Real Estate: Job in real estate? |
- Job in real estate?
- Any way out of realtor contract as a buyer (PA)?
- Closing question - Lender using higher property taxes than assessed - is this normal? [US - MD]
- Is it worth leaving the appliances? Any advice welcome!
- Why did my neighbor build a mansion and abandon it?
- It Finally Happened!
- Cash Tip for Realtor?
- Fed hinting on upping interest rates, what would this mean for the RE market?
- FTHB Offer Accepted - Instantly Excited, Instantly Stressed
- Our Realtor's mistake pushed closing out 2 more weeks, causing lots of problems
- Closing problems
- Larger offer or larger down payment?
- Trying to get an advantage
- We went under contract this week, just learned seller is in hospital and might not make it
- Signed for a new build, falling out with RE agent. Options to remove them?
- Lender no longer offering investment property loans
- Questions for buyers who are looking in more rural areas or just buyers in general. What are you looking for in listings? Is there any information you wish listings included?
- Confused fha 3 unit self sufficency
- Hide purchase price on zillow etc?
- Escrow Assistant?
- [NJ] "Quick home buyers" scam or worth looking at?
- Switching realtor after touring home - is this a bad move?
- Rent vs Buy with tax abatement program. Good idea?
- Builder will not communicate/ignoring requests for updates
Posted: 20 May 2021 07:15 AM PDT Not sure if this is the right place to post this, but I just scheduled an interview with a real estate company for an administration position for this Saturday. I've only ever worked in restaurants before, and I can get pretty nervous when it comes to interviews. I'm especially nervous for this one because this could be a great job for getting relevant experience for my future career for after I graduate. Does anyone have any tips about what kind of questions they'll ask, or something I should know going into the interview? Thank you so much in advance! [link] [comments] |
Any way out of realtor contract as a buyer (PA)? Posted: 20 May 2021 05:09 AM PDT Story time, my partner and I have been seriously house shopping since late February. We didn't have any strong feelings towards an agent, when I called a listing to ask for details, the house didn't work for us, but the agent did set up a search with parameters. They showed us a couple houses, but we didn't feel very comfortable with the "team" approach, so I reached out to an acquaintance who I knew was a realtor. She showed us 1 house, we liked it and put a bid on it. We were outbid, but both weren't happy with how she handled the bid/negotiations and felt like she was looking out for the sellers interests more than ours. We reached out to trusted friends for recommendations and were referred to another agent who we both liked more. We saw an amazing house, on a Sunday morning, offers were due by that night at 6pm. We decided to go in with the strongest terms we could afford. The agent said he would send docs over for us to fill out and sign. He called and at 430pm to say he was sending docs over and explained what they were. He told us that the one document ensured he got paid if the deal closed and disclosed a $300 doc fee due to the brokerage again only if it closed. He specifically stated that this didn't mean we had to use him, but that he would get paid if we did. We received all of the docs at 4:45 with again offers due at 6. We rushed through everything to make sure we got it in on time. Unfortunately we were outbid, but we were still happy with how the agent handled everything. He showed us several more homes, we made one other offer (significantly under ask, per his recommendation) and were 9th out of 10 offers received. We've tried alternative options, looking for land and building on it, finding a total rehab and fixing it up (but rehabs are going for insane numbers as well), anything you can imagine. Then an acquaintance in an athletic group I'm in told us that he was selling his house, but by owner and refuses to work with/pay one. It was in our #1 location so we decided to look by ourselves. It's amazing and we love it, minus a couple modifications. We mentioned the mods and he said he would address them all and put it into the contract, sent over an AOS and everything looks good. We felt bad for our agent, but this is our only legitimate option at getting a house. We both wanted to use him to sell my partners house, so he could make a relatively easy pay day as a thank you. I know what it's like to be commission only and when things happen out of anyone's control, it sucks, but this way at least there is a silver lining for him. I reached out to personally give him the news, and he flipped out. I was prepared for some sort of negative reaction, but this was just straight unprofessional. He told us to give him 5k, I said no, he told me to pay 5k more for the house and have the seller cut him in on the backend, I said no. I asked him again if he'd like to be the listing agent for my partners house and he said yea I guess. We ended the call and then he sends me a text saying we had an exclusive agreement and we owe him commission no matter what, on any house we purchase. In my head I'm like I would never sign anything like