So this is...good? Bad? Probably long-term good, right?
This is NoCal. I am spending amounts of money that even a Manhattan resident would agree are insane for a very, very pleasant '60s ranch.
I mean... there ought to be cabana boys. GOLD-PLATED cabana boys. And a cabana.
Yes, the new car every week is awesome, which is what we have this month! We've had one week or so a month for the last three months--if we can keep that amount of reviews up it will be suh-weet.
This is NoCal. I am spending amounts of money that even a Manhattan resident would agree are insane for a very, very pleasant '60s ranch.
I don't suppose it would help to say I wish I had your debt and the house it went with?
Well, you see this diamond shoe right here?
I just realized that I could have gotten ruby instead. So I'm pouting.
And in all seriousness, I'm frightened. I got back from signing papers and I've been upset all day. That's just too much money to comprehend, and if I get unemployed, I will be unemployed owing $600,000. Plus.
I just realized that I could have gotten ruby instead. So I'm pouting.
Okay, well I'm pretty sure Ple was available for consultation so that's just your own poor planning. However, the pout is fetching.
And in all seriousness, I'm frightened. I got back from signing papers and I've been upset all day.
I get that. Financing and home-owning have such heavy, long-term consequential anxieties attached to them.
$600,000 dollars of debt could buy quite a house here. The kind of house where you need a map to find your way around.
Is $600,000 a sum that lenders actually expect to get paid off? Or is it a number that gets shuttled around to various owners as people move in and out of places?