radalicious123
radalicious123 t1_j6o3hx7 wrote
The top priority financially is to get off the negative equity treadmill and never get back on. If you have the cash available to do that, do it. If not, plan out the quickest way to get there.
radalicious123 t1_j6k8wd8 wrote
It's fine. So much ink gets spilled arguing about this when it's just not important in the big picture.
radalicious123 t1_j6e6aai wrote
Reply to comment by adventuref0x in I’ve fucked up. What am I supposed to do. by [deleted]
Ugh. What I have done in a similar situation is get these kind of anchors:
https://www.amazon.com/Drilling-Drywall-Plastic-Anchors-Screws/dp/B0845YKDHV/
And cut both the plastic anchor AND the screw to be short enough to fit in the space. That was pretty fidgety and I don't know if it would be up to a super heavy cabinet.
radalicious123 t1_j6e1gwt wrote
Sounds like you're seeing it pretty clearly. (Except, drop this "rent is going down the drain" idea, that's nonsense, renting is fine.) In your case there are good arguments either way and I think you've got a good sense of what they are. You'll know in 5 or 10 years whether you made the right decision, haha
radalicious123 t1_j6e0x05 wrote
Reply to I’ve fucked up. What am I supposed to do. by [deleted]
At this point it might not be too much extra trouble to cut out the damaged drywall and fasten in some wood blocking to screw the cabinet to (how deep is the air gap?) Then fix the drywall. Def a bit of work but once you're on the hook for a drywall repair anyway...
radalicious123 t1_jebtmh5 wrote
Reply to Positive equity on my vehicle - Dealer wants to buyback and put me in a newer modelm but I'm tossed. by CarbonPrinted
Dealer wants to make a sale, and you're about to bite despite having a perfectly good nearly paid off car.