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As bedbugs spread across New York City, one Brooklyn apartment dweller recounts the battle he fought (and lost) against these nasty, relentless critters.


It started with an apartment.
In 2008, I moved into an apartment in Brooklyn with two of my friends from college. We were all 24 at the time and, together, had miraculously amassed enough stuff to fill an apartment -- furniture, a flat screen TV, a Nintendo Wii, an Xbox. We were living the lives our inner 15-year-olds had always wanted. It was a really great time in my life. In fact, up until that point, I had been pretty fortunate. And it is because of that good fortune that I can say the following with absolute certainty: Getting bed bugs is the worst thing that has ever happened to me.

Just the process leading up to figuring out that I had bedbugs was agonizing. My roommates and I had been in the apartment for about six months without incident. Then one summer morning, I woke up with a bug bite. It was a deep magenta-colored bug bite that seemed to itch a great deal more than most, but I assumed it was from a mosquito. Then about a week later I woke up with four more insanely-itchy bites. I began to suspect I might have bedbugs.

I brought it up to my roommates, but neither of them had been bitten. We also hadn't moved any new furniture into the apartment or done any of the things that normally bring in bedbugs. They were unconvinced. Over the next week, I got more bites. I said, "Guys, I really think we have bedbugs!" They still did not believe me. To their credit, their dismissiveness was not, in fact, naïve denial. But to explain that, I'm going to have to give you a little backstory.

A few months earlier, I slept with a stranger.
So, I started to do that thing you do after sleeping with a stranger -- freak out about your reproductive health when you see something even remotely abnormal. And I had found something abnormal. It was a bump. And in my brain, "bump" translated to "herpes." The bump was technically only on my upper thigh, but nevertheless it was enough for my herpes freakout to carry on full-speed ahead. In a panic, I made an emergency doctor's appointment with a female physician that I had never met. I arrived at the clinic and showed her my bump. She responded in the single most comforting way I have ever been condescended to. "Honey, that's an ingrown hair." I was healthy and herpes-less.

So, when I said to my roommates, "Guys, I really think we have bed bugs," they came back with, "Yeah...you also just thought you had herpes!" Their skepticism was well placed. I am nuts.

In the course of the next month, I kept getting more bites and my roommates continued to insist I was a lunatic. I was in a constant state of full body itch, but I could not convince anyone of what I was increasingly more sure of -- there were bedbugs not only in my room, but in the whole apartment. I tried sleeping on the couch in the living room and then showing my roommates the bites I got from that, but it was to no avail. They, after all, weren't getting bitten. What I would later find out is that bedbugs simply tend to bite some, and not others. And for those who do get bitten, they sometimes don't have significant reactions to those bites. My two roommates had apparently fallen into one of those categories. At the time, though, I did not have the proper knowledge at my disposal to make a case.

And then I found evidence.
This whole time, I had been searching for bedbugs all over the apartment, but I couldn't find any. I was starting to doubt myself. Maybe I just had hives. But then finally I found one. I was in bed. I had taken to sleeping with the lights on -- and I saw him crawling up the wall. This is when I first learned the most terrifying things about bedbugs. They do not die. I smashed the bug against the wall with my thumb. When I released he kept walking. I scooped him off the wall with a piece of paper, put him on my desk and pounded him repeatedly with a book. He still wasn't dead. I wrapped him in plastic wrap, stomped on him with my foot and then put a shot glass over him. The next morning he was still moving. I showed him to my roommates. I now had proof, at least.

For over a month I had been in a constant state of panic, anticipating the next round of bites. It was actually a relief to finally know what was going on for sure and to be able to convince everyone that I wasn't completely insane. That relief, however, was short lived.

We began a three week extermination process.
All of our clothes had to be washed, dried on high heat and put into sealed garbage bags. I took the extra step of washing all my clothes in commercial grade antiseptic. All of our furniture had to be moved two feet from the walls. All of our drapes, pictures, and posters had to be taken down. Then, once a week for three weeks, our entire apartment was sprayed and covered in a thick layer of white insecticidal powder. And while we were told we were allowed to vacuum it up each time after three days, we thought it best to just leave it there -- really make sure those bugs were dead. We were also told that we could actually live in the apartment during the whole ordeal, but it seemed unwise to try to sleep in a place steeped in poison. My roommates started staying at their girlfriends' places. I had fallen out of touch with the aforementioned stranger girl, so I had to stay with my friend, Joe.

That was a tough sell, by the way. "Hey Joe, my apartment is infested with bugs that ruin your life. They can live in just about anything and are notorious for spreading rapidly. Mind if I bring over a bag of clothes that were just in that apartment and stay at your place?" I convinced Joe I would take extraordinary precautions to somehow not spread the bedbugs, and he was nice enough to lend me a spot on his couch. It was scary for him, though. "Can I get bedbugs from you if we drink out of the same glass? What if we accidentally touch?" He had to watch me obsessively scratch the multitude of remaining bites for three weeks while he wondered, "What if it happens to me?"

