Anonymous wrote:I just moved into a new house. But I'm wishing I bought a different one.Is there anything i can do?
Anonymous wrote:Last year, we sold my totally-redone house (bought it while single, fixed EVERYTHING over 10 years, so it was a new house in a gorgeous old Craftsman shell) in a quaint, quiet town we loved, and moved to a giant 5-bedroom house with a lot of land in the middle of nowhere. I resisted it because I've already totally redone 4 houses in my life, and just didn't want to spend the rest of my life redoing ANOTHER wreck (I'm in my late 40's she's in her early 50's). I ultimately caved because it seemed that this house would make her happy - she always wanted a pool, and this place had one.
18 months later, we've had 3 floods, septic issues, electrical issues, water pouring through the roof and foundation simultaneously, fireplace issues, an exploding heat/cooling system, and collapsing retaining walls causing a literal cascade of water-related issues. EVERYTHING needs replacement. One small repair always leads to a larger repair and then - aha - something that requires contractors, permits, and money we don't have. We've spent ALL of our savings just keeping this money pit from collapsing, and there are still tens of thousands of dollars of repairs waiting in the wings. This house has become a full-time job that I have to PAY to do, and I dread coming home to a money pit that dominates our lives. The amount of money we've spent has forced me to postpone my retirement indefinitely - we were set until this horrible decision. Beyond that, I hate our new location and drive 20 minutes to our old town to everything anyway, because our only neighbors are trees and deer.
At this point I'd welcome a giant disaster so we could leave. Or, at least I would. If she wants to stay, she can have it. Lesson? Stick to logic and reason guys, and don't cave to make someone happy - it ultimately just makes both of you miserable. Also, don't use a realtor that's one of your wife's pals, or her home inspector who's real purpose was to facilitate a sale and NOT actually look at the house.
We traded a new house with great neighbors within 3 blocks of a great town, for a house in the middle of nowhere straight out of a Tom Hanks movie - but without the laughs. At least out here, no one can hear me scream.
I've got a house for sale, if anyone is interested. It's a bargain!
Anonymous wrote:My mother the realtor gave me a tip when I bought my first house. Before you move in or as soon as possible after you move in, take one room or project that you've always wanted to do, but couldn't do before, and do it. That may be painting walls (if you came from a rental where you couldn't paint) or tearing out something and replacing it. etc. Then, when you're having buyer's remorse, go into the room with the project and remind yourself why you wanted to own instead of rent--because you got to make the decisions for what you wanted.
In my first house, I tore out some built in light fixtures that drove me nuts and replaced them. When I was feeling down about the house, I could look at the lights and realized that I would never have been able to do that with a rental and I would have been stuck with old, ugly lights that I didn't like. We only had one small inconvenient door out to the back yard (from the kitchen). 18 months after we moved in, I took out the double window in the family room and added atrium doors from the family room out onto the deck. Whenever I needed to be reminded why home ownership is good, I could open the new door to the deck and appreciate it and let those changes that I made to the house lift my spirit a little.
In my new house, we closed about 3 weeks before we moved. We took the time to paint a few rooms and I bought and added built in furniture in one room for our office. Now, I can walk into the office and look at the built-ins and realize that I would never have been able to put those into a rental.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My mother the realtor gave me a tip when I bought my first house. Before you move in or as soon as possible after you move in, take one room or project that you've always wanted to do, but couldn't do before, and do it. That may be painting walls (if you came from a rental where you couldn't paint) or tearing out something and replacing it. etc. Then, when you're having buyer's remorse, go into the room with the project and remind yourself why you wanted to own instead of rent--because you got to make the decisions for what you wanted.
In my first house, I tore out some built in light fixtures that drove me nuts and replaced them. When I was feeling down about the house, I could look at the lights and realized that I would never have been able to do that with a rental and I would have been stuck with old, ugly lights that I didn't like. We only had one small inconvenient door out to the back yard (from the kitchen). 18 months after we moved in, I took out the double window in the family room and added atrium doors from the family room out onto the deck. Whenever I needed to be reminded why home ownership is good, I could open the new door to the deck and appreciate it and let those changes that I made to the house lift my spirit a little.
In my new house, we closed about 3 weeks before we moved. We took the time to paint a few rooms and I bought and added built in furniture in one room for our office. Now, I can walk into the office and look at the built-ins and realize that I would never have been able to put those into a rental.
I love that advice
Anonymous wrote:My mother the realtor gave me a tip when I bought my first house. Before you move in or as soon as possible after you move in, take one room or project that you've always wanted to do, but couldn't do before, and do it. That may be painting walls (if you came from a rental where you couldn't paint) or tearing out something and replacing it. etc. Then, when you're having buyer's remorse, go into the room with the project and remind yourself why you wanted to own instead of rent--because you got to make the decisions for what you wanted.
In my first house, I tore out some built in light fixtures that drove me nuts and replaced them. When I was feeling down about the house, I could look at the lights and realized that I would never have been able to do that with a rental and I would have been stuck with old, ugly lights that I didn't like. We only had one small inconvenient door out to the back yard (from the kitchen). 18 months after we moved in, I took out the double window in the family room and added atrium doors from the family room out onto the deck. Whenever I needed to be reminded why home ownership is good, I could open the new door to the deck and appreciate it and let those changes that I made to the house lift my spirit a little.
In my new house, we closed about 3 weeks before we moved. We took the time to paint a few rooms and I bought and added built in furniture in one room for our office. Now, I can walk into the office and look at the built-ins and realize that I would never have been able to put those into a rental.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Here, in the DC metro, yes very common.
+1 The owner of a 1960s fixer-upper who bought for relatively close-in location and schools
Anonymous wrote:Here, in the DC metro, yes very common.
Anonymous wrote:Just an idea, but how would you arrange/stage your house if you were putting it on the market next week? Could you try doing that and see if you like it better? Boxes you haven't unpacked are really depressing. Hide them, get rid of the stuff (obviously you don't really need it), and make the place look superficially attractive. Sometimes that helps a lot.