
27 September 2016 | 2 replies
I am emotionally involved in my current house because of my neighbors.

6 October 2016 | 1 reply
Then they do a quick conversion to condos in two years and raises the property value.Such buyers are most likely buying on emotions because they are purely looking for a nice home to live (not cash flow), possibly buying in that location because of proximity to family or about to start a family, etc; so they will pay top dollar.

4 October 2016 | 13 replies
Then join a local REI group and begin using this formula to overcome your fear of the unknown....Definite Goal/Plans + Faith + Emotion + Action = All Human AccomplishmentFaith = Knowing you can accomplish your goal / Self ConfidenceEmotion = Feeling you can accomplish your goal / objectiveIf you feel that you are deficient in any element, focus on working on that until you feel you're ready to take action.I wish you the best.

30 September 2016 | 10 replies
Brandt is correct, there is no place in business for emotions, leave your heart at home where it belongs.

29 September 2016 | 4 replies
At the end of the day make the offer with your numbers, not emotion, and if it gets accepted right on.

30 September 2016 | 27 replies
Most owners or owners acting as PMs keep it professional with no emotional ties to tenants and keep it running as a business.

29 September 2016 | 10 replies
Personally, I would walk away, but he's emotionally invested, so, I'm trying to give him at least some tips, where he should ask for changes in the contract, which probably won't happen.

3 October 2016 | 2 replies
Remember to leave emotion out of it and think "Future Rental".

30 September 2016 | 5 replies
Let the seller know this is not an emotional buy and #'s must work.

7 October 2016 | 5 replies
Don't get emotionally involved with your own primary - FIRST, treat it as an investment!