that, nice try, and reply asking him to produce said document. Sure enough he emails me a document that has my digital signature on it, and a 6 month(!!!) exclusive agreement, and says no matter what we owe him commission. It was in the document that had his commission and the $300 doc fee that was misrepresented, and given to us with no time to spare to get the offer in. He again is asking for compensation. I know that we are adults and we did sign this document and missed this clause, but I am furious. My partner, I, and our daughter, LOVE this house, but I refuse to pay off this extortion attempt. I would rather wait out the term than be forced to pay him for something he had no part in (unfortunately for me my partner and daughter might kill me for this). And it's not like we left him high and dry, we offered him a super easy home sale so he can still get paid. Is there any way out? [link] [comments] |
Closing question - Lender using higher property taxes than assessed - is this normal? [US - MD] Posted: 20 May 2021 07:29 AM PDT I'm a few weeks from closing and am looking over my disclosures. The final quote is higher than the initial amount I was quoted by the lender bc of the annual property taxes used in each quote is different. The assessed property taxes on the home are currently $3900 and that was used for the first quote, however in the final version they are using $5000. Is that normal for lenders to pad the escrow for higher taxes based on the new sales price even though the property has not been assessed by the county?? [link] [comments] |
Is it worth leaving the appliances? Any advice welcome! Posted: 20 May 2021 05:39 AM PDT Hello all, I don't want to word vomit to much so I'll try and stick to the point. We own a fully paid off house in a not super nice place but we have added new siding, new windows, new water heater, new washer and dryer and a new stove. Is it better to leave the new appliances? Will this really raise the value? Where we live we won't get to much for it but only spent $5,000 to own it completely about 7 years ago. Any other thoughts and questions are also welcome! I know I should talk to a realtor but for now they are entirely to pushy and I'm not ready to buy just yet. [link] [comments] |
Why did my neighbor build a mansion and abandon it? Posted: 19 May 2021 09:45 PM PDT I literally can't think of a single reason. Maybe someone can help? 15 years ago someone sold a farm and they built a very small culdesac (6 homes). You had to be approved to be selected and all the homes were big. One person, my neighbor, (ofc) builds this eerily creepy castle looking building and just before it is finished he completely abandons it. I pretty much spent my whole childhood next to this castle looking monstrosity. I never thought much of it really until today when I visited my parents from college and found out that the owner died. I went over and looked inside the property and it was swarmed with bees and hornets. The basement also seemed flooded. The owner was extremely sketchy. He did not answer his phone and there was virtually no info on him. People offered him large amounts for his lot but he never turned back calls. He certainly never listed his home for sale. So I considered it a tax haven but yet he was paying ~$25k/y in taxes. For 15 years. It doesn't make any sense to me. For 15 years he sat on this abandoned mansion paying property taxes but never once touched it. I don't think he was "fuck you money" wealthy either. What could possibly have been the reason? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 20 May 2021 09:08 AM PDT My fiancé and I got our offer accepted. We pushed and pushed and slogged through, and now the hard part is over Best part, we got it UNDER asking. It was truly just a serendipitous situation If you're reading this and feel like hope is lost, don't despair. Don't buy into the frenzy. Be patient and wait for the house you love. Happy hunting! [link] [comments] |
Posted: 20 May 2021 08:53 AM PDT I'm about to close on a building and I'm thinking of giving my realtor a gift at closing, maybe a bottle of Champaign and a check for $500. Back story, we've had a rough trip buying since December, and this is the second property that we've been under contract for. We're about to close but it would have fallen through multiple times if not for our realtor: she found us a better mortgage broker, gave up $5000 of her commission when it under appraised, painted window trim so it'd pass VA inspection. Really went above and beyond. Is it ok to give her a cash tip? Is it legal? [link] [comments] |
Fed hinting on upping interest rates, what would this mean for the RE market? Posted: 19 May 2021 09:37 PM PDT On a minute released by the US federal reserve, they stated:
Me reading between the lines, they basically acknowledge that inflation is higher than expected (at 4.2% in 2021), that they will execute monetary policies to control it. And the most direct way is to raise rates. It does sound like they are hinting big time that an interest rate hike is happening. Thoughts if this were to happen in the near future? What would the impact be in the current RE market. [link] [comments] |
