T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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577.1 | Roommates in Northern Cal | SKYLRK::OLSON | green chile crusader! | Mon Sep 12 1988 21:53 | 37 |
| Good issue, Jim. I'm currently in my first roommate situation since
college (most of us single folks in the Bay Area can't buy such
pricey real-estate, and I simply can't handle apartments anymore).
My roommates are a 25-year old female from England currently employed
as an 'au pair' (since she hasn't got a green card) and a 27-year
old guy who does technical drafting work. We've been together for
6 months, and consider ourselves compatible enough that we plan
to stick together and find a new place when our lease expires (our
landlord isn't reoffering the lease, his wife wants the place).
Current situation had numerous potential conflicts: pets (we have
3 cats with different habits); only one bathroom; limited storage
space; limited parking space; limited kitchen cabinet space. But
we all pitch in on the particular chores that we individually don't
mind, and most everything gets done...in particular, the bathroom
stays spotless, I don't quite know how...somebody else's tolerance
level kicks in much before I even notice anything remotely dirty
in there. On my part, I seem to do an awful lot of teacups, small
plates, and other incidental dishes that seem to lie around. Julie
makes no bones about issuing instructions to Andy or I (I've mopped
the kitchen floor more in the last 6 months than I had done living
alone in the last 4 years.)
Problems we don't deal with right now: nobody is dating. Nobody
has kids. Nobody is divorced. Andy disappears every weekend to
go rafting or camping or rockclimbing or whatever. Andy shares
work facilities so is either scheduled 6-2 or 2-10, so we never
conflict for bathroom usage, kitchen usage, etc...I sometimes don't
even see him but 2 or 3 times a week.
I think this is working because 1) we all pitch in 2) we accept
complaints from each other 3) we're all willing to be flexible.
When I think back to my days with an SO in college, or the years
I lived in the fraternity...I know how bad it could be.
DougO
|
577.2 | no roomate! | HACKIN::MACKIN | formerly Jim Mackin, VAX PROLOG | Mon Sep 12 1988 22:17 | 26 |
| Having tried just about every combination possible and then some,
I vote for living alone. I like having my own space to retreat
to. I hate clothes and during the summer rarely wear anything in
my apartment -- I've only "lived" in one place where everyone involved
never bothered with clothes either. This makes getting up in the
morning sooo much easier. No muss, no fuss. Most roomates are very
uncomfortable with that.
When I did have roommates, the best situation was when it was a
house and there were 4 of us. A 2/2 gender split. We drew up chores
lists and each fended for themselves with respect to food. There
was a communal grocery list for some things like toilet paper.
I liked that atmosphere much better than when there was only one
other person in the apartment, be it male or female.
Next best is one person of the same gender. It keeps life nice and
simple compared to the potential problems that can come from having
a roomate of the opposite gender. Unless, of course, you both are
planning on getting married.
The one time I had a female roomate (which was not an SO) lasted
only for a short period of time. We wound up becoming completely
infatuated with each other and for 4 weeks it was BLISS :^). She
moved out after 8 weeks because the infatuation wore off and it
just became uncomfortable for both of us. This is why I'm afraid of
having a female roomate again.
|
577.3 | | COMET::BRUNO | Mentat of House Atreides | Mon Sep 12 1988 23:59 | 17 |
|
I am in the midst of a decision of whether or not to enter a roommate
situation. We are trying to predict any possible problems and plan for them,
but there are some hard realities to face. I haven't had a roommate since
school, and that was a negative situation. I am quite happy with the place
in which I am currently living (the roomate move is so that I can spend more
money on travel). There are, of course, counterbalancing positive aspects.
The new place has two bathrooms and a LOT of space. There will be a
significant drop in expenses for both of us. We work schedules such that we
will not see each other 85% of the time.
At this point, I think that getting a roomate is the way to go. Both of
us expect to marry someone someday, and getting used to the quirks of another
person in the living space could be beneficial.
Greg
|
577.4 | | LEZAH::BOBBITT | color me clueless | Tue Sep 13 1988 10:33 | 20 |
| Well, for the past N years I have had nothing but SO's for roommates,
and successfully so. My current apartment-mate is a student (had
to be - only one parking space with the apt and it's *mine*), and
he and I get along really well. Very mellow, enjoyable, easygoing,
fun. We talk about what's going on in our lives. We share chores,
but eat separately. We have laid groundrules on how things go,
and what is okay, and what is not. This is important to do early
on.
