House for families

What Are the Benefits of Hugging?

We hug others when we’re excited, happy, sad, or trying to comfort. Hugging, it seems, is universally comforting. It makes us feel good. And it turns out that hugging is proven to make us healthier and happier. According to scientists, the benefits of hugging go beyond that warm feeling you get when you hold someone in your arms. Read on to find out how. 1. Hugs reduce stress by showing your...

How Much Will Today’s Median Home Price Really Get You Across the U.S.?

By Elena Cox Jan 17, 2022 Homebuyers these days are one stressed-out group, and they have plenty of questions. They want to know how high mortgage rates will rise. How to win insane bidding wars. Whether to join the suburban rush or the big-city retreat. Whether the open kitchen, modern farmhouse, and “cottagecore” designs are still a thing. But amid all the confusion and consternation, there’s one...

Fixed mortgage rates hit 20-month high as long-term bond yields rise

By Kathy Orton (washingtonpost.com) January 6, 2022 What a difference a year makes. One year ago this week, the 30-year fixed mortgage rate sank to its lowest level in history. This week, fixed mortgage rates followed long-term bond yields and rose to their highest levels in 20 months. According to the latest data released Thursday by Freddie Mac, the 30-year fixed-rate average climbed to 3.22 percent...

6 Home-Selling Hopes and Dreams That Can Easily Turn Delusional Today

By Erin Flaherty (realtor.com) As a real estate agent in upstate New York, I can say with confidence that home sellers are in a great mood these days. And who can blame them? In this seller’s market where homes go fast and for top dollar, many sellers are excited to cash in and make a killing. In many cases, they’ll succeed—yet this wild exuberance can also go overboard. Such bullish optimism could...

The Best Advice of 2021: Our Top Real Estate Tips To Carry Into the New Year – Realtor.com

By: Margaret Heidenry (realtor.com) Dec 9, 2021 Phew, 2021 was busy. Some of us returned to work, others headed back to school, and all of us went back out (hello, restaurants and arenas!). So it’s little wonder you might have missed some of the Realtor.com advice we gathered in the past year. So here’s an update: We spent the past 12 months researching and writing about every real estate subject...

Dress up your pet day

Grab your pet’s best outfit and join us in celebrating the “NATIONAL DRESS UP YOUR PET DAY!”, and get a chance to win $50 Amazon gift card! Read the instructions below to know the steps on how to join this event! Here is how to join: Stay tuned for our official post for this event in our facebook and instagram page. Share your stylish pet pics under the post’s comment section. Add...

CRUSH YOUR NEW YEAR’S RESOLUTION WITH THESE SIMPLE TIPS

There’s no doubt that January 1 can feel like an inspirational time—the resetting of the calendar can get nearly anyone to feel ready to make changes in their lives. But if you’ve ever embarked on an ambitious New Year’s resolution, only to feel burnt out by mid-January, you’re not alone. In fact, one survey found that nearly two-thirds of those who set resolutions give up within the first...

Preparing for a new year emotionally, spiritually, politically, financially

As we come to the close of 2021, the question each of us faces is whether we are ready to enter a new year. We can simply function as if engaging 2022 will be like all the other years of the past, or we can prepare ourselves emotionally, intellectually, socio-politically and spiritually for what may in fact be the “fundamentally new.” I do not believe 2022 will be the same as it has always been. The...

History of Christmas you can tell your kids

Christmas is for joy, for giving and sharing, for laughter, for coming together with family and friends, for tinsel and brightly decorated packages… But mostly, Christmas is for love. It was this love for which Jesus came to this world and sacrificed his life. Though originated by the Roman Catholics who commemorate the December 25th as the day of birth of Christ Child, it has gradually come to be...

What we kept, what we ditched, what we cooked: How covid changed the holidays

By: Jura Koncius (washingtonpost.com) Mary-Liz Lichtenfels got burned in last year’s pandemic Christmas tree shortage. And instead of hosting 19 people for the holiday, it was just her, her husband and their three millennial children. It was a quieter celebration, but Lichtenfels, who runs the McLean, Va., staging business Redesign by ML, says all of that uncertainty gave her the courage to mix things...

Compare listings

Compare