FTHB Offer Accepted - Instantly Excited, Instantly Stressed Posted: 19 May 2021 10:48 PM PDT TLDR: long journey of a perfect rental and a cut-short lease, a rare opportunity to save, floods, and storage units that ended with fortunate timing and a (hopefully) happy story. $56k over list, No appraisal contingency. Success story with a mixture of fortunate and unfortunate timing. I always appreciate all the stories and seeing the background and specific circumstances everyone has gone through. Commiserating and celebrating on this thread has been a part of this whole process for me. It's a long story, but hope someone out there can relate! Details: 30-something, married with 2 kids, First Time Home Buyer. We have been renting in San Diego for the past 13 years, and have always dreamed of owning a home and planned to get there some day. We rented an apartment for 5 years after being married and had our first kid and second kids there. With our two energetic boys, we knew we wanted to rent a house and have a backyard, so we found a place! Moved in March 2020. As in literally the week shutdown happened. It was a modest 3 BR 2 BA, 1400+ sq ft with a large backyard at a fair price, minutes from our work... a benefit prior to our full telecommute haha. We had told the landlord prior to COVID and moving in that we would love to sign a 2-year lease, since we plan to be long-term renters as we continue to save for a house. They declined but said that moving back from the city they had just moved to would be at least a couple of years. It was the perfect situation for our telecommuting and being trapped at home with two kids while homeschooling our oldest. December 2020 comes around. Landlord calls; they are moving back in because COVID and change in work plans are bringing them back to San Diego, so will not be renewing lease but said they could extend if we needed to help find our next place. Devastating blow to us and our already paper-thin COVID sanities. Reeling, we changed our frame of mind. We always were the ones who envied those who could live with family members to save up for that coveted down payment. Telecommute, homeschool choice for Kindergarten, and now without a place to live without a timeline on return to physical work presented us with that opportunity! My mother lived in Orange County 2 hours away in a 4 BR by herself, so we would lose our personal space and privacy (but get to occupy the 3 BR and bath upstairs with our two kids) for the sake of some of the easiest savings we've ever had and be ready to buy! We told our landlords we'd like to cut our lease early since they said they were willing to work with us and they agreed (nice people) so we would be out of there by the end of January 2021. It's 3 days before moving day. We have spent the last week packing the largest PODS storage container in our driveway that got picked up that morning for all the long-term storage we wouldn't need to access while living with good ol' Mom. All our primary furniture, couches and a lot of the other storage you pick up with kids and hobbies. POD gets picked up. It's 2 days before moving day. Moving truck is half packed for anything that wouldn't fit into the POD and what we generally need for the next 5-6 months. Mom calls, her house flooded. Half bath, kitchen, family room, dining room, master bath and master (downstairs). Insurance is called, but we'll be moving in to move out not long after adjusters assess. We move. We have too much stuff with items needing to be cleared out of all those rooms so we now rent a storage space up in Orange County for our "less essential" essentials. We move into a Residence Inn (edit: with Mom, on the insurance company), and here we have been in our 2 Bedroom unit since February 2021 as the affected rooms get Demo'd, delays happen, and contractors still haven't started the buildup due to selection process, including insurance delays in approval due to the Texas power issues that the Texas-based insurance provider prioritized. Oh the fun doesn't end there. Residence Inns are expensive, and living expenses aren't infinite. We're burning too hot, so have had an AirBnB booked for the last month (small city so nothing too close or not ridiculous) that we'll be moving into June 1st. Our easy savings wasn't so easy mentally, but we were able to save it, coupled with some stimulus checks to start finally looking for houses to support us buying in time to return to work for the Fall and give our oldest some stability and a place for him to grow, make friends, have a steady school.... And then we found out what the market was like. We haven't been looking as long as many of you to be fair, pretty aggressively since March 2020. Each time we want to see a house/houses in-person it's a 2 hour drive one-way. So it was spending weekends there, with our kids, or calling in a favor with Grandma to watch them. 8 offers in, and we have an acceptance as of tonight. Closing is far from over, but we had to learn the hard way from the "sheesh $20k over list how can they not accept this bad boy of an offer!" To "$65k over list, of a drastically lowered expectation house, and we're not in the multiple counters..." to the last few days of feeling like giving up and just looking for a rental to make sure we have SOMETHING to return to for work. Which