A friend of mine who lives in Watertown is living with 2 or 3 other
women. One bought a cat without even asking the other two, and
the other two are allergic! It was kept on the proviso that it
either stayed in her room, or stayed outside, neither of which is
happening. I think it will come to a head soon, and either the
cat goes or the roommate goes!
Communication is key.
-Jody
|
577.5 | Trusting? | ELESYS::JASNIEWSKI | Our common crisis | Tue Sep 13 1988 11:08 | 35 |
|
Well, I happen to "need" a roomate. The $900 or so monthly expense
is a bit heavy to carry alone, but I somehow seem to be doing so.
It's OK, not going to kill me or anything...
I hesitate to "look" for a roomate, by placing an ad or by
answering one. I dont know what the paranoia is about, it's certainly
*costly* paranoia, but I just feel that "you never really know"
what someone is like till you have lived with them. Guess I'm just
not that open to *trust* in others...which is really too bad!
I agree that communication is the key to quality in any sort
of relationship. I try to be very up front with things, when
considering a potential roomate situation (which I've done once
since I kicked out my last roomate for being physically violent
with me). Being up front means that you say "there's a rock band that
practices here two nights a week" *before* the potential roomate moves in.
Likewise, with all other things. This can involve a lot of trust sometimes.
So, I guess I'll be content to be able to blast my stereo whenever
I want (97 db spl @ 1W - I've 200W/ch available), play my drumset
whenever I want, have the rock band over whenever I want, run around
with no clothes on whenever I want, hook up some amplifier and do
screeching feedbacks with an electric guitar for an hour if I want
to, saw a board in half at 3 am with my table saw, etc et al. But,
things do get lonely at times and I'm not really sure if such absolute
freedom in my environment is really realistic or healthy for me in the
long run. It sure seems enjoyable for the moment!
As life's course goes on, I'm sure someone will turn up - maybe
right around the next corner!
Joe Jas
|
577.6 | | COGMK::CHELSEA | Mostly harmless. | Tue Sep 13 1988 19:44 | 24 |
| I'm pondering this myself. Since the rent increase is just too
much this time around, I'm looking for another place. Since I've
been lucky in my arrangements thus far, I've gotten finicky. I'm
having a hard time finding a place in my price range (the biggest
problem being that I refuse to live off exit 5E or in Hudson).
So I need to start sharing a place.
The advantages are that I can save a lot of money toward a place of
my own and I get more conveniences (dishwasher, washer/dryer, a real
kitchen). The disadvantage is that I have to live with somebody
else. It hasn't been that long since college, but I've been enjoying
it *so* much.
I would kind of like to share with multiple people. Spreads the
strain of interrelating around. I'm a recluse and someone who expects
their roomie to be a pal would drive me up the wall. (We might
be friends, but you can't expect it up front.) With multiple people,
that kind of dependency is less likely, I think. If only one roomie,
a person of the same gender -- it's just less complicated that way.
It's going to be a little tricky. I'm used to having total control
over my living environment. If the kitchen is messy, it's because
I did it and I can clean it up when I'm ready. So that will make
things interesting. I'll probably stop cooking ....
|
577.7 | | NEXUS::GORTMAKER | Whatsa Gort? | Wed Sep 14 1988 05:29 | 20 |
| I've been kicking around the idea of getting a roommate since my
divorce several years ago. I seem to get more serious(not real)
as fall and hi utility bills start rolling around.
I have had a real hard time going ahead and getting one because
of the fact I've never had a roomie before and have only heard
horror stories from everyone except one friend who has 4 female
roommates and loves it. I honestly can't see myself living with
another man so have decided if I do get an RM that female is what
I would feel most comfortable with. Anyone out there been in the
same baot before? How did you go about looking for an opposite sex
roomie( non SO type) without sending the wrong vibes? Ideas?
Maybe this is non-issue but having never looked before I dont know
much about it... I also wonder if it is neccessary to have full
seperate facilities(bathroom) for each person or if a 1 bathroom
house would work given the right conditions? I know there are bus.
like roomfinders that do placements but they wanted $300 up front
and dont really guarantee success. Anyone use such a service before?
