Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This house:
http://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/3619-Quesada-St-NW-20015/home/9970426/mris-DC8053122
This story:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reetika_Vazirani -- though it says CC MD, it was this house in DC.
It's a really cute house, but I can't look past the history.
How'd you even know about the history? Unless you live close by, the rest of the gneral public would have forgotten.
People talk. Realtors, friends who remember the incident, etc.
Well posting it here is a jerk-ish move. You could have asked the question without providing links to the house & to the suicide.
Why? Clearly some people care (and probably would like to know) and some don't and won't be bothered. As a buyer, I would be furious to find this out only after the fact.
+1. I would be so upset to find this out after the fact. I would never buy a house where a murder or suicide took place. I don't believe in ghosts, but it's still bad karma.
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So ghosts are not real but Karma?!
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Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the price was right, sure. But not if you don't think you can get over it. I have a friend with a gorgeous house next door to a cemetery. I wouldn't live in that house if you gave it to me. We all have different hang ups.
I would love to live next to a cemetery. It's like a park, with no one in it most of the time.
I lived in an apartment house next to a cemetery in grad school. Loved it! Far better neighbors than a frat house or a bunch of undergrads.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If the price was right, sure. But not if you don't think you can get over it. I have a friend with a gorgeous house next door to a cemetery. I wouldn't live in that house if you gave it to me. We all have different hang ups.
I would love to live next to a cemetery. It's like a park, with no one in it most of the time.
Anonymous wrote:If the price was right, sure. But not if you don't think you can get over it. I have a friend with a gorgeous house next door to a cemetery. I wouldn't live in that house if you gave it to me. We all have different hang ups.
Anonymous wrote:It's not rational, but it would just give me the creeps. Some people don't like exposed brick, some people don't like tile. Me, I don't like ghosts of murdered children.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:This house:
http://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/3619-Quesada-St-NW-20015/home/9970426/mris-DC8053122
This story:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Reetika_Vazirani -- though it says CC MD, it was this house in DC.
It's a really cute house, but I can't look past the history.
How'd you even know about the history? Unless you live close by, the rest of the gneral public would have forgotten.
People talk. Realtors, friends who remember the incident, etc.
Well posting it here is a jerk-ish move. You could have asked the question without providing links to the house & to the suicide.
Why? Clearly some people care (and probably would like to know) and some don't and won't be bothered. As a buyer, I would be furious to find this out only after the fact.
+1. I would be so upset to find this out after the fact. I would never buy a house where a murder or suicide took place. I don't believe in ghosts, but it's still bad karma.
So ghosts are not real but Karma?!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't understand the problem. But I'm a logical person.
My reaction as well.
What would be the logical reason to rule it out just because a murder-suicide occurred there?
Because when my kid is eating cheerios I don't want to wonder if he is in the spot where someone blew their head off. When I tuck him in at night I don't want to wonder if it is the room where someone came in and stabbed a child to death or whatever happened.
She sliced the wrist. In the dining room. Probably the formal dining room; which could be easily avoided. What bothers me (about the suicide) is that it wasn't even her house. I don't think she had a connection to the house, so it's safe to buy.