would have been complicated due to the house search, where to rent for school to start, lease or month to month, and potential dual mortgage/rent, etc. Now I'm not a dumb man, but I'm not the smartest man either when it comes to real estate. And maybe this isn't the best time to buy a house, but it's the time that worked for me and my family. We couldn't buy before we had this opportunity, so we're stuck with the timing or waiting and "losing" more on renting. We're excited to hopefully close and start the wonderful/terrible experience of being a homeowner. Even getting the call of acceptance I instantly felt this weird sense of shock, buyer's remorse, and stress. And maybe my timing is starting to look up; just earlier today we got a notice we'll be returning to work in person at the end of June - a 30 day escrow sounds just about perfect. [link] [comments] |
Our Realtor's mistake pushed closing out 2 more weeks, causing lots of problems Posted: 20 May 2021 05:20 AM PDT We accepted an offer on our home on 5/3 with a closing date of 6/4. Our offer was accepted on 5/3 with the following seller's contingency: "Subject to seller finding a home within 30 days of final acceptance." Preparing for the worst, we leased a month to month apartment with a $500 deposit with a move in date of 6/1. On 5/11 we were notified that they found a house and would be sending the paperwork over removing the contingency. We called the apartment to cancel the lease, and were told the $500 deposit would not be returned. We knew this was a possibility, and considered it a small price to pay to have had the security of knowing we'd have a place to live if our seller's didn't find a place for a long time or backed out of our deal altogether. At this time my realtor, the title company's and I were of the understanding that the closing date would be 6/7. I can't remember exactly how the dates lined up, but it had something to do with closing be 30 days after the offer was accepted? On 5/13 we received the paperwork. It was a document titled: Amendment to Purchase Agreement and it stated: "The undersigned parties to a Purchase Agreement dated 5/3 hereby mutually agree to amend as follows: "Seller removes contingency for finding a home. Closing to be on or before 6/29." Of course, that date of 6/29 concerned me. This is the following text thread between me, my husband and our realtor: Me: It states closing on or before 6/29? I thought closing is on 6/7. Realtor: That's their closing date for their buy side Husband: So we are closing on the 7th still, correct? Realtor: Current home address closing 6/4. New hom closing 6/7, sellers of new home on or before 6/30 Me: Why is the closing date of their new house on our paperwork? Why is our closing date of 6/7 not on this paperwork? It makes me nervous because I think it will confuse the lender. I really haven't felt like we're on the same page lately. Realtor: They are required to put their closing date on it to remove the contingency. We don't want our closing date on that document because it will confuse all of the documents. This amendment needs to be entirely regarding their new purchase. Husband: Just want to make sure we can move into the house on 6/7 no matter what happens with their new home**.** Realtor: Yep! That's exactly what this contingency removal is for. This is locking the sellers into the contract. This is the amendment we've wanted and been waiting for. So we signed it. Then last night our realtor calls us stating there is a "hiccup", that she had made a mistake in regards to understanding that amendment, and that our sellers really did mean that they wanted up until 6/29 to move out/close. She stated she and her broker talked the seller's into confirming a move out/closing date of 6/18. My husband and I were furious. That puts us in limbo with nowhere to go for 11 days in June. She apologized and said she'll try to get our buyers to give us until 6/16 to move out, we are currently waiting to hear back from them. We demanded to be compensated for the mistake and for our 11 day stay at a hotel to be paid by her. She sent us an email offering this (She had already lowered her commission by 1% for an earlier mistake she had made when putting our house on the MLS.): "I will drop my commission on the sale of your current home to 4.5%. If this (mistake) does cause you to have to stay somewhere, I will gladly pay for that expense, as well. I was also able to get permission to take the broker admin commission out my own commission instead which is also an additional $499 that you won't have to pay for at closing, as well." Overall, I'm upset that I signed that amendment without asking for a 2nd opinion. I'm upset that I've spent so much time making plans and handling so many logistics with the closing date of 6/7 that I now have to cancel/change. Also, we were looking forward to not having a mortgage payment for 1 month, but now with the closing dates changed to the middle of the month I don't know how that is going to pan out. But mostly, I have lost all trust in our Realtor. I'm so nervous to sign anything or agree to anything from the fear that it is wrong or going to cause more issues. Feel free to reply with whatever criticism, insight or advice you might have. My lesson to the reader, if something sounds wrong, DEMAND A 2ND OPINION. [link] [comments] |