Ideas and suggestions please,-j
|
577.8 | Opposite sex roomies | BSS::VANFLEET | 6 Impossible Things Before Breakfast | Wed Sep 14 1988 13:05 | 12 |
| Jerry -
I wouldn't specify that you want an opposite sex roomate.
Just place an ad not specifying gender requirements. Then
select from the female applicants.
I have lived in roomate situations with both same and opposite
genders and I find I am more comfortable with opposites. We
always had very genial relations but never went "beyond bounds".
If you feel it's necessary set up guidelines ahead of time.
Nanci
|
577.9 | Yes, it's possible! | USMRM3::JHUTCHINS | | Wed Sep 14 1988 14:45 | 33 |
| I've had a variety of roommates, and fortunately, no horror stories
to report. Personally, I prefer living alone, but the cost of living
just doesn't allow that luxury at this point. And yes, it is more
interesting to talk to a person instead of four walls or the TV
set!
I've lived with 1 and 2 other people, and personally, I prefer 1
roommate. As for chores and schedules, as others have mentioned
in previous notes, if you set that up from the start, there is less
chance for things to go to pieces. (One roommate was fanatical
about cleaning, so I told her that if she wanted things _that_ clean,
it was up to her.)
Housework gets done whenever possible, since we both have crazy
schedules that vary from week to week. We keep each other posted
about guests, to avoid having people over when the other person
has a final or whatever coming up. Since we're both off at meetings
or classes during the evening, and elsewhere on weekends, it works
out pretty well. As for the morning routine, my roommate usually
gets up before I do, so she's in the shower first, and I use the
time to make breakfast.
The bottom line is communication and courtesy. You don't have to
be "buddies" with your roommate, but it does help to have common
interests. Both of us were looking for roommates for financial
reasons, and we knew that together, we could find a better place
in a better neighborhood.
Start asking your friends...that's how I found my current roommate.
Good luck
Judi
|
577.10 | avoid friends as roommates | HPSCAD::HENDERSON | This Buds 4U, London Pride 4me | Wed Sep 14 1988 15:53 | 22 |
| re -1
>> asking your friends...
I have often heard it said that its not a good idea to idea to get
a friend as a roommate. If things don't work out you lose a friend
as well as a roommate. I know several people this has happened to.
Find a stranger, if it doesn't work out, find someone else, not
too serious.
I too had heard lots of horror stories about roommates, so I
was pretty sceptical about the whole thing.
I put an ad in the Boston Globe, didn't specify gender. Several
women called, and some said they didn't want a guy as a roommate.
I ended up taking another guy as a roommate. Works out very well,
no stresses and strains and the company is very welcome at times.
On the other hand, I think you have to be sensitive to when your
roommate(s) want to be on their own and keep out of their way at
those times.
Steve
|
577.11 | Sharing as a good alternative | SMURF::HOFFMAN | anywhere in the universe | Wed Sep 14 1988 20:42 | 48 |
| I've lived in shared living situations all of adult life
starting with college and through 10 years of marriage before
moving to New Hampshire and getting divorced. I've lived in
4 shared situations in 3 years here and am starting on a 5th.
They've all been enjoyable and certainly much more affordable
than living on my own.
A few pointers...
So far the Digital Classified Ads have been an excellent source
of leads for housemate situations. I feel much less paranoid dealing
with another DEC employee than with other strangers. One reason
is that communication via electronic mail and the phone is much
easier, both before and after making the arrangements. As noted
previously, communication makes a big difference.
I prefer to share with the owner or with someone else who's
responsible for holding the mortgage or lease. Same with the
utilities when feasible. It just makes it a lot easier to move
in and out when it seems right. Economically, I think the best
arrangement is to share with an owner who doesn't have to get
half the rent (or payment) back from you.
I've had excellent luck with housemates of the opposite sex.
In each case, we've clearly expressed our agreement from the
start that there will not be a relationship that goes beyond
friendship. It keeps things so much simpler. The result is
that we're more like brother and sister which suits me, never
having had a sister.
It's always important to discuss economic and behavioral needs
and preferences before entering a shared living situation.
Most horror stories I've heard seem to result directly from
failure to deal with basic issues before making the commitment.
Hope this helps others to decide whether and how to pursue this
option. One or more other people can be very pleasant to come
home to under the right circumstances.
