I am talking about specific first world problems, not problems everyone has whether rich or poor.
mental illness can strike anyone, but having a house thats too big is not a problem the majority of people have.
why not look a bit deeper then assume I am making fun of people
if you have a home thats too big you need to find use for it rather than sell it to downsize and live somewhere else. perhaps it could become a childcare centre, or a school or a safe house. you could gift it to someone who really needs a home for their family.
you could use you extra money to buy gifts for the needy rather than gifts for people that already have everything
if you have enougn to have a holiday you could sponsor a family to get away who has NEVER had a holiday.
Hi Lanolin,
I know you've mentioned giving away a home or car in several of your posts.
I understand that having too large of a home might seem like a trivial problem, but it's a common one in the area where I live. The biggest reasons the house becomes too large is because someone in the family either moves out of the home or dies (as in an elderly spouse), and charity, while wonderful, is not the answer. Most people in the areas where I've been the past several years are downsizing because they can no longer afford the home.
As far as giving away a home or turning it into charity, you have to be very careful because you could wind up with a legal nightmare on your hands. Let's say you allow someone to stay in an unused room as an act of kindness. If that person gets hurt (whether accidentally or on purpose) on your property, they could very well sue you for everything you have. Unfortunately, now days (at least in the United States; I'm not sure how it is in your country), you have to protect yourself from every legal standpoint, even if, and sometimes, especially when, you are trying to do something good.
The first person you need to contact when doing a good deed of that magnitude is a good lawyer.
You also have to be careful that a blessing does not turn into a curse for someone. Many of the people you would think of gifting a car or house to would not be able to afford the expenses that come with it (HOA fees, property taxes, utilities, insurance, maintenance and repairs, etc.), so unless you are willing to continually pay these things for them, chances are, they will lose what is given to them anyway, and it could become another ugly, costly legal battle -- that you might wind up paying for. There may also be taxes and other hidden costs you might wind up owing.
Maybe things are different in your country? I'd be interested in hearing about what it's like there if someone wants to give away a house.
It's a sad and unfortunate thing that here in the United States, there is quite a bit of truth in the old saying that no good deed goes unpunished, and you really have to watch your back.