Posted: 20 May 2021 06:49 AM PDT Edit: Just got a text that they got the payoff letter! We should be closing next week if all goes well . Thanks for all of the advice everyone, this is one of the most stressful situations I have ever been in . My Fiancé and I were supposed to close on our home last Friday. We both took a day off from work and drove out to where the closing was taking place only to have our lawyer call and tell us that closing was canceled because the sellers payoff letter was a month old , we asked if they could try and get a new one that day because we were set to move on Sunday ( utilities were switched to our name and insurance was starting that day ) after sitting around all day our lawyer called back and told us they were unable to get a new letter and that hopefully Tuesday we could close , yesterday they told us maybe Friday but I doubt that is happening at this point . The title company had offered to close still and hold our money in escrow until the seller got there letter but they refused .Is there anything we can do besides wait ? We have to be out of our apartment by the 1st and are currently living out of boxes . Our rate is only good for another two weeks before it goes up . My fiancé and I are just so frustrated and at a loss . [link] [comments] |
Larger offer or larger down payment? Posted: 20 May 2021 07:19 AM PDT As a seller, would you prefer a larger offer on your home (with appraisal gap coverage) or would you prefer a higher percentage down payment? My husband and I are looking at homes in the $600k area in Indianapolis (2 passed offers so far). The market is crazy for here but hardly crazy when I compare it to other cities around the country. My realtor is suggesting we put 25% down instead of the 20% we had originally planned instead of making a larger offer. This didn't make sense to me since I would have assumed the seller would want to walk away with more in their pocket? (If it matters for your answer, we are working very closely with our loan company and they are willing to put in a call to the sellers agent in addition to our pre-approval letter stating their confidence that we will have no issue with financing. ) [link] [comments] |
Posted: 20 May 2021 07:09 AM PDT FTHB, trying to think outside the box and get some sort of advantage in highly competitive area (PA -Bucks County). My wife and I put an aggressive offer on a house we loved in Langhorne ($45K over asking, waiving everything, and covering entire appraisal gap.). Really thought we were going to get it, but the winning offer was 75K over asking and an all cash offer. Good for the seller. Anyway, we love that neighborhood, and other than hoping that deal some how falls through (slim chance!), would it be appropriate to have my agent ask that seller agent if the sellers know of anyone in that neighborhood selling their home soon? Is this frowned upon? Thanks! [link] [comments] |
We went under contract this week, just learned seller is in hospital and might not make it Posted: 19 May 2021 05:36 PM PDT First, we hope the best for the sellers health. This is a sensitive situation. We went under contract Monday, and just learned the seller was admitted to the hospital. We don't know details but sounds like they are trying to set up a transfer on death in case they don't make it. If the worst happens, will this go to probate court, or will a TOD avoid this? If that happens, should we back out of the deal? [link] [comments] |
Signed for a new build, falling out with RE agent. Options to remove them? Posted: 20 May 2021 10:06 AM PDT We purchased a new build approximately 1 year ago (Covid delayed progress significantly) We found the home and have done all the leg work. The RE agent we were using was a family friend. There was a falling out and she is being rude and threatening to take commissions (which very well may be her right) but we want to remove any and all association with her. Do we have any options to remove her from receiving the commissions and getting a new real estate agent that we can trust and close out our contract with? We haven't signed the final dotted line, but we also don't want to impact our contract as costs have changed significantly. We just want to understand any options we may have. [link] [comments] |
Lender no longer offering investment property loans Posted: 20 May 2021 10:04 AM PDT They were a month ago, suddenly they are not. They told me that the secondary market they sell the loans to has stopped buying them. Switched to my other lender, heard the same thing, they are now capping how much investment loans they do. It seems to me they are limiting their exposure to a crash with the upcoming end to foreclosure moratoriums. Yet some data I've seen shows not that many households are actually delinquent, unlike 2008 where almost 30% of real estate transactions were short sales, REO's or foreclosure auctions. I'm about to buy 3-4 more houses, and this is a bit worrying. I will say I am glad I cash out refinanced a few last fall.... Anyone have any data on sources for said data on what they expect to happen to the real estate market once the moratoriums end? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 20 May 2021 09:59 AM PDT Aside from sq. ft. beds, baths, and lot sizes, basically basic info, and solid pictures, is there anything else you like or want to see in listings? [link] [comments] |