By the way, my frequent moves have not been because of any real
problems in the living situations. Various causes (housemate
got married, housemate took a job in Australia, I decided that
20 mile commute was too far) have contributed.
Good luck!
John
|
577.12 | I'll second being careful about living with friends | LDYBUG::GOLDMAN | Hear the song within | Wed Sep 14 1988 21:18 | 34 |
| Re .10
Ah yes, the old 'you never really know someone till you live
with them' syndrome.
My last roommate was someone I knew in school - she had lived
on the same floor and we got along pretty well. It ended up being
a disaster. It might not have been so bad, but there was a fianc�
in the picture. He came over every night and she made him dinner,
she made a lunch for him and left it in the fridge for him to pick
up, etc. He was there weekends. And whenever he was around, they
were very exclusive - I felt like I was living with a newlywed couple.
I was definitely not wanted around. Believe me, it didn't make going
home fun - I felt like I didn't belong in my own place. I knew
she had a boyfriend when we made the decision to live together,
but never expected it to be quite so bad. For a while, she went
to stay at his place, and I had the apartment to myself. I didn't
realize how nice it was until she moved back.
Anyway, when I finally decided that I'd had enough of commuting,
and enough of them, I thought about trying to find another roommate
through Classifieds, to save expenses. I was a little wary of living
with someone I didn't know. I finally decided that I needed peace of
mind more than money, so I currently live alone. Yes, sometimes
it would be nice to have someone around, but I also enjoy the solitude.
I know of several situations where people have found roommates in
C_A, and have become very close friends. Maybe the next time I
move, I'll try a roommate again. I think there's a lot of chance
(luck...fate?) involved, but you can also help the odds in your
favor by communication, as many here have stated.
Good luck to anyone looking!
-Amy-
|
577.13 | | COMET::BRUNO | Retirement is wasted on the elderly | Wed Sep 14 1988 23:36 | 13 |
| Re: .12
You bring up an issue that my potential roommate recently
mentioned. A previous roommate had a girlfriend who literally
lived in their apartment (and paid no rent). They fairly well
occupied the whole place all the time, and were pretty hard to
handle. We have agreed that no guests of any gender would be
living in the new place for more than a day or two.
I had never even considered this possible problem, but I can
EASILY see that it would make me VERY angry.
Greg
|
577.14 | If I can't tell you've used it, I don't mind | YODA::BARANSKI | The Rich want Law; The Poor, Justice | Thu Sep 15 1988 10:57 | 27 |
| I've shared housing through most of my life. They have all been at least
reasonably successfull, except for the last.
My last experience was staying with 'friends', a couple who owned a house.
Immediately after I moved my stuff, they broke up, and the guy (a DECCIE) moved
out. I had no idea what to do in the situation. The woman ended up marrying
another guy two months later. During most of the time, the feeling was like
living with a ghost, with very little contact. It was horrible for me...
I like to be on friendly terms with roommates. I don't usually have problems
with roommates SO's, I don't care if they 'put on a show', but I wouldn't put up
with being made to feel like I was infringing on their space. I would make it
clear that the place was just as much my space, except for roommate's bedrooms.
I like to share food, and other appliances with roommates... To me, that's one
of the benifits of having roommates that I don't have to have a couple of
thousand dollars of stereo or microwave or whatever. They are quite welcome to
read my books or use anything I have in return. My motto is, 'If I can't tell
that you've used it, I don't mind.'; IE, if it's put back where it belongs, it's
clean, and not ripped, torn, or otherwise destroyed, I don't mind if roommates
use whatever.
I think it's nice to cook and eat a couple of meals a week together, or have
some activities in common, but I have so many different interests that I can't
even find a SO with all the same interests, let alone a roommate :-)!
Jim.
|
577.15 | | MCIS2::POLLERT | Have you KICKED your computer today? | Thu Sep 15 1988 11:21 | 42 |
|
I've had 4 roommates in the past 11 years - one SO (3 yrs), two close
friends (2 and 3 yrs), and one friend of a friend (2 yrs).
Living with close friends is hard. Often they expect their problems
to become your problems. I'd come home and want to just relax and
unwind, and they'd have a fight with their boyfriend and need to
talk, etc. Or you're on your way out the door and they're having
a crisis... And close friends expect to know all the details of
your life, where you're going, when you'll be back, why you're doing
that, etc. - there's less privacy that living with a stranger! I
know it went both ways, but its a different type of relationship,
and it takes a lot of work.
