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PDF Editor FAQ

What are 9 things you can't look away from, and the reasons they capture you?

This question is oddly specific. Why not five things, or ten things, or seven? Why nine?Which leads me to the first thing I can’t look away from:I can’t look away from this question: Why nine? Why?The Scrabble board on my phone: How can I make PRCXWTCJ into a word? My eyes burn as I stare at the BS words the phone totally made up and put on the board and there’s nothing I can do about them. I can’t even write a complaint letter! Words like Barfi and Grrrl. (Barfi Grrrl would be an awesome name for a rock group. Or a small female dog with digestive issues.) Here’s a post I wrote about my cheating phone: Me, Phone Scrabble, And That Cocky Cheating ComputerBlack and white photos from the 40s and 50s: I don’t know why, User-10226245301584535970. They fascinate me. Their lack of color makes the subjects look professionally human. If there is such a thing, which there isn’t.Photos of the interiors of abandoned buildings: I don’t know what this compulsion is about either. I might need professional help.Like, why didn’t someone ever come back? Why didn’t someone ever take any of this stuff? Were they waiting until it was thoroughly destroyed and reduced to its molecular beginnings because no furniture is so much easier to live with? Why are squatters living in new empty buildings when they could live in decayed opulence? (Decayed Opulence is an awesome name for a rock group. And their back up group: The Molecular Beginnings. )5. The fact that this question has nine answers already. Nine! Coincidence is hard to look away from.6. A clean house: I just finished cleaning it, I’m taking a break, and I want to just gaze upon the lovely cleanliness and listen to the broken quiet of snoring dogs before anyone walks through the house with their filthy selves. Why can’t they just stay out on the porch for a few days? I’ll pass them a samwish now and then.7. Some rocking paragraph, or to be honest, a sentence or two, that I’ve written: I read it over and over and giggle and chuckle. I’m my best audience.8. Sunshine and shadow falling through a leafy tree or through fluttering curtains unto the place beneath: Yeah, cheesy I know, but I can’t look away.9. OMG. I’ve reached number NINE! I can’t look away from the bottom number.Photo credit: The World's Best Photos by † Rebecca Bathory †

How can I deal with another tenant who wrote me complaint letters, saying that my walking around at 8 a.m. disturbs her sleep? She has rented her apartment for 41 years, and pays 25% of the rent I pay, due to the SF rent control.

She sounds like the typical San Francisco rent control tenant, who has an entitlement attitude and thinks she has special privileges due to longevity. She has the right to complain to the owner, but not the right to boss you around. Any issues should be presented to the owner.You're probably paying $3,500 to her $900, though you have the same rights. She has no authority over you as a fellow tenant, and has no power to demand meetings with you or to intimidate you into moving. She is NOT the owner/landlord and does NOT “manage” the building! I suggest you send a copy of her complaints to the owner.Walking around at 8 a.m is not unusual, most people do get up and get ready for their day by then. If she requires complete silence, she shouldn't live in a City apartment building with people above her unit.

How did a landlord try to kick you out of a rental?

My daughter and I rented an apartment on the 3rd floor of a large downtown building. We always paid our rent on time, never had parties or loud gatherings and used headphones while on our computer so as not to disturb our neighbors. We never had a complaint, nor did we complain. At the end of the fifth year - and the whole of the sixth year of tenancy,- the owners renovated the exterior of the building and replaced the balconies. The new rent requested for an apartment our size was advertised as over twice what we were paying.The letters then began…The first one accused us as having plants on our balcony ( never a problem before) second one was that we had an electric barbecue and that we were breaking our lease. ( We had asked and received permission for said barbecue before purchasing it and our lease did not forbid it, but we agreed to not use it. ) There was a lull for nearly 3 months until they began sending us letters of inspection to address a noxious odor that emanated from the apartment.At first we were appalled that there was a smell that according to the letters, resulted in multiple complaints to the supers, severe nausea and threats to call the health inspector. We were also confused as we could not smell anything.After multiple inspections from the super, I went and knocked on all of my neighbors’ door to apologize and ask them if they could describe the smell so I could narrow down what it was to deal with it. My fellow tenants on my floor were confused as well and assured me that they hadn’t complained nor did they smell anything. My immediate next door neighbor, who had been there as long as us, said that he too had been given letters regarding multiple noise complaints of his dog barking during the day when he was at work - and which according to him, stated that I and two other neighbors were angry due to it’s noise.I was dumbfounded and assured him I would never complain to the landlord as he and I were on good speaking terms, and if we did have a concern about his dog we would have told him outright.The neighbor then stated, “ I do smell something.”My heart sank. OMG I thought, there is a smell and we were too use to it to notice. I began to blush in embarrassment and stammer out apologies which he gently cut off.“No, not from your apartment,” he said. “What I smell is a rat!”We together contacted a lawyer that dealt in tenants rights and he said that this was a common result of building wide renovations. He then asked us how many letters we had received from the landlord. We both handed him four letters apiece. I assured the lawyer that with each inspection ( some with not even the required 24 hours notice due to my having to work until midnight ) the landlord could find no fault in my housekeeping, but they still insisted that there was a horrible smell.My neighbor told him that he was played multiple videos of his door with the sound of his dog clearly barking on the other side of it, but was baffled as to why the dog had suddenly began to behave in such a manner since he had not done so since he was a puppy.The lawyer dryly stated that it was very easy to get a dog to bark on tape; rattling the mail-slot, rattling the doorknob or by fake barking until they had succeeded in provoking the dog into warning them away before hitting the record button.As for me, the lawyer explained that with all the technology available for tenants to record and document proof against housekeeping concerns or noise complaints, the one thing that couldn’t be recorded or proven on video are smells. Most tenants would be too embarrassed by the accusation to bring it up with others and they would assume that they had become desensitized to the odor exactly as I had done.Moreover, the multiple letters suggested to him that the landlords were building up a case for eviction, Manufacturing a paper trail and showing a judge that they had given us multiple opportunities to correct the issues that in reality weren’t there.He agreed to assist us if we wanted to move forwards with a complaint or if we were served eviction papers but after talking it over with my daughter we decided to give our 60 days notice. It’s my understanding that my neighbor did as well.Yes I know I was letting the landlord win and get what he wanted - our apartment - but I no longer felt welcome there and no longer trusted them in the place that I had thought of as my home, nor did I want to risk an eviction on my record.I can secretly hope however, that they get a slew of bad tenants and that the super looks back on the years we lived there and wish we hadn’t moved.

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