• hrimfaxi_work
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    01 year ago

    I introduce myself to my neighbors once I’ve established that they are the ones who will live in the house and they’re not flippers or planning to rent the place for pAssIVe iNcOmE.

  • @darth_tiktaalik@lemmy.ml
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    01 year ago

    Makes the conversations quicker

    door knock

    “Hi, I’m”

    “molester informing us? Ok stay away from my kids bye”

    door slam

  • Troy
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    01 year ago

    I always go introduce myself after I move in, but only if they have property abutting mine. It helps to avoid conflict if you have a phone number or something. “Hey, my moving truck is arriving this Thursday with my stuff and will block access to your driveway in the afternoon. With apologies. If this will cause you problems, please let me know and we can work something out.” Or whatever.

    There’s a phrase that goes “good fences make good neighbours” and I hate the phrase.

    • FiveMacs
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      01 year ago

      I’d be pissed regardless. Why is your truck blocking my property? Must be some really weird entrances to the property if that’s the case but using my own area as my mental example, I’d have tow trucks on standby. Nice tow trucks though.

    • kersplooshM
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      01 year ago

      There’s a phrase that goes “good fences make good neighbours” and I hate the phrase.

      I agree. Also, it’s trivia time! That phrase came into common usage from Mending Wall by Robert Frost. A character in the poem keeps repeating it while repairing his stone fence. The narrator clearly disagrees, and wonders why people are driven to create fences that are unnecessary or counterproductive. People who use “good fences make good neighbors” as a truism need to read the poem.

      • Troy
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        01 year ago

        Nice poem! Do you think Robert Frost coined the phrase in the poem, or was it something he heard somewhere that he figured he’d skewer with the poem?

        • kersplooshM
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          01 year ago

          I don’t know. I assume he heard it among the farmers in New Hampshire where he lived, but that’s a total guess on my part.

        • @tigeruppercut@lemmy.zip
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          01 year ago

          Frost had a history of subverting the literal lines in his poems. For example, there are several lines in The Road Not Taken that directly contradict the conclusion of “And that has made all the difference”, yet no one really reads the entire poem these days.