On the other hand, there was always someone to talk to, help and
friendship when you needed it, and just somebody that cared. We had
mutual friends and there was always something to do. I'm thinking
now that when I lived with my friends we were both 20-25. We've
changed a lot since then, I wonder if it would be different now.
The friend of a friend worked out well. We had a chance to get to
know each other before she moved in, and we became friends, but not
best friends. It was easier, but it was a lot lonelier too.
Two years ago I bought a condo and she moved from the apartment to
the condo with me. By the time she left, I just didnt want a roommate
anymore. Part of the reason I always had one was to save
for a condo, which I finally got. And I didnt like sharing the place
I worked for and owned. Kind of wierd, but I felt if I got another
roommate, they wouldnt care about it as much as I did. (Just like
I used to feel about the apartments I rented.) By the time that
feeling wore off, I was used to living alone.
About living alone (11 months now) - I love it, but I think I've been
developing some bad habits. I've been getting a little lazy
and set in my ways, and getting used to living with someone else
again will be real hard.
I've never shared an apartment with a guy (non-SO), but not becuase
I had anything against it. It just never came up.
Kp.
|
577.16 | Good luck so far | BROKE::BNELSON | The virtue of adversity is fortitude | Thu Sep 15 1988 16:52 | 35 |
|
I've had 2 roommates. The first was my best friend, and we got along well
together. True, he has some habits that drive me crazy (they still drive
me crazy), but I know I have some that annoyed him too. Since this was
my first experience of living with someone away from home, I had some learning
to do, some maturing to do, and just in general learning to be more easygoing
and flexible about things. I learned a lot, about living and about myself.
We're still best friends, the only reason we're not living together is we
wanted to buy condos. As it turned out, we're still pretty close because
we got condos in the same building!
Then there was a period of about 3-4 months when I lived alone. I didn't
know if I'd like it, but after a couple weeks I ended up *loving* it. It's
really great, the freedom you have. I swore I would never have another
roommate again until....
My second (and current) roommate is a good friend who needed a place to stay
when he started developing problems with his fiancee. He's very good about
being fairly neat (like myself) and clean and helping out with the housework.
I do have to inform him of certain things that one should/shouldn't do with
various pieces of cookware/cutlery from time to time, but he respects it
(even if he doesn't understand or agree with it). The only *really* annoying
thing is when he has lady friends over; I feel like a stranger in my own
place. Unfortunately, I'm also a light sleeper and I sometimes have trouble
sleeping with the added noise (I've "taught" him to be quiet, but adding
another person is bound to increase the decibels!). Still, he's a good friend
who's helped me out, I enjoy his company, and the extra money really helps --
it made it *much* easier to go to England for a couple weeks, so I really
can't complain too much!
I guess overall I've been pretty darn lucky, considering what I've heard.
Brian
|
577.17 | | SEDJAR::THIBAULT | It doesn't make sense. Isn't it | Fri Sep 16 1988 13:15 | 17 |
| I absolutely hate having roommates (the non-SO kind anyway). I've had many in
my daze and most were bad experiences. I like my own space too much. I like
to play what I want on the stereo when I want to play it. I like to watch tv
when I want. I like to have company when I want. I like to put things down
and have them be there when I want them. I like to be responsible for my
own messes and don't like looking at someone else's. Oddly enough the best
roommate I ever had was in college and she was totally opposite from me.
We were like Ocsar and Felix (I was Oscar :-)). We had different tastes in
clothes, men, friends everything. She got up in the morning and spent hours
putting on gobs of make-up and ironing her clothes and all the other
whatnots. I woke up, crawled out of bed, took a shower and went off to
school. We had a few things in common and did stuff together but the
rest of the time we went our own ways. We were complete strangers when we
met and we're still friends to this day. I still prefer my own place but
if I had to, I'd want someone who was quite opposite from me.
