As sheriff’s deputies directed the removal of furniture from her apartment, Alison sat on the front steps looking at her phone. Her bright pink t-shirt had glowing orange letters that said, “This is my lucky t-shirt.”
But after nine months of not paying rent and violating other terms of her lease, Alison’s luck had run out.
When I met her last year — when she applied to rent from me — I felt sorry for Alison. She told me about her difficult past. A failed marriage to a dysfunctional man. Drug issues and recovery. Financial problems. But she said she had turned everything around. Her supervisor at work gave her a glowing endorsement.
In the five years that I’ve been managing rentals for my company, she’s the only person I’ve regretted renting to. She left owing us thousands and thousands of dollars. Cleaning up and repairing the apartment will cost even more.
But as she sat there in her lucky t-shirt — two days after having her third child — I still felt sorry for her. And it hurt my heart to think about what could have brought this attractive blue-eyed blonde to such despair.

We’re happier if we learn to ‘sell’ ourselves to people who want us
Everybody has times when he needs someone to save his life
Feds to trucking co.: You can’t fire the drunk, but you’re liable for him
Too many voices with little to say: Politics matters less and less to me
What if I’ve fooled myself — and darkness is all that waits for me?
I’m trying to silence inner critic who says I ought to be perfect
FRIDAY FUNNIES