Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Maybe if you hire her to sell your house or let her know she can bring buyers through, she will agree to undecorate her yard!
Haha. I've thought about offering to take it all down (and later put it all back up) for her, just to get through our sale. Ugh.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I've considered mental health and, of course, financial reasons. Neighbors have talked to her directly about this. Her child goes to an expensive private school, and the business seems to be thriving. It does not seem that mental health is the cause. It is just a mystery. Our neighborhood has been gracious, for many years, and saw the humor when the skeletons were the only items on the lawn, but now they are in disrepair, and there are layers of other holiday decorations in addition to the trash. We will contact the city about rodents. Thx.
Of course it's mental illness. Successful people can have ADHD/autism and be hoarders and generally unable to keep a home. The mentally ill aren't automatically disabled people in group homes, OP. My very financially successful husband has a hoarding problem and would totally let the house and yard go to seed if I wasn't there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does she work for a company? If you've already politely spoken to her, I would call her employer and tell them you're going to post negative reviews about her unless she cleans up her yard.
I don't mind neighbors who don't have a green thumb, who have ugly lawn furniture, who store broken cars in their driveway, or who take too long to take down their holiday decor. But 6.5 years of 6 foot skeletons isn't reasonable. Come on now.
Omg please call my employer and tell them I have decaying decorations in my yard. Their reaction would be hilarious. Also the reviews would get removed as irrelevant.
Are you a realtor responsible for marketing and selling residential properties?
How she keeps her own home is irrelevant to how she markets and sells other people’s properties.
Who cares? She's being outride rude, whether intentional or not. Her neighbors have tolerated it for 6 years and kindly asked her about it. Whatever they do at this point isn't worse than what she is doing to them. There may not be rules against what can go in her yard, but there's also no rules about asking her to address it. These are decaying 15 foot skeletons, people, overlaid with other holiday decor. This lady is nuts!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does she work for a company? If you've already politely spoken to her, I would call her employer and tell them you're going to post negative reviews about her unless she cleans up her yard.
I don't mind neighbors who don't have a green thumb, who have ugly lawn furniture, who store broken cars in their driveway, or who take too long to take down their holiday decor. But 6.5 years of 6 foot skeletons isn't reasonable. Come on now.
Omg please call my employer and tell them I have decaying decorations in my yard. Their reaction would be hilarious. Also the reviews would get removed as irrelevant.
Are you a realtor responsible for marketing and selling residential properties?
How she keeps her own home is irrelevant to how she markets and sells other people’s properties.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I've considered mental health and, of course, financial reasons. Neighbors have talked to her directly about this. Her child goes to an expensive private school, and the business seems to be thriving. It does not seem that mental health is the cause. It is just a mystery. Our neighborhood has been gracious, for many years, and saw the humor when the skeletons were the only items on the lawn, but now they are in disrepair, and there are layers of other holiday decorations in addition to the trash. We will contact the city about rodents. Thx.
Of course it's mental illness. Successful people can have ADHD/autism and be hoarders and generally unable to keep a home. The mentally ill aren't automatically disabled people in group homes, OP. My very financially successful husband has a hoarding problem and would totally let the house and yard go to seed if I wasn't there.
The irony is that she is successful in real estate and staging. When she goes to sell this home, we can guess that her yard will be well-kept and staged. In the meantime, neighbors selling around her will suffer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I've considered mental health and, of course, financial reasons. Neighbors have talked to her directly about this. Her child goes to an expensive private school, and the business seems to be thriving. It does not seem that mental health is the cause. It is just a mystery. Our neighborhood has been gracious, for many years, and saw the humor when the skeletons were the only items on the lawn, but now they are in disrepair, and there are layers of other holiday decorations in addition to the trash. We will contact the city about rodents. Thx.
Of course it's mental illness. Successful people can have ADHD/autism and be hoarders and generally unable to keep a home. The mentally ill aren't automatically disabled people in group homes, OP. My very financially successful husband has a hoarding problem and would totally let the house and yard go to seed if I wasn't there.
The irony is that she is successful in real estate and staging. When she goes to sell this home, we can guess that her yard will be well-kept and staged. In the meantime, neighbors selling around her will suffer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does she work for a company? If you've already politely spoken to her, I would call her employer and tell them you're going to post negative reviews about her unless she cleans up her yard.
I don't mind neighbors who don't have a green thumb, who have ugly lawn furniture, who store broken cars in their driveway, or who take too long to take down their holiday decor. But 6.5 years of 6 foot skeletons isn't reasonable. Come on now.
Omg please call my employer and tell them I have decaying decorations in my yard. Their reaction would be hilarious. Also the reviews would get removed as irrelevant.
Are you a realtor responsible for marketing and selling residential properties?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here. I've considered mental health and, of course, financial reasons. Neighbors have talked to her directly about this. Her child goes to an expensive private school, and the business seems to be thriving. It does not seem that mental health is the cause. It is just a mystery. Our neighborhood has been gracious, for many years, and saw the humor when the skeletons were the only items on the lawn, but now they are in disrepair, and there are layers of other holiday decorations in addition to the trash. We will contact the city about rodents. Thx.
Of course it's mental illness. Successful people can have ADHD/autism and be hoarders and generally unable to keep a home. The mentally ill aren't automatically disabled people in group homes, OP. My very financially successful husband has a hoarding problem and would totally let the house and yard go to seed if I wasn't there.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Does she work for a company? If you've already politely spoken to her, I would call her employer and tell them you're going to post negative reviews about her unless she cleans up her yard.
I don't mind neighbors who don't have a green thumb, who have ugly lawn furniture, who store broken cars in their driveway, or who take too long to take down their holiday decor. But 6.5 years of 6 foot skeletons isn't reasonable. Come on now.
Omg please call my employer and tell them I have decaying decorations in my yard. Their reaction would be hilarious. Also the reviews would get removed as irrelevant.
Anonymous wrote:OP here. I've considered mental health and, of course, financial reasons. Neighbors have talked to her directly about this. Her child goes to an expensive private school, and the business seems to be thriving. It does not seem that mental health is the cause. It is just a mystery. Our neighborhood has been gracious, for many years, and saw the humor when the skeletons were the only items on the lawn, but now they are in disrepair, and there are layers of other holiday decorations in addition to the trash. We will contact the city about rodents. Thx.
Anonymous wrote:Does she work for a company? If you've already politely spoken to her, I would call her employer and tell them you're going to post negative reviews about her unless she cleans up her yard.
I don't mind neighbors who don't have a green thumb, who have ugly lawn furniture, who store broken cars in their driveway, or who take too long to take down their holiday decor. But 6.5 years of 6 foot skeletons isn't reasonable. Come on now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Mind your own business.
You might be able to address the food trash. Unlikely to be able to address out-of-season holiday decorations.
Sorry, we plan to sell our house in the next 12 months. This feels like our business as it will affect how prospective buyers perceive our home's value.
Your neighbors don’t have any duty to maintain your property values. You should’ve bought in an HOA if you weren’t prepared to live near people who keep out Halloween decorations year round.
Just to be clear, it is now 'decaying' halloween decorations, Xmas decorations, and giant Easter decorations, plus weathered fabric draping from a party.
Thanks to those that have offered empathy. Next house we buy will be in an HOA. Can't always anticipate how neighbors will care for the place we call home.
Anonymous wrote:Maybe if you hire her to sell your house or let her know she can bring buyers through, she will agree to undecorate her yard!