Please register to participate in our discussions with 2 million other members - it's free and quick! Some forums can only be seen by registered members. After you create your account, you'll be able to customize options and access all our 15,000 new posts/day with fewer ads.
I didn't say it wa sin ruins, just one of the rooms needs a the floor replaced due to that was the room my dogs stayed in. Excuse me for asking a question texasfirewheel. I do have pride, but why am I fixing up a house that is goig to be repossessed? Geez, some of you have some biting tongues.
I didn't say it wa sin ruins, just one of the rooms needs a the floor replaced due to that was the room my dogs stayed in. Excuse me for asking a question texasfirewheel. I do have pride, but why am I fixing up a house that is goig to be repossessed? Geez, some of you have some biting tongues.
I ask again : Can you fix it up with friends and family ?
Maxwell, when I was out of work in the 1980's, I took a job cleaning repossessed homes, most of which had no electricity...in the summer...in Houston Texas. It was a disgusting eye-opener to see the way some people lived, with dog/cat poop all over the house, animal damage everywhere and garbage up the walls. I never understood why they didnt have any pride in the homes in which they lived.
Trashing a house, or part of a house, and then moving out, leaving your trash and dirt for someone else to clean it up, is a reflection on YOU.
Fixing it up, cleaning it out, and cleaning it up are three very different things. If it is being foreclosed on, I would not suggest spending any money fixing it up, that would be silly. However, you should clean it out. Do you not want your stuff? "Cleaning it out" implies removing of your belongings. "Cleaning it up" implies actual cleaning. Since you can do that with little to no expense to you, you should do that as well, because it is the right thing to do.
So
Fixing it up = no
Cleaning it out = Definitely
Cleaning it up = Yes
I have a mobile home I bought 12 years ago that I no longer want to live in due to the neighborhood went down the toilet and can't have my 1 year old live there anymore.
I've also wondered about your claim that you had to move because of your one-year old baby. You didnt say that the neighborhood is too dangerous for you. Why is it too dangerous for a baby?
I live in what is considered, by many, to be a dangerous area. My kids are grown but other families live, with their babies, on this block. They may be poor but they take pride in their homes and yards.
Did you just decide that the mess in your place is unhealthy for your baby?
1. I am not "fixing it up" since yes I am having it foreclosed on as Lacerta said.
2. I did "clean it out" and took my stuff with me.
3. I did "clean it up: by going back and sweeping out any stuff left behind the appliances when we moved them.
4. I did not trash my house. The house was not deemed unsafe to live in. I did not have my dogs poop everywhere in the house, I am not a pig. I did not have garbage up the walls as you said you have seen in some homes.
5. The neighborhood is somewhere I did not want my child to grow up in. When I get out of my car nand get called the b word and they scream from across the street that my baby is ugly and when the neighbors decided to shoot guns off at each other I took it upon myslef to move.
6. I have pride in myself, thank you, and for the reasons listed above, I decided to move.
7. Please don't assume things.
It is a double wide 24x60 Redman home. I bought it in 1998 new.
You bought a double wide
You bought it 12 years ago
You still owe $48,000 on it and you don't own the land it sits on ?
What have you been doing for the last 12 years ?
Please register to post and access all features of our very popular forum. It is free and quick. Over $68,000 in prizes has already been given out to active posters on our forum. Additional giveaways are planned.
Detailed information about all U.S. cities, counties, and zip codes on our site: City-data.com.