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Paul Auster’s New York Tragedy
  + stars: | 2024-04-30 | by ( Lucy Sante | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
I first became aware of Paul Auster, who died on April 30, from reading old issues of The Columbia Review when I was a student at the university. He translated French Surrealist poetry and wrote prose fiction, set in a sort of silent-movie cityscape that anticipated his novels and films. We inhabited the same Morningside Heights world of the early 1970s, with its cranks and cults, mimeographed screeds and tracts. Surely Paul, too, patronized Marlin Café and the Moon Palace. Paul was living blocks away, and when I met him he made me feel as if the whole neighborhood welcomed me.
Persons: Paul Auster, Lydia Davis, Allen Ginsberg, Philip Roth, mimeographed, Paul, Marlin Café Organizations: Columbia Locations: New Jersey, Newark, Columbia, Morningside, Manhattan
Paul Auster, the prolific novelist, memoirist and screenwriter who rose to fame in the 1980s with his postmodern reanimation of the noir novel and who endured to become one of the signature New York writers of his generation, died of complications from lung cancer at his home in Brooklyn on Tuesday evening. His death was confirmed by a friend, Jacki Lyden. With his hooded eyes, soulful air and leading-man looks, Mr. Auster was often described as a “literary superstar” in news accounts. The Times Literary Supplement of Britain once called him “one of America’s most spectacularly inventive writers.”Though a New Jersey native, he became indelibly linked with the rhythms of his adopted city, which was a character of sorts in much of his work — particularly Brooklyn, where he settled in 1980 amid the oak-lined streets of brownstones in the Park Slope neighborhood. As his reputation grew, Mr. Auster came to be seen as a guardian of Brooklyn’s rich literary past, as well as an inspiration to a new generation of novelists who flocked to the borough in the 1990s and later.
Persons: Paul Auster, memoirist, Jacki, Auster, Locations: York, Brooklyn, New Jersey, brownstones
Agrawal, a 45-year-old serial entrepreneur who founded the period-underwear company Thinx and the bidet startup Tushy, has always poured herself into her businesses. That July, Agrawal gave birth to her son, Hiro Happy Horn Agrawal. AdvertisementAfter leaving Thinx, Agrawal, pictured here in her Texas home, poured her energy into her bidet startup Tushy. Before Thinx, before Tushy, Agrawal was an analyst at Deutsche Bank, working in an office near the World Trade Center. In 2011, she cofounded period-underwear company Thinx with her twin sister, Radha, and a friend, Antonia Saint Dunbar.
Persons: Miki Agrawal, Agrawal, she's, We're, missteps she'd, Miki Agrawal Agrawal, Andrew Horn, Agrawal's, Horn, Instagram, she'd, Hiro Happy Horn Agrawal, Forbes, Tushy, they'd, Thinx, Ilana Panich, , hadn't, they're, Richard Wolf, Radha, Antonia Saint Dunbar, Nicholas Hunt, undressed, wasn't, Shama Amalean Skinner, Amalean Skinner, Maria Molland Selby, welling, Miki, who's, Justin Allen, She'd, Hiro, Jason Ojalvo, Ojalvo, Horn —, Melissa Pruett, Pruett, Jessica Fern's, I've, exes, it's, wifedom, hummus —, Happie Hoffman, Austin, Tesla, Elon Musk, Musk's, Kimbal, Argawal Organizations: New York, Commission, Human Rights, Washington Post, CNBC, Business, Deutsche Bank, World Trade, New York Magic, Food Network, New York Magazine, Antonia Saint Dunbar ., Nike, Outfront Media, New, MTA, New York Times, Glamour, Amazon Locations: New, playa, Texas, Tribeca, West, Williamsburg, Park, America, Canada, Orlando, Thinx, Costa Rica, Horn, Oregon, Austin
She found her neighbors describing the same rattling, realizing they had experienced an earthquake in a suburb about 20 miles east of New York City. New York City Mayor Eric Adams urged New Yorkers to "go about their normal day.” Brittainy Newman/APUSGS said the earthquake occurred at 10:23 a.m. Three neighboring homes in Newark, New Jersey, were evacuated after residents reported structural damage, according to the city’s public safety director. Good quality New York moment.”In Jersey City, New Jersey, Kristina Fiore was sitting at her desk in her apartment when her building shook for a few seconds. The epicenter was just northeast of Lebanon, New Jersey, less than 50 miles west of New York City, according to the USGS.
