7 Comments
Mar 22Liked by chuck mckeever

Congrats! There's a robust co-buying community in Denver / Colorado, just did something similar with a group of friends out here. We got way more value for our dollar too, compared to going it alone, because of the weird economics of single vs multi-family properties. Hope you can find some like-minded realtors in Detroit!

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Mar 22Liked by chuck mckeever

Such a good column!! Thank you, Chuck! We were just talking about this this morning!

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Mar 22·edited Mar 22Liked by chuck mckeever

This made me think of a short story I mentioned to you a while ago in a different context (Peter Meinke's disturbing "The Piano Tuner"), but I decided to be practical here instead. The recent settlement of a lawsuit involving real-estate commissions may work in your favor: https://www.npr.org/2024/03/22/1239486107/realtor-fee-commission-homes-for-sale

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Mar 22Liked by chuck mckeever

I met with a friend and he asked why we haven't hung out if we'd both been home, bored and unemployed, for months. Neither of us had a good reason. It was just easier not to.

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Mar 23Liked by chuck mckeever

I resonate so much with everything you've said here, Chuck. A large part of what I've grown to love about Baltimore is how neighborly the culture is. It's novel to be able to sit on our front porches and crack open some beverages during summer thunderstorms, or water each other's plants when someone goes out of town. Community is so important, and now you've got me thinking about other ways I can lean into it.

I wrote a sermon last fall about loneliness (at the request of a congregant) and one of the things I ended up exploring is how the mechanisms we use to emotionally survive periods of loneliness tend to become entrenched and self-protecting. I think a lot of us are trying to figure out how to shake off our pandemic habits in 2024, and so much of the success of this reorientation hinges on finding avenues of reconnection which feel authentic and accessible.

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