Jenna
|
577.18 | Sister's do not make good roommates | PENUTS::THIBAULT | | Fri Sep 16 1988 13:33 | 14 |
| My roommate right now is my younger sister. The reason I say right
now, is because she is moving out next month. She had a date several
months ago and he never went home. He has lived there and never
offered a penny to the support of the apartment. This has caused
me to have a dislike toward him. Because of this dislike, my sister
has decided to go live with him. I am not condemning her for falling
in love, but I think she could have talked to me several months
ago and explain his financial situation. Maybe then things would
have been better.
I am in the process of finding a smaller apartment. I have had
it for the time with roommates. I am looking foward to being on
my own again. To come and go as I please.
|
577.19 | Roommate, you say? | HYSTER::THEIL | It's All in the Cards | Fri Sep 16 1988 14:57 | 49 |
|
I'll add a little humor to this topic if I may......
I moved to New Hampshire 2 years ago. I needed to get a place to
live and needed someone to share the expenses with. With very little
time to do this, I was unable to be very picky!
I moved into a beautiful brand new apartment with a girl who's parents
were friends of a relative of mine. She seemed nice and pretty
quiet. Well, looks can definetly be deceiving!!!! I'll call her
"Bird" from here......
Bird was 24 years old, going on 16!!! It's hard to describe but
try to draw a picture with the following examples:
Bird was not quiet, to say the least. She could talk your ear off!
She was also the most "unkempt" person I have ever met. Ex: I was
taking my small pile of clothes (1 weeks worth) down to the laundry
room when she jumped up and said, "Wait I'll get mine and go with
you." OK, right? Well she walks out of her room with every piece
of clothing she owned (not an exaggeration) in her arms. I asked
her when the last time she did wash was. Her reply was, "Oh last
week, I just don't know what's clean and what's dirty." She threw
all her clothes in the middle of the floor when they came out of
the dryer, when she came home from work.....whenever!!!!!!
I was dusting the living room one Saturday and Bird said, "Can I
help?" After recovering from the shock of her offering I said sure
and told her to clean up the kitchen. My back was to the kitchen,
when all of a sudden I heard a spray sound and then "WHOOSH!!!!!!"
I turned around to see Bird standing there covering her face (she
was fine), the ceiling and stove covered with black! I immediately
asked her if she was alright and asked what she did. Then I noticed
a can of ENDUST laying on the counter. She sprayed ENDUST on our
gas stove!!!! I couldn't believe it! I did take the time (and
I MEAN I really took the time) to show her the right way to do things
and what to use, etc. She was just very lazy and nearest cleaning
solution is what she used.
There are many more stories but this has been long enough. All
I am trying to say in this reply is SCAN your possible roommates
as much as possible! This girl was so naive she could have done
a lot of damage to both herself and me much less the apartment.
She would buzz people in when she didn't even recognize their voices
on the intercom, etc. And the list goes on......
dLt
|
577.20 | | AKOV11::BHOLLAND | | Fri Sep 16 1988 16:57 | 20 |
| re. .19 Thanks for the humor! Those of us who feel we could write
a book on roommates can relate, I am sure. Over the years I have
had every imaginable type of roomie, SO's, groups, non-SO opposite
sex, etc. One thing people have not mentioned here is the age
factor: what you can handle fresh out of college in your 20's becomes
intolerable by the time you hit 30. I had the problem of a roomie's
SO moving in without paying rent at my FIRST apartment junior year
of college. Since then I was always clear about time limits on
overnight guests. Another big issue is always standards of cleanliness.
One summer I got so upset over this and when I approached the roomie,
she said, "I don't do bathrooms" (or dusting or vacuuming). She
did keep the kitchen nice and was a GREAT cook and otherwise a good
roomie, so I just decided to live with it and do the cleaning myself.
My advise would be to negotiate to hire a housekeeper if the parties
cannot agree on cleanliness standards. My sister was my roomie for
a few months (her first rent-paying independent situation) and loved
it. Only she had TOO many dinner guests and I missed my privacy.
It is definitely a trade off: I have learned lots from roommates,
good recipes, shared friends and parties. But now the privacy and
freedom to run your own place is more important.....
|
577.22 | I need a break | CADSE::DUNTON | Frankly my dear..... | Tue Sep 20 1988 18:26 | 45 |
|
.... Just my subject (wonder why I didn't think of it..)
Over the last 4+ years I have had.. mmm.. let me take off my shoes
:-).. to count.. accually, I'm with the 5th one presently.
A few tid-bits on them..