Finally, the three weeks were up. My roommates and I returned to our apartment and vacuumed up the layer of powder that coated every horizontal surface. My two-month long panic attack was at an end. Or so I thought.

Two weeks later, I woke up with another bite.
As I said, they don't die. I completely lost my mind. I threw away my bed, my dresser, my night stand, my desk, my posters, my chair, most of my clothes, pictures of my family, and even my TV. Not that I could afford to replace those things -- I certainly couldn't -- but I just couldn't bear to keep them. Logically, I knew that there was no way the bedbugs had somehow infested my family gallery or TV, but I knew I was leaving that apartment forever, and I couldn't stand even the embryo of a thought that I might bring them to a new place. I took my remaining clothes to a laundromat, bought new garbage bags, and made plans to go back to Joe's. By the time I got to his apartment, the only things I owned were two garbage bags full of laundry that smelled like Listerine, a laptop, an iPod, and one final deep magenta bite on my leg that I couldn't stop staring at.

My roommates and I broke our lease and split up to find new apartments. Not wanting to further impose on Joe for the duration of a lengthy New York City apartment search, I took to sleeping at a different friend's place every few nights. I carried my two garbage bags of clothes from one place to another.

Then, one Monday I had a day off from work. I really had no place to go, but I didn't want to ask the friend who's place I was staying at to just hang around in his apartment alone all day. I was going to be staying at a different place that night, so I picked up my laptop, iPod and two bags of clothes and I started walking aimlessly around Brooklyn. By this point, I was so depressed that I had pretty much given up on maintaining any level of respectable personal appearance. I was wearing a ripped tie-dye shirt and a swimsuit. I looked homeless, and in fact, I was.

I made my way to a park and found a nice patch of grass to lay down to take a nap on. Just as I was about to doze off I heard someone yell my name. My eyes bolted open. Standing over me was a girl I had known in college. I hadn't seen her in three years.

"Noah? What...are you doing?"

There was no efficient way to explain why I was sleeping in a park in the middle of the day on a Monday, surrounded by garbage bags. I decided I'd start at the beginning. "Well," I said, "A few months ago I thought I had herpes..."

Noah spent six months trying the patience of college friends, crashing at their apartment, until he found a new apartment in Brooklyn. He's been living there bedbug free ever since. He tries to keep sane during the current bedbug outbreak sweeping New York City. About a month ago, he found what turned out to be a mosquito bite. His roommate had to talk him out of moving. Noah still refuses to sit on subway benches or walk on the same side of the street as a discarded mattress. He has yet to replace all of his belongings. More than anything, he just wants his corduroy blazer back, but realizes the potential karmic repercussions of reenacting any part of of his pre-bedbug life.

Still thinking about bedbugs? (We're sorry!) Check out these great pieces from our friends...

Don't Let the Bedbugs Bite!
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and more about bedbugs from AOL Health!

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Filed Under: Your Home, News & Trends

  • Mea

    I read on another site that you could use borax to kill the bedbugs. I know you can kill roaches with it as is causes cuts in their exoskeletons and their insides dry up. You can put the powder on your mattress and then put a plastic mattress protector on that, then you need to put it everywhere on the floor, corners, closets, furniture, you name it. do NOT use this if you have young children or pets, as it is poisonous if ingested, but it gives off no odors and will not be inhaled, so it is safe for adults. Of course you still need to wash everything washable on hot and dry on hot. run things that cannot be washed on hot in the dryer. I don't know what to do about electronics. It gets pretty hot inside many electronics, but I don't know if it gets to 120 degrees. these bugs can go a year without eating, however they are not like roaches, which will eat anything - they only drink human blood. they ought to call them vampire bugs - ugh!

    Reply
  • addd

    give it a rest, a few bug bites and u accordingly throw your life away?? lol you're pathetic... think about the people who service this unjust country by enlisting and putting their lives on the line just so more and more immigrants and lazy low lives living off welfare (blacks of course) reaping our tax dollars. Get your place fumigated and realize you're not the one getting blown up by suicidal bombers to support this place we call the land of oppurtunity.

    Reply
  • LIn

    This story and others like it, just tells us just how clean we are. Just earlier this week the empire state building was /or is enfested with bedbugs.DON"T BUY USED BEDDING OR ANY OTHER FURNITURE. BED BUGS ARE LIKE LICE> ONCE YOU GET THEM IT"S HARD TO GET RID OF.