Confused fha 3 unit self sufficency Posted: 20 May 2021 09:42 AM PDT House need to pass self sufficiency test due to 3 flat and fha requirement so current rent for all three flat with 15% down paymnet was at the price to pass self sufficiency test( PITI =3250). But after appraisal here comes the confusion, Out of three which one the underwriter use to validate self sufficiency: Acutal rents 4350( we thought we will be good with 15% down) By Apprasial "opinion of market rent" 4000( are they going to use 15% or 25%) . Monhtly operating income 3317 deducting 5% vacancy rate and expenses.( calculated by appraisal) I am thinking number 3 is the one underwriter use, but lender officer/ realtor is confused too . [link] [comments] |
Hide purchase price on zillow etc? Posted: 20 May 2021 09:27 AM PDT Is it possible to hide the home purchase price on sites like Zillow or Redfin? I assume it has to be public record in MLS but wasn't sure what options were with the usual websites? [link] [comments] |
Posted: 20 May 2021 08:59 AM PDT I got a message on LinkedIn about being an Escrow Assistant for a company. I wasn't able to find much conclusive information online about this role. But the company is pretty reputable I just don't know much about being an Escrow Assistant; salaries, duties, if people enjoy it, etc. [link] [comments] |
[NJ] "Quick home buyers" scam or worth looking at? Posted: 20 May 2021 08:37 AM PDT My mom has a house in New Jersey that hasn't been very well maintained over the last ten years or so and is thinking that now is the time to sell. It's still very livable but it seems like all of the majors need to be repaired. Roof, siding, HVAC, windows, etc. She's asked me for help and we're both of the opinion that the house needs to be sold as is because neither of us has the time or resources to get the repairs done. So she's aware that she's not going to net anything close to market value for the property. We're having the appraisal done by a local appraisal company so we know what exactly we're looking at. The question is, are the "quick cash buyers" legit? Can anyone give me some insight on dealing with them? Personally, it sounds like a too-good-to-be-true kind of thing and I'm assuming they are either a scam or they're low balling folks. Is that true? [link] [comments] |
Switching realtor after touring home - is this a bad move? Posted: 20 May 2021 08:21 AM PDT Hi all. Looking to purchase a condo. Toured the unit last week with a Redfin agent and all looked good. Wondering if it would make sense and help sweeten my offer if I reached out to the sellers agent to work with her instead? Don't want to blow off the Redfin agent as he has been very helpful, but I just want to make sure that I have the best shot at having my offer accepted. [link] [comments] |
Rent vs Buy with tax abatement program. Good idea? Posted: 20 May 2021 06:23 AM PDT Bit of background information. Family of three, we currently rent and pay $1,845/mo. Our last apartment the rent was ~$1,700 for a tiny two-bedroom apartment (939 sqft). Like most markets, inventory is flying around here and we were lucky enough to find a builder that's putting up new homes in an area that has a tax abatement program. The total build price for a 2 bed 2 bath (1,650 sqft) with a two-car garage is $237K (after a $5K deposit). The house qualifies for a 5-year tax abatement program that kicks in a year after the home is assessed saving us a nice chunk in property taxes from participating tax bodies. Here's the breakdown.
Unfortunately, I only qualify for an FHA loan and our estimated monthly payment will all costs included is ~1,650/mo. We plan on staying in the home for the full 5 years to take advantage of the program and then relocate (once our child is a bit older). Given my situation, does it make sense to buy right now instead of rent? [link] [comments] |
Builder will not communicate/ignoring requests for updates Posted: 20 May 2021 06:03 AM PDT Hi there. We are under contract for a new home from Century Communities for 278k. I am probably not the right temperament (anxious) for building but buying a pre-owned home in our area right now is as terrible of an experience as we are all familiar with and I already lost 4 offers (50k over, information only appraisal, etc. etc.). When we can get her to respond, the sales agent has made many claims that are either untrue (the home is in drywall) or extremely unlikely to be true (we are going to close in June). Mostly she completely refuses my requests for the promised updates or says she will get the updates and then refuses to acknowledge me at all. She requests that I only text or email. I don't know what to do and feel like we are kind of in limbo. Is this normal? Should I blow things up and find a way to go above her? I'm scared of rocking the boat in this market since I don't want the whole deal to fall apart but also have no idea when my life is about to make a giant change so I can prepare. [link] [comments] |
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