Persons: , , Jeanne Evola, Eric Adams, ” Brittainy Newman, David Rodriguez, ” Long, Kathy Hochul, James Oddo, Fritz Fragé, , Fragé, Kevin J, Bethel, ” Bethel, Spencer Platt, Reed Whitmont, Kristina Fiore, Fiore, panicking, Betancur, New York Kennedy, ” Nobody’s Organizations: New, New York CNN, Geological Survey, The New York Police Department, ” New York, New York City, New York City Fire Department, Empire, ” New York Gov, NYC Department of, Newark Public, Emergency Management, Philadelphia Police Department, Getty, Boonton Coffee Co, Earthquakes, Federal Aviation Administration, Newark Liberty, FAA, Amtrak Locations: New York, Washington, New York City, Maine, New Jersey, Square, Long, New, Hoboken , New Jersey, , New Jersey’s Hunterdon County, Lebanon, Newark , New Jersey, Newark, New Jersey’s Essex County, Montclair . In Pennsylvania, Lebanon , New Jersey, Manhattan, Park Slope , Brooklyn, York, Jersey City , New Jersey, Boonton , New Jersey, Philadelphia, AFP, Baltimore
New York City is known for its pricey real estate, but some homeowners get an unexpected bargain: Property taxes on some of the fanciest, most coveted properties are often very low — at least relatively. Its annual property tax bill is around $12,000 — about 0.2 percent of the home’s overall worth. Now compare that with the $7,500 tax bill for a $780,000 home in the Bronx. The cheaper home has an effective property tax rate almost four times higher. Both bills are lower than in much of the suburbs, where property taxes for less valuable homes routinely top $25,000.
Locations: York City, Brooklyn’s Park, Bronx
In the South Fordham section of the Bronx, residents give their neighborhood a Bronx cheer. In Park Slope in Brooklyn — known and parodied for its self-consciously liberal politics and wealth — residents are much happier. But if there’s one thing that New Yorkers can agree upon, it’s that the quality of life in New York City has suffered. Less than a third rate the city’s quality of life as excellent or good. Less than a quarter are content with the overall quality of government services.
Organizations: New Locations: Fordham, Bronx, Slope, Brooklyn, New York City
Lisa Miller moved from Knoxville, Tennessee, to Brooklyn, New York, with her husband and three kids. Miller said her family has never been happier, and she gets to date her husband again. I moved to Tennessee when I was 19, and we lived in Knoxville and Nashville. AdvertisementWe quickly sold our house in Tennessee and found the perfect Brooklyn apartmentThe market is great in the Knoxville neighborhood we lived in. We haven't looked backIt's been the best decision we've ever made for our family.
Persons: Lisa Miller, Miller, , He'd, I've, I'm, we'd, there's, Joffrey, I'd, haven't, We've, we're, We'll, We're, it's, It's, we've, they've, Lisa Miller doesn't Organizations: Service, Flanelle Magazine, Tennessee Locations: Knoxville , Tennessee, Brooklyn , New York, Tennessee, Detroit, Virginia, Georgia, Knoxville, Nashville, New York, Slope, Brooklyn, of, Manhattan, New York City, Park Slope, Our Brooklyn, It's
Grieving the Loss of a Pet? They Want to Help.
  + stars: | 2024-02-04 | by ( Lauren Gill | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Weeks after Maria Sandomenico’s Chihuahua, Luigi, died last August, she shared a long post in a Facebook group for residents of the Park Slope neighborhood of Brooklyn about how she was struggling to come to terms with her adopted rescue dog’s passing. In an interview in January, Ms. Sandomenico said that in the seven years she had lived with Luigi, he had become her “north star,” trotting by her side in various custom-made clothes she had bought him. A pink and black pompom hat was his signature look, though he was also known to wear cashmere. Ms. Sandomenico said she turned to Facebook when Luigi died because she didn’t want to burden her friends with her feelings, and because she craved connection with others who had experienced the death of a pet. She was surprised by how many people responded to her post saying they were also grieving the loss of an animal companion and didn’t know where to find support.
