Mirabile dictu,
Susie and I have found a buyer for our apartment, a young doctor and his wife
who are coming to Chapel Hill so that he may take up a residency at UNC
Hospitals. Papers have been signed, but
there is still the inspection, so
once more we shall prepare the apartment to be seen, this time by an eagle-eyed
Inspector probing for hidden plumbing flaws or hinky wiring.
Now begins the seemingly endless business of telling
everyone who matters [i.e., who sends me money, like the Massachusetts Pension
System] what our new address is, informing Spectrum [formerly Time Warner Cable
– when did that happen?] that we still want Starz at our new location, and
telling the NY TIMES the new delivery
location.
As I predicted, we took a bath with the selling price. I figured out that if you ignore inflation
and complicated matters like that, my gains and losses on the sale of five
principal dwellings over the past half century just about sum to zero
dollars. I would strongly suggest that
no one ask me for financial advice. On the
other hand, I have never aimed to die rich, just solvent so that my children
are not left with bills to pay.
The next stage of my life, if things work out as I hope, will
feature an increasing involvement with Columbia University through my new
membership in the Society of Senior Scholars there. It is now forty-six years since I left
Columbia for an extraordinary thirty-seven years at the University of Massachusetts. The young Marxists At UMass from whom I
learned so much are now old, retired, and in some cases no longer
Marxists. The exciting experimental undergraduate
program I started – Social Thought and Political Economy – is flourishing in
middle age, and the doctoral program in Afro-American Studies that I helped to create
and ran for twelve years has just celebrated its first twenty years, turning out
bright, young, productive scholars.
My
involvement with Columbia will necessarily be intermittent, since I will continue
to live in North Carolina, but there are direct flights, and as I learned long
ago, in the Academy even those professors who live across the street from the university,
as I did back then, are liable not to spend that much time on campus.
It should be fun.
2 comments:
Good wishes on this new phase.
Real Estate is funny (I could tell you tales).
Arrange things so that the very last check you write bounces.
Nice to read it !
Regards
Mir Mohammad AliKhan
Post a Comment