Anonymous wrote:The Money Pit
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Catty, social climbing, hyper competitive Mom & pushover, nice enough Dad bought their first house and selected the most over-improved, flashiest house in the neighborhood. Couple attempted to renegotiate at settlement and threatened to walk away when their last minute counteroffer wasn’t accepted.
Moved in and immediately began throwing parties to show off their house. Only time there were no parties was when they took off on splashy vacations to big name places (Vail, Jackson Hole, Paris) and sometimes invited their friends. Joined the country club.
Then, abruptly the dream house went on the market. Couple oddly made a local move to a rental claiming they needed to downsize.
Husband went to federal prison for embezzlement.
He is not nice at all. Funny how you tried to make it about the wife until the last sentence.
Anonymous wrote:Catty, social climbing, hyper competitive Mom & pushover, nice enough Dad bought their first house and selected the most over-improved, flashiest house in the neighborhood. Couple attempted to renegotiate at settlement and threatened to walk away when their last minute counteroffer wasn’t accepted.
Moved in and immediately began throwing parties to show off their house. Only time there were no parties was when they took off on splashy vacations to big name places (Vail, Jackson Hole, Paris) and sometimes invited their friends. Joined the country club.
Then, abruptly the dream house went on the market. Couple oddly made a local move to a rental claiming they needed to downsize.
Husband went to federal prison for embezzlement.
Anonymous wrote:when we went to build our dream house, we asked each of the architects we interviewed what their divorce rate is.
anyway, we made it through 10 years since getting a contract on the property and then purchasing, zoning, architecting, building, and finally living in our dream house. still married!
but i think the process can really highlight disconnects around money and taste and just decision-making styles, and if people aren't in sync, or particularly good about communicating, or can't differentiate/articulate between wants and needs, things can go very badly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:A successful women friend built a gorgeous beach house in Delaware and some people got very jealous. They won’t visit her beautiful home because it makes them feel less than. These are mature women.
We are buying a nice home, and my sister (who lives in a nice home, smaller scale) told me it makes her feel terrible about her life. Not jealousy, just bad I guess? I was expecting her to be happy for us, but a lot of people can't process people gaining well anything.
Anonymous wrote:A successful women friend built a gorgeous beach house in Delaware and some people got very jealous. They won’t visit her beautiful home because it makes them feel less than. These are mature women.
Anonymous wrote:A successful women friend built a gorgeous beach house in Delaware and some people got very jealous. They won’t visit her beautiful home because it makes them feel less than. These are mature women.
Anonymous wrote:No specific stories but 3 years ago we bought a larger house in the same neighborhood instead of renovating the house we lived in.
We had several couple friends divorce in the 2 years before we moved. Not everyone we know who built a house or did a major renovation got divorced, but everyone who divorced had done a renovation or bought a new-build at the top of their budget in the 24 months before the divorce.
Anonymous wrote:War of the Roses