Persons: Maria Sandomenico’s Chihuahua, Sandomenico, Luigi Organizations: Facebook Locations: Luigi, Brooklyn
"A, people have less access to capital and less purchasing power because interest rates are so high. People don't want to leave their lower interest rates to enter into a higher interest rate mortgage." This is a strategy that California-based real estate investor Mike Zuber refers to as " learning your buy box ." To pick your buy box, spend time walking through different neighborhoods, going to open houses, and looking at rental listings. He had a major advantage in that he could make all-cash offers, he noted, but anyone can use the "buy box" strategy to find deals right now when there are less buyers.
Persons: Grant Sabatier, it's, don't, Sabatier, they're, Mike Zuber, seasonality, It's Organizations: Rolex, Business Locations: Ohio, Indiana, New York City, California, Park Slope, New York
Walk up to Lafayette Avenue between Fulton Street and Bedford Avenue for one of the best parties along the course. You can also catch runners at several points in Williamsburg and Greenpoint, along Bedford Avenue between Lafayette Avenue and Nassau Avenue. Take the L train to Bedford Avenue, the M or J train to Marcy Avenue or the G train to Nassau Avenue or Greenpoint Avenue. The Q subway line stops at several points along this stretch. North of 96th Street, use the 6 subway line to get to this part of the course.
Persons: It’s, Alexander, Duke Ellington, Charles A, Dana, Harlem Meer, Organizations: New York, Brooklyn, Barclays Center, Lafayette, Bedford, Queens, ., Dana Discovery Center, Park, Columbus, West Locations: Staten Island, Brooklyn, Staten, Bay Ridge, Sunset, Park, Flatbush, Fulton Street, Williamsburg, Greenpoint, Bedford, Lafayette Avenue, Nassau, Avenue, Vernon, Jackson, . Manhattan, Manhattan, Bronx, Harlem
Some shop owners fear that reducing street parking will hurt their sales. But there's mounting evidence that street parking isn't necessarily good for business. The study notes that shop owners often oppose removing street parking around them because they're "afraid of deteriorated accessibility, declining pedestrian frequencies, and lower revenue." Previous studies have shown that bike lanes and more pedestrian-friendly, walkable, and car-light areas are better for business. Shopping districts are much like outdoor malls, which are most convenient and popular when they have both adequate garage parking and are accessible by mass transit.
Persons: , Tom Harris Organizations: Service, Protesters, RWTH Aachen University, New York City Department of Transportation, New, Times, Times Square Alliance Locations: America, , Connecticut, Germany, Aachen, New York City, Park Slope, Brooklyn, New York, downtowns
“As a matter of free speech, people who oppose the ‘kidnapped’ posters could erect posters of their own, expressing their views,” Professor Zick said. “I don’t think they’re ripping down posters of ‘Dan Smith Will Teach You Guitar,’” he said. The posters “don’t include Palestinians, so are they concerned about missing people?” he asked. At the corner of Broadway and West 96th Street last weekend, half-ripped posters were covered with small fliers that said: “Why are the posters of kidnapped Israelis being ripped down? With friends and relatives, he has gone door-to-door through the towns of Cedarhurst, Hewlett, Inwood, Lawrence and Woodmere and asked store and restaurant owners to display the “kidnapped” posters inside windows that face the street.
Persons: Nitzan Mintz, , “ I’m, Tim Zick, Zick, Mike Mishkin, Mishkin, “ I’ve, they’re, ‘ Dan Smith, ’ ”, Israel, Miles Grant, New York “, , Grant, ” “, ’ ” Ms, Mintz, Dede Bandaid, Rafael Shimunov, you’re, listserv, Rabbi Amichai Lau, Lavie, Councilwoman Julie Menin, “ Ella Elyakim, Ms, Menin, Guy Tsadik, Woodmere, ” Mr, Tsadik, Alain Delaquérière Organizations: Boston University, The New, William & Mary Law School, Broadway, Twitter, West, Auschwitz Jewish Center Foundation Locations: Gaza, Boston, South Florida, Queens, The New York, Manhattan, Williamsburg, Va, New York, Israel, Brooklyn, York, Palestinian, Israeli, Broadway, Long, Cedarhurst, Hewlett, Inwood, Lawrence, New Jersey, Florida
That’s very different than how Google defines Flatbush:Prospect Park Holy Cross Cemetery Flatbush by google maps Flatbush by readers Prospect Park Holy Cross Cemetery Flatbush by google maps Flatbush by readersLet’s look closely at Brooklyn’s Prospect Heights, which has mostly sharp edges and one very blurry one:Sharp prospect heights Sharp blurry Sharp Prospect Park Sharp prospect heights Sharp blurry Sharp Prospect Park Crown heights Prospect Park Crown heights Prospect Park prospect heights ? Crown heights Prospect Park prospect heights ? Racial composition of Prospect Heights and Crown Heights residents, 2000-2022 80% 60 Black 40 White 20 2000 2022 80% Racial composition of Prospect Heights and Crown Heights residents, 2000-2022 60 Black 40 White 20 2000 2022 Source: Furman Center, N.Y.U. prospect heights Condo for sale crown heights Prospect Park prospect heights Condo for sale crown heights Prospect ParkStreetEasy lists the unit as being in Crown Heights. A local grocery store on Classon Avenue — two blocks east of Washington,prospect heights Key Food Prospect Heights crown heights Prospect Park prospect heights crown heights Key Food Prospect Heights Prospect Parkused to be called Gala Fresh Farms.
