A Problem Next Door Turns Strangers Into Friends
It began as one of those Southern California stories we all understand and that often have bad endings: Youâre an angel, but your next-door neighbor is an agent of the devil sent to make your life miserable.
You canât live with âem, and you certainly canât kill âem . . . so all you can do is suffer.
At least, thatâs what Debbie DâArrigo thought. âIt started out on a real sour note,â she says, recalling the neighbors who moved next door to her Lake Forest condominium complex in late 1997.
The new residents were a young woman, her infant child and her boyfriend. And, worst of all, they attracted a seemingly endless supply of visitors. âIt was a party house from Day 1,â DâArrigo says. âTwenty-four hours a day.â
She complained to the condo association, to no avail. She complained numerous times to the Sheriffâs Department, but not much happened. âIt got to the point,â she says, âwhere I was going to my parentsâ house and even my ex-husbandâs to get some sleep. Finally, my parents said, âYou need to do something, this is ridiculous.â They were right, but I didnât have a clue what direction to go.â
How about a lawyer, her parents said. DâArrigo agreed, but all that implied to DâArrigo was a potential confrontation with her next-door neighbors that she didnât welcome.
Instead, fate intervened.
It began when her lawyer suggested she ask other neighbors if theyâd experienced similar problems. DâArrigo had lived in the complex about a year but hadnât struck up a single friendship. She wasnât anti-neighbor; she just considered herself introverted and unmotivated to meet others.
âEverybody is so busy,â she says. âBesides, the people next to me werenât real good, so I was thinking, âWhat if some of the others arenât real good either?â â
She girded herself to knock on doors. âI had to talk myself into it,â she says. âI had to pick a place and go for it.â
But as she started asking around, her neighbors immediately knew who the culprits were. One of them said sheâd called the cops once too.
The more they talked, walls came down. All the faceless, anonymous people DâArrigo had never seen or known became friends.
Roxanne had cancer and had been taking radiation therapy. Her son was recently baptized. She and DâArrigo began taking evening walks together.
Kim was a schoolteacher. DâArrigo now feeds her cats when sheâs gone.
Irene was even shyer than DâArrigo, but the two began taking walks occasionally and recently went to a crafts fair together. DâArrigo learned sheâd gone to the same high school as Ireneâs husband, Dan, and that religion is a central part of their lives.
Cecile had major cancer surgery six weeks before DâArrigo met her.
Delia lost a newborn shortly after its birth.
DâArrigo now refers to cancer survivors Roxanne and Cecile as âmy heroes.â She and Roxanne are going on a three-day cruise to Ensenada in May.
The sense of community, of shared knowledge of each other, took DâArrigo, 45, back to her roots.
âI grew up in Fullerton,â she says. âEverybody in the neighborhood was at our house. I had a great childhood, and I knew all the neighbors.â Her parents still are friends with people theyâve known since her childhood, she says.
DâArrigo, who manages UC Irvineâs Sign Shop, understands why people in contemporary Southern California donât make time to know their neighbors.
âWe all work and have families on top of it,â she says. âSo, when youâre not working, youâre trying to spend quality time with your children. And I think neighbors and friends sometimes tend to be put on the back burner, so to speak, until something like this comes along and reality wakes you up.â
In time, the noisy neighbors moved away. It hardly mattered, because what DâArrigo once referred to as â10 months of hellâ disappeared under the importance of her newfound friendships.
âItâs just been something wonderful thatâs happened,â she says. âIâm really so grateful in a way that the bad part happened, because I never would have gotten to know these wonderful people.â
Dana Parsonsâ column appears Wednesday, Friday and Sunday. Readers may reach Parsons by calling (714) 966-7821, by writing to him at The Times Orange County Edition, 1375 Sunflower Ave., Costa Mesa CA 92626, or by e-mail at [email protected].