    Reply
  • jack

    BUSH DID IT

    Reply
  • AMGARY

    Unfortunately. folks, we have a problem and I think we are only seeing the tip of the iceberg. LIttle story for all of you:

    My son, who lives in Philly, has been through two infestations.The first one required taking all his belongings out of his apartment, which is about the size of a large broom closet, paying $800 to have the apartment treated, then throwing away a new bed, box spring, furniture, etc,. renting an outside storage unit and letting his clothes lie in a state of suspended animation for a year in sealed garbage bags, then to a commercial wash, then drying at near nuclear flash point temperatures. We (mom and dad) live in Annapolis, so he was able to leave his premises for much of the treatment period and bunk out with us. Interesting seeing your son move his belongings in and out of the trunk of his car in black garbage bags during his visits. And of course, we began to view him in the same light as one looks at a mass murderer; we never knew if in fact he was really clean, but as a parent, we had to take the chance. Could not see him sleeping outside-ala Noah.

    Round two: son has a clean apartment, new job, life is good. New job takes him to Canton, Ohio for occasional training (be aware, folks in Ohio-you have the curse too) and he stays in what is probably well-used corporate housing, After a couple trips back and forth is sitting at his desk in his broom closet apartment working on his computer and a new guest crawls up his leg. Guess what-bedbugs. Cleaning out apartment round two starts. Same drill. Goes back on business to the corporate housing and starts to inspect the bedding (he KNOWS what to look for by this time.) Finds all the evidence one could ask for (blood spots on mattress pads, under pads, eggs on headboard etc.) Does all the right things with his personal belongings when he gets home so he does not re-infest his apartment for the third time. Advises his employer of the situation and asks for reimbursement for the second treatment to his broom closet. For whatever reason, and there could be many, the story does not end weil for him in regard to his employment, so I just look at this as a coincidence. Readers should too and draw no inference-just part of the story.

    Round Three, or "Paranoia Unleashed":

    My wife and my 29th anniversary was on August 29th; we invited both our sons to our house for dinner and my Philly Flash son drove down late in the day on the 28th to spend the night and stay through the 29th and a few days longer so he could help me with some projects I had to do at the business we own. My wife and son go out for a late lunch on the 28th and my wife casually mentions that she had a bug crawl on her in bed the other night. She had told me about it, I looked at the carcass the next morning and I knew, without question that it was NOT a bedbug. Even I have a visual positive match capability by now. My son freaks out, wants to see the carcass. I, unfortunately, have vacuumed the house by now and have a vac bag full of, well, you know what the next word is.

    Bottom line: my son, who just drove in from Philly, refuses to stay in our house for fear of bedbugs until we have our home inspected. Drives home very late at night on a same day turnaround. Next day I have the place inspected and we are given the green light, so he does another turnaround and is able to be here for our 29th. i should pay the kid mileage, for cripes sake!

    I fully understand and sympathize with any and all of you who have had to deal with bedbugs; the damage they do to a person in terms of mind games I am a living witness to, and I fully grasp the fear and loathing of bedbugs. I am just waiting, at this point, for my turn in having to deal with them as it looks like it is almost an impossibility to not have them show up with, on, or in one of your friends houses, hotel rooms or whatever and ultimately become a traveller with you.

    On the good news side, those people that entertain at home now have the option of asking their guests to remove all of their clothing before coming into the house, so perhaps for the next generation, cocktail chatter will focus on the seen and not the unseen.

    Hope you enjoyed the humorous endgame piece, but to be serious, be careful. Knowing what to look for will help, but once you have them, be prepared for some mental and monetary anguish as you will get a lot of both. Good luck, stay clean and.............here it come.......................watch out now.........."Don't let the bedbugs bite." Bring back DDT!

    Reply
  • Rose Houser

    Linda, and what foreigners are u speaking of? Your forefathers?

    Reply
  • rod hogan

    We really hate bed bugs especially if we have our travel in timeshare exit solutions business and can sleep in a hotel that have lots of it. My companions really hate this thing.

    Reply
  • Carrie Cohen

    Very well written piece. I really enjoyed reading this! They should sell bed bug insurance!

    Reply
  • Anne Harrington

    What's worse than parasites coming in from Texas is Texas coming into New York!! It's Gross alright. Downright Inhuman!!!

    Reply
  • mizT

    The hygiene of a person has nothing to do with it. World wide travel does. People are more mobile now. And after doing a little research, the attitude of people will make a difference in this epidemic.
    Lots of info on these websites. :-) Hope it helps.

    http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/bedbugs/DS00663

    http://www.badbedbugs.com/

    http://bedbugregistry.com/ ◄bookmark if you travel or plan to! I live about 10 miles from one of these registered places! arrrrrgggghhh! what scares me most of all is that the business, owners, managers, etc.... denied the fact that these pests were even present. And apparently over time have done nothing about it. There are several posts on this hotel over a 2 YEAR period! >=-(
    hmpf! with these blatant, callous, POS attitudes, no wonder these bugs are making a come back! UGH!

    Reply
  • 50 Comments / 3 Pages

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