Persons: Van, Obeid, , It’s, who’s, New, Casey Berkovitz, Mr, ’ you’re, , Yemen ’, ” Mr, ” Long, Robert Moses ’ Brooklyn, Red, , ” Colson Whitehead, Readers, Fort Greene, Tubby, ., Red Hook, Hook, Whitehead, we’ll, Douglas Elliman, ” “, streeteasy, Xavier Santiago, it’s, Suleiman Osman, Rambo, Ross Perlin, Perlin, Sures, Yemen hasn’t Organizations: Kennedy, Google, Bronx Zoo, East Harlem —, Carnegie, Brooklyn, New York Times, Times, Richmond Hill, city’s, Department, Bronx . The Bronx Muslim, Bushwick :, Stuyvesant Bushwick, Powell, soho tribeca, New York Public, Queens Expressway, Yorkers, steinway, Queens, Navy, Waterfront District, Fort, Brooklyn - Queens, Yorker, Bushwick, Jersey Silver, Park New Jersey Silver, Prospect, White, Furman Center, Sterling, East, Manhattan’s, brooklyn South brooklyn South brooklyn South brooklyn, Liberty Loan, Carroll Gardens, , brooklyn ”, Language Alliance, East Harlem, Washington Locations: New York City, Bronx, Morris, New York, Little Yemen, Manhattan, East, Sugar, Clinton, Rose, Richmond, Todt, Lenox, Forest, Cypress Hills, Murray, Yemen, , Brooklyn, Bushwick, Bushwick : Bushwick Bedford, Stuyvesant Bushwick Bedford, Stuyvesant, Windsor Terrace, windsor, Green, kensington, Queens, Point, Flushing, Powell, Lower Manhattan, TriBeCa, SoHo, Houston, soho, Hudson, Lispenard, Queens Expressway Brooklyn, Astoria, Woodside, Jackson Heights, astoria, sunnyside Brooklyn, Dumbo, Columbia, Red Hook, williamsburg, columbia, carroll, Red, Fort Greene Park Brooklyn, Queens Expressway columbia, Williamsburg, greenpoint East, Queens Expressway williamsburg, greenpoint East River williamsburg Brooklyn, East Williamsburg, , BoCoCa, Hamilton Heights, Greenwood Heights, Hudson Heights, Lincoln, Bridges, Carnegie Hill, Manhattan Valley, SpaHa, Village, Bedford, Kingsbridge, Riverdale, Fort, Inwood, Inwood washington, chelsea, greenpoint tribeca williamsburg ridgewood kew, brooklyn, bushwick, Soho ridgewood kew, Sheepshead, Shore, Staten Island, Jersey, Park New Jersey, Flatbush, Prospect, Prospect Heights , Brooklyn, Heights , Brooklyn, Prospect Heights, Crown, Washington, Classon, Crown Heights, Side, East Harlem, harlem, Harlem, Central, streeteasy, carnegie, South Brooklyn, Carroll, Revolutionary, Boerum, Cobble, South Bronx, Spanish Harlem, South Harlem, Lower, Loíza, Puerto Rico, Language, Barrio, Puerto Rican, Hispaniola, Dominican, Washington Heights
The rate of combinations ramped up in the 1990s as the city came out of an economic crisis. “I’m not trying to begrudge folks who are trying to build a larger apartment as their families grow,” said Adam Brodheim, a preservationist who did the research. “I’m trying to bring attention to the way these actions across the entire city make a meaningful impact on our housing crisis.”On some streets, many buildings that were built a century or more ago as single-family homes and split during the 1900s into multiple units have once again become single-family homes. In the rowhouses on West 88th Street between Amsterdam Avenue and Columbus Avenue, there are about 173 units. That compares with more than 400 units on the same street in the 1950s and 1960s, according to Mr. Brodheim, who is also a member of Open New York, a nonprofit that advocates for more development.
