Sarah Maddox
Breaking my lease under ADA
5 May 2017 | 10 replies
I don't know your situation, I don't know you but I assume you were fine where you lived and "normal" before the birth of your twins.You can find a doctor to diagnose you with anything but having twins generally doesn't thrust upon the mother borderline personality disorder, agoraphobia, severe panic disorder, unspecified bipolar disorder, PTSD, and certainly not ADHD.
Dielita McKnight
Former IT Project Manager - will my skills transfer
2 December 2023 | 21 replies
I'm a project manager with the experience my rehab-loving spouse wisely thrust upon me and have occasionally thought the same.
Burte Lkhagvasuren
Had THE WORST renovation experience with rental property!!!
19 September 2022 | 5 replies
This is either the funniest parady I've ever seen on Bigger Pockets or the most serious visual crime thrust upon a property I've ever seen.If it actually occured and I trust you that it did, take all the pictures as you seem to already have done.
Johanna Perez
When to start making offers
10 June 2023 | 5 replies
It somehow got accepted and I was thrust into RE investing without doing any due diligence or knew what I was doing.
Ray Reed
inherited 85 year old tenant but rent is way below market
11 May 2020 | 94 replies
Now, all this is amplified of course, but that is really what a blanket law is doing, it is "commandeering" a business by force of law and utilizing it's resources with no compenstation, actions that typically require a very specific set of criteria and are rarely used in the history of this country.Now, it's probably best for your business if you CAN work this out, to do so, but to have it thrust upon you in a "one size fits all" like the ridiculous examples above, that's where the problem lies, and a sad reflection of whom we have elected over the years.
Curt Dumonceaux
Lease Back?
12 February 2022 | 18 replies
As soon as they ethically and legally help a seller avoid foreclosure, and do everything they promised to do on time, the seller will turn on them and start complaining about some perceived injustice, calling them a con artist.If you can live with being treated like garbage by the very people who would have been thrust out on the street like vagabonds in the middle of winter without two pennies to rub together were it not for you bending over backwards and risking your butt to save them with an overly generous arrangement that’s better than 99% of other investors would ever consider doing, then by all means, go ahead.If the irony of explaining something multiple times in clear, direct language, and having them read and initial every paragraph of a painstakingly understandable, notarized CYA letter, contract to SELL, and Lease Agreement, only to be threatened with legal action because they claim they didn’t know they were selling their house does not make you ashamed to belong to the same human race, then proceed.If you’re going to do it, just know the following things:1) No matter how intelligent, sensible, and responsible you believe a seller to be, they will mutate into something else entirely the very second you advance funds and solve their problem, to the same extent, and with the same speed and ferociousness as Bilbo Baggins in the first Lord of the Rings movie.2) You will go from benevolent savior to despicable con artist within 1 week after closing.3) They will almost always stop returning your calls once you have solved their problem, which makes collecting rent or qualifying them for a loan more difficult.4) They will understand the terms of the sale and lease with 100% certainty, until the closing has occurred, at which point something which scientists do not yet comprehend alters the chemistry of their brain and supplants their true memories with false ones.
Jeremy Bobbert
First-time landlord unsure of how to handle charges against tenants upon moveout
20 June 2023 | 3 replies
I'm a first-time landlord that was unexpectedly thrust into renting out our home with a job change and I'm a bit naive to how the process works.
Chris Mason
Coronavirus Mortgage Meltdown Articles
11 May 2020 | 54 replies
To be clear, unlike the last recession when borrowers had to prove hardship in order to qualify for a forbearance plan, a move made to make sure that taxpayers were only helping those who truly were in need, the current regime has opened this up to any and all homeowners with a loan from the GSEs or the GNMA programs.This means that even people still employed, earning their regular pay and able to make the payment on their home, can simply opt in for a free “put” provided by the federal government to be paid for first by private industry and backed up by the taxpayer.But in doing so, policy makers thrust billions of dollars of liquidity risk right on top of the financial services sector that may take down the system entirely if they don’t adhere to their responsibility.
Alexandra Hughes Pailet
BPCON2021 Attendees - Let's connect!
9 October 2021 | 177 replies
This is my first big step in thrusting my way into the REI world.
Robin Simon
NPLA - New Private Lending Glossary
2 September 2023 | 4 replies
Their biggest initiative this last couple of years is to move away from the term "Hard Money" to "Private Lender" - thats the biggest thrust of the organization.