Posted on 11/14/2010 10:49:02 PM PST by 2ndDivisionVet
It used to be that everyone knew their neighbors. At the very least, you'd meet them after the kid next door accidentally hit a baseball through your living room window, or an apron-clad housewife appeared on your back porch to borrow a cup of sugar. But that's so 1950s. During these days of two-paycheck parents commuting and cocooning because they're afraid to let their kids run unsupervised outside, it is becoming increasingly common to buy a house and eight years later realize that you have never met your neighbors.
If that's your situation, consider yourself lucky, because oddball and unusual neighbors do still exist. You may find yourself in constant contact with them, especially if you live in a community with yards that are just about a yard long. How you co-exist can make all the difference between living happily ever after or litigiously ever after. That's why we've created a primer on some of the neighbor archetypes you might expect to find and how to handle them.
Type 1: The Home Devaluers
Type 2: The Dangerous Neighbor
Type 3: The Richer Than You Are Neighbor
Type 4: The Wacky Neighbor
Type 5: The Difficult Neighbor
The Home Devaluers
Who they are: They're friendly enough. They just never seem to mow their lawn more than once or twice a year, and they have a 1978 Buick rusting in their front yard. Granted, if they're bad enough, you may have noticed this before moving in, but even a stopped clock is right twice a day: They may have looked presentable when you gave them the once-over.
How to handle them: Communicate, communicate, communicate, suggests Jodi R. R. Smith, author and etiquette consultant in Marblehead, Mass.
She knew a group of neighbors who were upset that a house on their block wasn't taking care of the lawn. The neighbors assigned a delegate to knock on the door to discuss the yard, and when the owner came out of the house and the problem was explained, she broke into tears. It had turned out that she was in the midst of a divorce and an aggressive chemo treatment. The neighbors then organized a rotating schedule of lawn care for the ill neighbor.
"Things are not always what they seem," says Smith.
The Dangerous Neighbor
Who they are: Sad but true, some neighbors are not worth getting to know well -- but it's still good to know something about their dislikes and boundaries, so you don't cross them. In 2006, for instance, headlines were made when Charles Martin, an elderly man living in a suburb of Cincinnati, Ohio, shot a 15-year-old boy to death because he had apparently made the error of walking across his meticulously manicured lawn.
How to handle them: Martin -- who is in jail -- may have been destined to snap no matter what his neighbors did or didn't do, but he was well known for the care he lavished on his lawn, and in theory, if that 15-year-old had been more aware of the kook's devotion to his lawn, it might have kept him from going anywhere near the home.
You can't consume yourself with worry looking for red flags in your neighbors. However, if you're aware of them, it may help you from igniting their fury.
And if you have young kids, you really should look at www.familywatchdog.us, the website for the National Sex Offender Registry. If there is anyone in your neighborhood you need to be aware of, and they're on this list, they'll pop up on a map of your community.
The Richer Than You Are Neighbor
Who they are: These are the Joneses who you try valiantly to keep up with, but can't. They're always getting a new addition onto their home. They have the perfect blades of grass treated by a team of dedicated lawn professionals. They have the new Maserati parked in the driveway. And, of course, what's so maddening is that they're doing nothing wrong. You can't walk up to their front door and say, "Excuse me, but you're being too rich."
How to handle them: "The best you can do is learn to cope," suggests Long Island novelist Saralee Rosenberg, author of Dear Neighbor, Drop Dead (HarperCollins, July 2008).
Rosenberg, who did a lot of nonfiction research for the tale of a harried mother who often feels inferior to her wealthier neighbor, says it's important to remember that "every family is dysfunctional to some degree, and that just because a lawn is beautifully maintained and a house is immaculate, doesn't mean that trouble isn't brewing. Not that you'd wish that on someone, but if you find yourself envious, it's important to remember that you probably don't know the whole story."
The Wacky Neighbor
Who they are: They're the folks who barge into your living room and convince you to invest in their new ferret farm, and suddenly, within a half hour, you've been fired after getting into a raucous pie fight in the employee lunchroom.
How to handle them: Wait, sorry -- that only happens on TV. If a neighbor actually pulls a Kramer and barges into your living room and then starts to raid your refrigerator, feel free to call the police and press charges.
The Difficult Neighbor
Who they are: Who aren't they? They're the aforementioned neighbors as well as anyone who makes your life more complicated than it needs to be.
How to handle them: "The thing I do is keep a good rapport," says Susan Nelson, a landscape designer in Tampa, Fla. "I really feel that the small amount of physical contact goes a long way with neighbors. I notice who keeps to themselves and it comes off as being unfriendly. These days, there aren't many chances of making impressions with your neighbors, so a simple wave or hello can represent you well."