Persons: “ I’m, , Adam Brodheim, Brodheim Organizations: Open Locations: Manhattan, Brooklyn, Amsterdam, Columbus, York
REUTERS/Brendan McDermid/File Photo Acquire Licensing RightsAMSTERDAM, Sept 15 (Reuters) - More than two-thirds of the world's population favours solar energy, five times more than public support for fossil fuels, a global poll has found. With 68% support, solar power was the most popular energy source, trailed by wind (54%), hydropower (35%) and nuclear (24%), with only 14% of respondents saying they favoured fossil fuels, the survey found. Fossil fuels, however, still accounted for 77% of global energy consumption in 2022, said Michael Sheldrick, Co-Founder and Chief Policy, Impact and Government Affairs Officer at Global Citizen. "This 'production gap' highlights a concerning paradox: despite strong public support for renewable energy, fossil fuel production remains prevalent," he said. Global energy demand rose 1% last year and record renewables growth did nothing to shift the dominance of fossil fuels, the most recent Statistical Review of World Energy report said.
Persons: Brendan McDermid, Glocalities, Michael Sheldrick, Anthony Deutsch, Kate Abnett, Miral Fahmy, Jane Merriman Organizations: House, REUTERS, Rights, Global Citizen, Initiative, Pew Research, Government, Democrat, World Energy, Thomson Locations: Manhattan, Brooklyn , New York, U.S, Australia, Brazil, China, India, Italy, Mexico, South Africa, South Korea, Turkey, United States, Europe, Ukraine, Paris
As a two-term Democratic mayor of New York City, Bill de Blasio earned mixed reviews, at best. But now that he’s out office, he’s getting raves for the way he is handling an unexpected development: his separation from his wife and the transformation of their marriage. It was an unexpected moment of both transparency and ambiguity that transfixed many New Yorkers. The couple did not plan to divorce, they said, though they didn’t rule it out. And it was, in its emotional risk taking, somehow very New York.
Persons: Bill de Blasio, he’s, de Blasio, Chirlane McCray, implosions, Organizations: The Locations: New York City, The Times, New York
Bill de Blasio, former mayor of New York City, and his wife Chirlane McCray announced their separation earlier this week. But the end of their union doesn't resemble what many would describe as a typical divorce. "They are not planning to divorce, they said, but will date other people," The New York Times reported. "They will continue to share the Park Slope townhouse where they raised their two children, now in their 20s…"This arrangement is becoming less uncommon, says psychologist Lisa Marie Bobby. "I do think there is more recognition for all of the gray areas in between [being married and divorced], and I certainly have seen and worked with couples who are separating and living together."
Persons: Bill de Blasio, Chirlane McCray, Lisa Marie Bobby Organizations: New York Times Locations: New York City, Denver
Bill de Blasio and Chirlane McCray Are Separating
  + stars: | 2023-07-05 | by ( Matt Flegenheimer | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
Mr. de Blasio and Ms. McCray are separating. They are not planning to divorce, they said, but will date other people. “I can look back now and say, ‘Here were these inflection points where we should have been saying something to each other,’” Mr. de Blasio said. “And I think one of the things I should have said more is: ‘Are you happy? What’s missing in your life?’”
Persons: de Blasio, McCray, Organizations: City Hall
Ms. Hanif’s family history illustrates how Bangladeshi Kensington came to be. While the corner is often a male-dominated space, she and other Bangladeshi American women have carved out their own places there. Ms. Saeed wants to buy a house, but real estate in Kensington has become far too expensive. Ms. Saeed also faced opposition as she was growing up, from relatives on her mother’s side who frowned upon dance. With other public spaces so dominated by men, Ms. Ferdous sees it as vital that women gather to keep their traditions alive.
