Sadly, she phoned me today and we had an argument. I finally told her how I feel about her bf living there and her lying to me. I was quite angry. I tried to avoid the conversation at first in order to prevent a blow out, but she pushed and pushed. She didn’t apologise for any of it.
So I guess things did get ugly at the end.
I fly back tomorrow. I hope my trip home next year will be more pleasant. This was a nightmare.
It is a good thing you have an agent to handle the eviction, if it comes to that.
I see no reason why she has to agree to leave. It’s your place and she pays no rent. She has no lease. Ask the agent to send her an enforceable notice to vacate. You can call her to let her know the notice is coming and that you will trust she will leave the apartment in good order for the new tenant–notice I did not say the “next” tenant, since your friend has been a guest, not a tenant–in spite of your differences.
I hope she leaves it in good condition and doesn’t take anything that doesn’t belong to her. After living there this long, however, she may have grown attached to some of your belongings. If she is angry at you, too, she might rationalize some spiteful behavior.
Yes, it is a good thing you have an agent to handle this. Worth every penny, whatever you’re paying.
By the way, I have a rule of relationships that goes like this: If you wronged someone, apologize, even if you are not the most wrong. There are two reasons this works. First, if one party is the most wrong and knows it, they are also the most defensive and have the hardest time making a bid to mend fences. It makes them feel too vulnerable. Second, it is not uncommon for two people to each believe that it is the other one who is the most wrong and therefore the most responsible to apologize first. Changing the expectation of “who ought to go first” really erases the whole question of who is the “most” wrong, which is pretty pointless, in the end.
If you said anything during that conversation that you regret or that you feel was gratuitously hurtful, apologize. You’ll be glad you did, whether she accepts the apology or not. If you did nothing wrong, then you are ready to ask God to forgive the wrongs she committed against you, let go, and commend the whole thing to God.
What comes of this after that, no one can tell. As Mother Teresa used to say,
“God did not call me to be successful. God called me to be faithful.” Be faithful, and don’t worry about the rest.