We had one downstairs from my mom's apt she was bipolar and off her meds. She was also noise sensitive and gay. She was convinced the whole world, including our dogs, hated her and were out to get her.
We had to go to housing court in the end, we were found to be blameless of persecuting her or making excessive noise, or persecuting her and inflicting 'hate crimes' upon her because of her orientation. Her roomie, BTW, her cousin, was totally normal. And witnessing all this stufff, and actually acted as a witness FOR us in the end.
The unbalanced gal eventually moved back home to her parents in florida to live, no doubt, unhappily ever after. After all the hell she put us through, which I managed to get through without ever losing my temper, compared to my mother, who is as volatile as nitroglycerine, about a month before she was leaving, she apologized! And said she was sorry, that it really HAD been all in her own mind after all.... 4 years of hell, but lesson learned.
I felt sorry for her, and I was right to. She was really just a very very unhappy person. Perhaps if you understand the other people's unhappiness or cause of inconsiderateness, you can manage to get along in the end?.
I did..... I live in a house that was built in 1933. Around 1984 there was a house built behind me. I know the girl who built it, so when I told her I was buying the house in front of her she was thrill.
They didn’t stay too long, they built a smaller house in a different part of town. Neighbor #2 ~ awesome couple from out of state that stayed a few years and moved again due to work. Neighbor #3 was the neighbor from hell (way too much to write about) that at one point I though we were going to move just to keep our sanity.
They finally moved out after three years. Neighbor #4 ~ very nice, young but shady. They moved after two years.
Neighbor #5 was a gift from God to us. 5 neighbors in 13 years and this family could not be any nicer. I love them!
I love my little house and I am so glad we didn’t move out, but had neighbor #3 not moved we would not have been able to stay here. They were a nightmare. There is a story (by me) about the house itself that I will share with you someday.
For now we are settled and happy! I like my little corner in the world! This is the neigbors house, mine is about 1/4th of the size of this one!
:) .
Have had several Have had several. First one was an old guy who still thought he owned my house. And wrote it into his will.
That was a mess to straighten out. He also had this tree which grew these huge golf-ball sized nuts and it dropped one every 30 seconds from July to September every year, right onto my aluminum carport-roof. Wham!
Next one was a classic clueless millionaire who was drunk all the time and put his Cadillac up on blocks in his back yard. Had hot women running in and out at all hours. They often left very abruptly with a startled expression on their faces so who knows what was going on.
Then a real jerk moved in. We’d do him little favors and he’d often COMPLAIN about the way we did them. Like he’d ask if he could have our newspaper when we were done with it.
When my wife would bring it over to his house, he’d COMPLAIN that he was not interested in a particular section or two. He'd also not mow his lawn for months at a time.
We moved out and she died two months later grrrrrrr loved the house hated the neighbor .
1 You need to talk to AgentOrange...her neighbors are real crazy (think explosions and fires! ) .
You need to talk to AgentOrange...her neighbors are real crazy (think explosions and fires! ).
" "So we're going to hell!" "So we're going to hell! " "Obtaining state certified birth/death records for people who lived in the early 1900's? " "What do you think about Hell?
Heaven? URL1. Maybe.
I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.