Persons: Shahana Hanif, Hanif’s, Hanif, Radhuni, Ms, Mir Hossain, Hossain, , , Sala Miah, Rubel, Tarek Aziz, Uddin, Farojan Saeed, Syed Rehan, Saeed, Annie Ferdous, Ferdous, Eid, Mr, Mahmud Organizations: Young, City Council, Bangladesh Institute of Performing Arts, Bangladeshi Institute of Performing Arts, McDonald Locations: Kensington, Bangladesh, Pakistan, , United States, America, Bengal, Noakhali, Chittagong, Sandwip, Brooklyn, East, South America, Colombia, Panama, Dhaka, Bangladeshi, Manhattan, East New York, Jackson Heights, Ozone, New York, Motiul, Philadelphia, Jessore District, Jamaica, Queens
New York City’s outdoor dining program, a popular pandemic-era measure designed to be a temporary salve for a devastated restaurant industry, is about to become a permanent part of the city’s landscape. A City Council bill, released on Thursday evening, called for creating a licensing structure that would allow outdoor dining structures to exist in roadways, but only from April through November. The bill, which is supported by Mayor Eric Adams and still requires the approval of the full Council, aims to strike a balance between retaining a mostly popular program while taking steps to control its outgrowth. The bill would set forth basic design guidelines that are still to be determined. Some elements of the plan drew immediate criticism, including a provision requiring restaurants in a historic district or at a landmark site to receive approval by the city’s Landmarks Preservation Commission for an outdoor dining site — a policy that could affect restaurant-heavy neighborhoods like Greenwich Village and Park Slope, Brooklyn.
On a corner in Central Harlem, just blocks from the Apollo Theater and Marcus Garvey Park, stands Harlem Shake, a diner designed to look as though it’s been there for decades. The walls are covered with Jet magazine covers and photographs, some signed, of Black American musicians and celebrities: Regina Hall, Diddy, Maya Angelou, Questlove. Its retro diner-style menus and swivel bar stools evoke nostalgia for an era of charm — and upheaval — in American culture. Rasheeda Purdie, a neighborhood resident of 14 years, finds comfort in how distinctly Harlem the restaurant is. “Sharing food is almost like a love language,” said Dardra Coaxum, an interior designer and Harlem native who opened the restaurant with Jelena Pasic.
NYC building officials have inspected 78 buildings so far since the collapse of a three-story parking garage in April. Officials closed four NYC parking structures over safety concerns, AP reported. City building officials said they closed down four parking garages in a safety sweep of about 78 structures, the Associated Press reported. "During our sweep of 78 parking structures, we found four locations where structural concerns necessitated areas of the buildings to be immediately vacated," he added. A 2022 mandate required parking structures to be inspected by owners at least every six years, the AP reported.
Exclusive: The FBI's McGonigal labyrinth
  + stars: | 2023-02-08 | by ( Mattathias Schwartz | ) www.businessinsider.com   time to read: +28 min
She never saw McGonigal pay. "The notion that Mr. Deripaska is some proxy for the Russian state is a blatant lie," Ruben Bunyatyan, a spokesperson for Deripaska, told Insider by email. McGonigal was not charged with espionage, and although there is currently no evidence that McGonigal committed espionage, an FBI source told Insider that the investigation is ongoing. At the FBI, McGonigal racked up a string of big cases and promotions. "He said he needed to make more money," Guerriero told Insider.
She had dated federal law enforcement officials before. "Charlie McGonigal knew everybody in the national security and law enforcement world," Guerriero said, in an exclusive interview with Insider. One law enforcement source estimated that McGonigal stood to make roughly $300,000 to $350,000 a year, including annual bonuses. Former New York City Mayor Rudy Giuliani, whom she knew from law enforcement circles, let her stay in a guest bedroom. During her relationship with McGonigal, Guerriero says, they never talked about politics.
A few months ago, New York City's real-estate market was on fire, with no signs of slowing down. But that's changed as inflation continues to rise, federal interest rates spike, and construction costs climb — making it extremely expensive to purchase a home. I can't say I didn't see this comingThe market frenzy earlier in the year was largely driven by lower interest rates making home ownership more affordable. The real-estate market requires flexibility and patience, so that's what I'm focusing on right now. Time has repeatedly shown us that the real-estate market is cyclical, and at some point, it will turn, for better or worse.
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