Quote:
Originally Posted by cshenk
Tommy Joe wrote in rec.food.cooking:
On Jul 5, 6:29*pm, "cshenk" wrote:
The glory of owning is you can do what you want. *The pain is no one
fixes it for you no matter what it is. *You build equity but you
can be hit with a 2-5000$ bill suddenly.
Good luck with Aunti Mabel. Yes, what you say above was just
stressed by me in another post. No matter which way you turn there's
something to pay. Everything has its positives and negatives, and
when things are going ok I'm laughing at the world, content in the
knowledge that I made the right decision, that I had it right all
along - till something goes wrong and I begin to wonder about it. But
with me renting vs owning was never an option anyway as I really can't
even begin to imagine having the cash to own or even rent a house.
It's not a contest or argument. I can see the positives either way.
The only way I would own a house is if someone gave it to me. But
even if I hit the lottery tomorrow I would choose an apartment over a
house. Top floor, not too high, with the windows always open, a fan
blowing air out or in. I think of people who live in really huge
homes, like mansions, and there's something scary about it - like the
place is so huge with so many rooms that you don't know who's in there
with you. You buy a big home, you need a big fence. Then something
to guard the fence. Then something to guard the things guarding the
fence. That is my fear of ownership - lack of responsibility and
openly admitted laziness of which I am oddly proud.
Yup. One makes choices. I chose to move me and my family about the
world for 26 years in the Navy. That meant apartment dwelling until we
hit a sweet deal on this house. It was the right time for us and
unlike many fools, we took a straight fixed mortgage at what the banker
was saying was foolish but over time, we were dead on right. We paid
more in the first years but it did not go *up* and we could bank the
excess once we had it.
Now, I could not touch an apartment for 800$ a month which is my total
mortgage and taxes/insurance payment. Instead, I have a 4 BR 1.5 bath
with fully fenced backyard and a fireplace. House will be paid off in
about 6 years so it will drop to about 350$ tax/insurance well before I
hit retirement age.
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Smart man. You saw the scam and thought with some common sense. I bought my first house fifteen years ago, and moved up to a very nice home in the country, with acreage. I'm paying $630/month. I have to also pay to maintain it; but it is an appreciable asset even with the economy down. Since it's affordable, I bought some land that I use for camping and hope to build my retirement crib there.
I'm about 8 principle payments from paying off my home and another 15 on my other property.