Rosenberg concurs, piling onto Smith's plea for a little communication. "If you explain your problem in a reasonable, nice way, suddenly you're no longer anonymous. Often we have an issue with a neighbor we don't know, and so we hate their guts, and we don't even know their name."
And if you don't say something to your neighbor, why should they stop doing whatever they're doing? If you do talk, a solution may just be forthcoming. After all, Rosenberg adds, "Most people don't want to be that neighbor."
Left one off:
Type 6 = The ‘just leave me the hell alone’ (especially if you voted for Obama) and mind your own business’ neighbor. :O
(that would be kind of where I fit) LOL!
The new neighbor and his wife (He moved here in '68 or '69) did manage to come over to check out the flashing lights.
It's a bad, bad idea to jack with this neighborhood. Not healthy at all.
/johnny
I have excellent relations to the neighbor on my west. I know one of my neighbors to the south fairly well. I’ve never been in their house, but we talk to each other regularly. I have never spoken to the other one since they moved in. Of my two neighbors on the north, one put up a wooden slat fence 7 feet high that you can’t see though, but I can hear them when they have parties. Based on the language being spoken, yelled and screamed at these parties, they’re from Eastern Europe. The other northern neighbor’s wife called the cops on me when I built a bonfire in the backyard. But the husband and I split a few shots of whiskey and since then we say hi to each other and I’ll let bygones be bygones (the cop and I just talked for a while and then he had me put it out with the hose). I hadn’t spoken to my neighbor to my east in years, but he’s never home - he’s a doctor who also teaches. Then a tree fell over from my yard onto his house. It wasn’t neglect - it was a live tree that had a bit of a natural lean towards his house, but constant rain had softened the ground and it fell over. There were some tense moments but everyone kept a civil tongue in their head, we kept communications open, got to the point that we each acknowledged that people can speak a little abruptly when this kind of thing happens and eventually worked that and the finances out to our mutual satisfaction.
Type 7: the ones with the barking dogs who start up when you go into your back yard and don’t stop, and cats they let out at night to do their business on your deck and scratch up your cars.
Because of this type, I feel like the other poster.... just leave me alone... and your cat out of my yard and your dog quiet and your obamanation sticker muddied.
Left another one off: the nosy neighbor. Have had more than my share of those. There are just times when privacy and peace and quiet at our own home are all we want.
“It used to be that everyone knew their neighbors. At the very least, you’d meet them after the kid next door accidentally hit a baseball through your living room window, or an apron-clad housewife appeared on your back porch to borrow a cup of sugar. But that’s so 1950s. During these days of two-paycheck parents commuting and cocooning because they’re afraid to let their kids run unsupervised outside, it is becoming increasingly common to buy a house and eight years later realize that you have never met your neighbors.”
Oh, but I know my neighbors all too well. And where I live, kids run unsupervised. I could tell some unbelievable stories.
Number 8: the neighbor whose good for nothing kids keep vandalizing your property and stealing things.
Sounds like you have the same kind of neighborhood we do. Everyone knows everyone and none of us have been here more than two years.
Nobody gets on to our street without being noticed. If someone needs help with their yard, we all make a Saturday of it.
The Home Devaluers
Who they are: They’re friendly enough. They just never seem to mow their lawn more than once or twice a year, and they have a 1978 Buick rusting in their front yard.
How to handle them: Communicate, communicate, communicate,
The 'new guy' moved in in 1968 or 1969. I live next door to the house I was concieved and born in.
Try again.
/johnny
/johnny
And then there are the noisy porch-people.
Those that have a house but refuse to spend any time actually in it, preferring to live every waking minute on their porch, watching TV... scolding their children... having their family arguments... etc.
Only going inside when it’s time to sleep (well, not even then... half the time).
That can be an asset as well....better than paid security.
Guess I lucked out.. great neighbors on both sides of me 200’ to 300’ feet away.
My neighbor behind me plays their music very loud and very often. The bass alone shakes the pictures in my house. Speaking with him and his wife proved fruitless. Calling the cops was even more of a waste of time.
So, I bought a CD player and a CD of HORRIBLE bagpipe music. When they had their next party, I brought my speakers to my backyard and pointed them directly at their party. Then, I played the bagpipe music at full blast and kept repeating the same song, over and over and over...
He came over to complain and I simply said, “You turn off your music, I turn off mine; I hear your music, you hear mine. ANY QUESTIONS?”
When half his company went home in disgust, he complied.
Next, I work on quieting his barking dog.
My neighborhood is about 2/3 owners and 1/3 renters. It’s always the renters that pull that crap. The loud ones have all moved away at the moment, so the neighborhood is finally quiet. The neighbors on either side of me are terrific, though. I lucked out there.
It’s always the shaven-headed twenty somethings with their blaring stereos who’ll give you the finger if you express the slightest dislike of having their thumping bass reverberating through your house.
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