Instead of being a deadbeat and relying on the system to get you out of the situation you created, put on your big boy panties, pay off the loan company and other encumbrances, then live in or sell the property.
Wow OHRoadwarrior,
I hope for your sake that you never go through the financial downturn that I have. I honestly do not think that my personal finances are your business... however since you felt the need to get personal, I will tell you a little about what I have been through...
At the beginning of 2008 I was working in a factory that builds R.V.'S Making roughly $27 per hour. My wife and I spent the majority of our savings on the down payment for our first house (now the zombie deed). when the economy went down the tubes, the R.V. industry was one of the hardest hit. unemployment in the county that I live in hit 28%. Yes, I was one of those workers who was let go... it took over three years for the county unemployment rate to climb back to 12%... that means that there were no good paying jobs, and if you happened to find an opening there were at least 250 applicants per position. Did I rely on the government to pay me unemployment?... NO!!! I did whatever I could, deliver pizzas, take part time jobs at retail clothing stores, at one point as a last ditch effort to try to save our house I even joined the army. (that didn't work out because I found out that I have a medical condition caused by the hard physical labor I had done building R.V.'S)...
After all this time I have finally found a job that pays a fair wage ($12 per hour) and my wife and I are finally starting to get back on our feet... (that's right, My Wife is still with me. Do you think that if you lost everything, your wife would stick by your side OHRoadwarrior?)
it has been a long and very tiresome road, but I thank God for it. I feel that through all of this I have learned what is truly important... I guess that I can't be mad at you OHRoadwarrior, because if this hadn't happened to me, I might be a judgmental douche just like you.