Trying not to let the bedbugs bite

Thursday, August 19, 2010
I assume it's not like this in any other city, but you cannot open a paper or any news website in New York without being attacked by stories of bedbugs infiltrating the subway/hospitals/hotels/retail stores/everywhere. Today alone I've already been bombarded with 3 bedbug stories and as I write this it's not yet 11 AM.

A lot of you know, either from knowing me in real life or perhaps from reading my old blog, that I used to have bedbugs. And let me tell you something: they are No. Fucking. Joke. Here's why.

In October of 2007, I started getting itchy red bumps all over my face, arms and legs. I thought I was having an allergic reaction to something and went to see the dermatologist. After 2 visits and multiple tests, they had no idea what was going on, but new bumps were still cropping up. In the meantime, I missed a day of work because I woke up one day with multiple bumps on my face and neck, in addition to one on my eyelid that made it swell up and look like I got punched in the face. I purchased nearly every type of cover-up I could find at the drug store and combined them all to try and look presentable for a wedding I had to go to. It didn't totally work and you can look at the pictures and see some red on my arms.

The following week, after talking to a coworker who had just finished dealing with bedbugs, I had my lightbulb moment. I told the doctor, and he confirmed that bedbugs made sense. I went back to my coworker to talk to her about it, and she walked me through the hell of getting fumigated. I had no intention of doing that and decided to seek other options.
I went to a hardware store and purchased some anti-bedbug spray. It proved ineffective. I bought a bedbug-fighting powder and turned my bedroom into something that resembled a sloppy cocaine den. That didn't work either. I began a nightly ritual where I would douse myself and my entire room with bug spray before going to bed. I knew it wouldn't work, but at that point I took every suggestion I got.

As I struggled to get rid of the bugs, I was itchy. I had bumps everywhere that ranged from mosquito bite size to as large as if I had been hit with a fastball. The biggest ones were more like welts. Despite the research, there was no rhyme or reason to them. Sometimes they were in groups. Sometimes in lines. Sometimes I would wake up with 7 bites in completely different places. They didn't stop itching for about 2 weeks, by which time I had amassed new ones. I went back to the drug store and purchased all sorts of cortizone creams and moisturizers, and had a few donations from my coworker who didn't need her anti-itch stash anymore. I also began pumping myself full of Claritin and Benadryl and promptly took to taking daily naps with my head down on my desk at work due to the resulting drowsiness.

The thing about bedbugs is that it's not just being itchy that gets to you. I went from being pretty stable to going absolutely out-of-my-brain crazy. I was afraid to go to sleep knowing I would get bitten. I would delay going to bed as long as possible, and then I could never fall asleep because I knew the bedbugs would come out as soon as I stopped moving around (they're attracted to warmth, carbon dioxide, and things that stay still). When I finally did fall asleep I would wake up itchy, either from old bites or new ones (or both). So I didn't get much rest those days. This fear of going to bed only multiplied into an overall uneasiness about going home, because I soon realized that I could get bitten while watching TV or sitting at my computer. If I wasn't moving, they were biting. So I was walking around like a panicky zombie who, as I already mentioned, was uncomfortable due to the itching and self-conscious from the welts. I was on edge and started snapping at my coworkers (and probably my friends too, sorry!) for no reason.

It was after the failure of the aforementioned powder that I knew I had to get fumigated. I called and left a message with my landlord. No response. I left another messge. No response. I called again and unleashed all the fury of a Jewish Woman Scorned on the answering machine and finally, someone picked up the phone and gave me the information for the exterminator. I called them and learned that they refused to make an appointment until the apartment was "prepped." They sent me a prep sheet and I got to work. But as it turned out, this was no easy task.

I had to pack up my room as if I was moving out. Every little thing had to be thrown in plastic bags and moved out of the room. Though I worked at top speed, I had to wait for my roommate, who worked 14 hour days and came home only to sleep and who, I should mention, NEVER got bitten, to do the same. She slowed down the process and there was nothing I could do about it. So as I waited for her to pack up her room, I got bitten.

I was able to schedule the exterminator after we had made substantial packing progress. And thus began an awesome week which involved packing in the earlier days, getting fumigated on Wednesday, heading to NJ for Thanksgiving the following day, coming back to New York on Friday to unpack my life from the garbage bags, and oh, taking this little test called the GMAT on Saturday.

Once I had unpacked and the GMAT was a thing of the past, I felt home free. On Monday morning, I woke up to go to work and had fresh new bites. I resisted the urge to tear out my hair and instead called the exterminator. He informed me that it's perfectly normal to get bitten after fumigation because the bugs don't die unless they come out of hiding and walk through the poison. So essentially I had to lay there in bed as bait for them because if someone wasn't there to draw them out, they wouldn't die. In the words of Adam Sandler, "Once again, things that could have been brought to my attention YESTERDAY!!!" Grumble.

So I kept getting bitten for a bit, but as promised, it stopped. And eventually I had cycled every article of clothing I owned through either the laundry or the dry cleaner (they were ALL supposed to go to the dry cleaner but hello, that's expensive). I added to the ridiculous list of bedbug-related costs by purchasing brand new everythings for my bed. Things were actually, finally, thankfully, better.

Fast forward to several months later, July of 2008. I had been sleeping peacefully in my brand new sheets/pillows/comforter for over 6 months. I awoke in the middle of the night with an itchy face. I lay there scratching for probably about a minute before I realized that my bedbugs were back. I broke down in tears because I knew the whole process was just beginning again. And it did, start to finish. Because that's just how the fucking bedbug story goes.

5 comments:

Mega said...

No bed bugs in Chicago. Just sayin'

nancypearlwannabe said...

Ugh this post skeeved me out so bad. I thought nothing could be worse than roaches, but bedbugs make me want to cry for you.

Suburban Sweetheart said...

Oh, man. I am TERRIFIED of bedbugs. They're getting around all over the place, it seems. The Midwest had them bad right now, too, especially Kentucky & Cincinnati... right as I'm about to move back...

Jamie said...

This made me start to feel all kinds of itchy.

Jessica (Bayjb) said...

Oh Jesus. I've heard the bedbugs situation in NYC was bad enough where it was getting into movie theaters. OMG gross. I thought I had bedbugs once but I'm still not sure. Those f*ckers did itch badly though.

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