and pest-free environment and should not have to pay what can easily amount to tens of thousands of dollars in pest control fees; it is the sole responsibility of the landlord.
Family Cimicidae consists of a group of bugs that are highly specialized for feeding on blood. Within this family is Cimex lectularius, commonly known as the bed bug. Though the bed bug has proven to thrive on birds, bats, and rabbits in laboratory tests, their primary hosts are humans (EOL). Bed bugs are small, wingless insects, growing up to four to five millimeters long. Their rust coloring and flat bodies has given them the nicknames “mahogany flats”, “red coats,” and “cinches.” Their body is wide and flat, easily allowing them to hide in crevices such in headboards, floor cracks, under carpets, and along mattress seams (Orkin).
Bed bugs are nocturnal parasites, coming out at night to feed from their victims. Using a sharp beak to pierce the skin, they inject saliva that contains an anticoagulant that allows them to easier suck the blood of their victims. The young nymphs will become engorged with blood in three minutes, where the adult will feed on the person for a full fifteen minutes (Orkin).
Female bed bugs can lay up to twelve eggs a day coated with a stick substance to allow them to adhere to the cracks and crevices. It takes between six and seventeen days for the nymphs to hatch, immediately beginning to feed on their human host. Temperature and abundance of food greatly affects the development time of the nymphs. In temperatures averaging 86 degrees Fahrenheit, adulthood can be reached in only 21 days; lower temperatures delay this, developmental time taking closer to 120 days. Nymphs require a meal of blood to molt, and reach maturity after five molts. Scarcity of food will delay this process even further, the bugs able to survive for months without feeding (Jones). Adult bed bugs live up to eighteen months, and each year, three or more generations can occur. At a conservative average of six eggs a day and a lifespan of twelve months, a single female bed bug can explode the population by over two thousand parasites; with their eggs reaching adulthood in two weeks, this explodes the number of insects exponentially (Eisenburg).
Bed bugs cannot tell the difference between males and females, so the male bed bug simply stabs any it comes across with its hypodermic appendage. When it finally finds a female to impregnate, it injects her with the DNA of every male it hit before her, making the genetic tracking of the bugs nearly impossible (Amyx).
The bite of the bed bug is painless, and symptoms do not show up for several hours afterward. Fifty percent of people have no reaction to bites, assisting in the difficulty of pinpointing infestations (Orange Environmental). For those who do react, the bites initially resemble mosquito bites, small, raised, and itchy. These welts can produce severe itching and swelling, the symptoms lasting for days and exacerbated if scratched. Though bed bugs do not carry infectious diseases, scratching the bites can lead to infection and scarring. Welts commonly appear in rows of three or more, and differ from flea bites in that they do not have a red spot in the center (Jones). Victims of bed bug infestations can undergo great periods of stress, leading to anxiety, insomnia, and even nightmares.
The history of bed bugs stretches back to the beginning of recorded time. As people began to settle into villages and cities, infestations became more commonplace than in the hunter/gatherer civilizations that moved frequently. Archeological dig sites dating back more than three and a half centuries ago carry the fossilized bugs (Potter).
They have been used in many different cultures as curatives, such as the Greeks and Romans, who burned them to make leeches loosen their hold. They believed that the parasites could cure many diseases when ingested with beans, eggs, or wine. Just over a hundred years ago, the fifth edition of the American Homeopathic Pharmacopoeia gave directions to cure malaria by making a tincture from the bugs (Potter).
As civilization expanded in Europe, the warmth provided by sleeping and cooking fires allowed bed bugs to infest the homes of the wealthy and working class. The poor, however, suffered the most; unable to afford the constant changing of bedding that the wealthy could, the bugs had a must more established breeding ground. This precedent is remains true today, as the impoverished lack the means to exterminate an infestation (Potter).
Common household pests until World War II, early colonists are to blame for bringing bed bugs over in the 1600s. After the war, dichlorodiphenyltrichloroethane, or DDT, as it is commonly known, was accredited to the eradication of bed bugs in the U.S. prior to the ban on its use (Jones). In 1942, the USDA Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine in Orlando, Florida declared DDT to be “the perfect answer to the bed bug problem.” In the 1950s, however, the U.S. began to ban its use because its carcinogenic nature to humans could damage the nervous system. DDT remains in mammals for long periods of time, dissolving their body fat. The chemical can travel far, condensing in water or vaporizing in the air, causing problems in places where it has never been manufactured or even used. The indigenous population of the Arctic has never touched DDT, yet they have the highest levels of concentration in their food and bodies. In 1972, DDT was banned in the U.S. by EPA administrator William Ruckelshaus. Use of the chemical slowly became unknown in the world after the U.S.’s ban, and no industrial country currently uses it (Martin).
In 400 B.C.E, the Greek philosopher Democritus instructed hanging rabbit or deer feet at the foot of one’s bed to deter an infestation and in the 18th century, The Compleat Vermin-Killer recommended one place gunpowder in the cracks of the bed and light it on fire. In the 1800s and early 1900s, a tonic created from arsenic and mercury was commonly used to apply where the bugs hide with a brush, oil can, or even one’s own finger (Potter). Though the current methods of extermination are quite a bit more complicated than that, they are also much more effective. Unfortunately, they also run the side effect of being extremely costly.
All cloth, including clothing, blankets, towels, backpacks, rugs, pillows, and more, must be thoroughly washed and dried at high temperatures. Exterminators suggest immediately placing clean items in garbage bags when they come out of the dryer and placing them in bathrooms and kitchens. These are places where humans do not linger and give less hiding places conducive to the parasites’ growth. The cloth contents of a small, one-bedroom apartment taken to a laundromat can run a bill in excess of a hundred dollars (Amyx).
Though not always feasible, exterminators also recommend that all cloth furniture such as mattresses and couches be thrown out; this gives one less item for the bugs to hide in and speeds up the process of their removal. If such action is taken, the items need to be defaced beyond use to help prevent others from picking up the used furniture and spreading the infestation further (Maestre).
Pyrethroids can be used to treat the small crevices where bed bugs hide, though using repellent formulas is discouraged as it causes to bugs to spread out. The chemical in a dust form works well with hollow areas in walls and in attics. Chemicals can only be used every 7-10 days depending on poison legislation, so it is recommended that treatments be repeated every two weeks until all signs of the bugs are gone (Amyx).
In lieu of DDT, the best recourse against the bugs is heat treating the dwelling, though the cost can quickly become astronomical. A single heat treatment of a building consisting of ten one-bedroom apartments is in excess of $10,000 dollars. The process requires homes to be sectioned off into smaller areas and the temperature raised over 140 degrees Fahrenheit for four hours (Amyx).
The high cost of bed bug extermination in apartment homes is the sole responsibility of the landlord. Several states have already passed legislation about it, setting a precedent for current and future laws.
“No man shall be required to pay rent for a house infested with bed bugs” declared a Chicago jury in 1895 (Potter).
In August of 2010, former New York state Governor David Paterson signed legislation that requires all landlords must disclose any history of bed bugs within the past year to prospective tenets. This law applies only to New York City, in which there were 11,000 complaints issued about the parasites in 2009 alone (Journal of Property Management).
On 12 July 2010 a law took effect in Maine that not only required landlords to disclose information of past infestations, but also set regulations on who had to pay for the removal. In this instance, landlords are required to cover the costs of extermination, however a clause exists that can move the responsibility to the tenets if they do not cooperate with extermination efforts (Journal of Property Management).
In New Jersey, a state-wide bill passed in February 2010 requires landlords to pay for removal or face fines of $300 per bedroom and/or $1,000 per common area. They must also provide resources to tenets on the insects and preventative methods (Journal of Property Management).
The state of Massachusetts decreed that infestations fall under the current statute requiring landlords to “maintain the dwelling you own without insect infestation” (MA: 105 CMR 410.550). Property owners are responsible for inspecting each unit and financing any required extermination (Journal of Property Management).
Several other states have pressed for legislation about bed bug infestations. In Illinois, pending legislation would require landlords to take responsibility for infestation. Additionally, discussions have been ongoing about petitioning the federal government to allow banned insecticides to be used in treating bed bugs in residential units. Ohio has already petitioned the federal government to use the chemicals, and also has pending legislation to create an awareness and prevention program. The matter has also been brought before the U.S. House of Representatives in a bill that would give grants to assist individual states in inspecting hotels for the parasites (Journal of Property Management).
Once considered an anecdote of the past, bed bug infestations are making a furious comeback. History tells a story of imperialistic expansion and chemical warfare against the parasitic bugs with the extermination companies the only victor. Traumatic and costly, they destroy property and cause victims both money and grief. Though many landlords make an effort to press cleanup costs off on their tenets, precedent set over multiple states demands that the cost of extermination lies solely in the hands of the landlords.
Works Cited
Amyx, Bob, Pest Solutions Specialist for Schendel Pest Services. Personal interview. 11 Feb. 2011.
"Bed bug laws." Journal of Property Management Mar.-Apr. 2011: 16. Academic OneFile. Web. 12 Nov. 2011.
Eisenburg, Jeff. The Bed Bug Survival Guide: The Only Book You Need to Eliminate or Avoid This Pest Now. New York: Grand Central, 2011. Print.
EOL. Cimex lectularius: Bedbug. Encyclopedia of Life, 2011. Web. 17 Oct. 2011.
Jones, Susan C., Ph. D. “Bed Bugs.” Ohionline. The Ohio State University, n.d. Web. 17 Oct. 2011.
Maestre, Ralphe H., BCE. The Bed Bug Book: The Complete Guide to Prevention and Extermination. New York: Skyhorse, 2011. Print.
Martin, Ashley K. “The regulation of DDT: a choice between evils.” Vanderbilt Journal of Transnational Law Mar. 2008: 667+. Academic OneFile. Web. 27 Nov. 2011.
Orange Environmental Services. Bed Bugs. Orange Park, FL: Orange Environmental Services, n.d. Web. 17 Oct. 2011.
Orkin. Bed Bugs: Facts, Identification & Control. Atlanta: Orkin, LLC, 2011. Web. 17 Oct. 2011.
Pinto, Lawrence J., Richard Cooper, and Sandra K. Kraft. Bed Bug Handbook: The Complete Guide to Bed Bugs and Their Control. New York: Pinto & Associates, 2007. Print.
Potter, Michael F. “The History of Bed Bug Management – With Lessons from the Past.” American Entomologist. Entomological Society of America, 2008. Web. 17 Oct. 2011.
Terminix. Bed Bugs. Memphis: The Terminix International Company Limited Partnership, 2009. Web. 17 Oct. 2011.
[/spoiler]Dear god please let these spoilers work.
I'm considering quitting Aet simply because I can't get my system situation in check. I remember this is why I stopped playing my first character too.
Le'sigh.
Which client?
@Illidan The messed up thing is that other people use the same system on the same OS and (maybe a different distro) as me and have no issues! I'm the only one it does this with and there's no reason we can divine. Not sure if I need a programmer or a priest.
"To be awkward or unkempt, to talk or move wrongly is to be a dangerous giant, a destroyer of worlds...any accurately improper move can poke through the thin sleeve of immediate reality." - Erving Goffman