1. Female (opposite sex - non SO ).. after 8 mo's of having
too good of a time ( borrowed a picture to de-seed her pot and
later to 'road painting' aka white lines..) no thanks - kicked
her butt out.
2. same sex - no connections .. Not a bad roomie at all..
very few disagreements and they were easily resolved. Moved
jobs and moved closer to work - he was there about a year.
3. same sex - co- deccie.. working with him was no indication
of his home life.. just packed up and left one day leaving me
with left over expenses.. cops showed up a week after he split
looking for him... saw his name in the Nashua telegraph for
selling cocaine to an undercover cop - hope they threw away the
key !
4. same sex - no connections.. this guy was an a**hole with a
great disposition.. was helpful when convienient, lied thru his
teeth, didn't pay his entire way ( I'll get the rest to you next
week..) and had "looser" written all over his face - in invisible
ink ! Ex-wife in Maine decided she wanted him back after i started
court action for the "next week" that never showed up.
5. This is my brothers SO.. and yes.. with both of them there
its' just not my house.. The bathroom situation in the morning
is interesting at times.. and they're not as conservative as I am..
afterall - we're splitting the bills right..? well i don't like
~$60 elec bills for 175 watts in the bathroom and 165 watts
in the kitchen and they're both in the bedroom.. (we have gas heat,
hot water, and drier)... gee, does that seem unreasonable.??
Next place is going to have "my 2 favorite" roomies.. alone with
"me" there will be "myself" and "I".. ! (Unless a better situation
is available between now and then [ never know when and where that
special someone is])
K-
|
577.23 | Mostly Harmless | WAYLAY::GORDON | Well... There you have it! | Wed Sep 21 1988 23:02 | 32 |
| I've had roomies ever since college.
Straight out of college, I moved in with an old high school friend
of mine. Things were great until his girlfriend moved in without
paying any rent. (She had her own apartment, but was never there.)
Eventually, we moved to a larger place and we "split" the rent.
I ended up moving out when I started losing all the arguments 2-1.
I got a place, then supported it myself for 2 months while I
searched for a suitable roomie. One came along, and we lived together
very successfully for a year. Then my landlord decided to sell,
and my roomie was getting married, so I was looking again...
My old high school friend had broken up with his girlfriend,
so we moved back in together (having had a long chat about what
caused me to move out in the first place.) We lived together for
about a year and a half 'til he met the woman of his dreams and
they decided to get married and move into their own place.
Fortunately, a friend of mine knew someone he worked with (at
DEC) who was looking for a place to live, so I met Mark, and we've
been living together a year and a half with only really minor problems
which we've talked out. I keep my mess in my room, he keeps his
in his room, we keep the common areas reasonably clean, and we seldom
see each other. We're both very busy with our own things, and it
was more than a year before we'd gone out for breakfast together
one morning. It's worked out well...
When I move out of here, I'm probably going to buy something
of my own, so probably no roomie...
--Doug
|
577.24 | you may become friends for life | TELALL::MORRISEY | | Thu Sep 22 1988 19:52 | 118 |
| (I know this entry is too long, but I don't make many entries!)
I guess the most roommates I ever had at one time was 24 ...
that was a 3 room apartment (plus kitchen and 1 bath) ...
and everyone got along fine! This was when I ran a crash-pad in San Francisco,
("the sixties"). Ya know...I still can't figure out how the bathroom thing
worked out so well in that place.
Anyway... I have lived in other roommate groups of 7, 6, 5, 4, 3, and 2
over the past tweny years or so. Almost all good situations. Same sex,
mixed sex, couples, children, whatever. I have developed a number of lifelong
friendships out of these situations. And gotten to know a lot of
interesting people.
But ... should I tell you this ... I guess so, it's already been
brought up in another note ... finally I hit disaster ... this year ...
I had one roommate, oposite sex (this was nothing unusual) ... and ...
of all the crazy things to do ... I fell in love with her. Total infatuation.
Sigh. Well, this is outside what you're "supposed to do" with a roommate,
and unfortunately, the same feelings didn't happen to her and this made things
rather uncomfortable. I guess it's bad enought when it happens and you live
in different towns, but when it's you only roommate ...; so after sorting that
out (sigh), I've decided to live alone for a bit.
But enough of my problems; here are a few suggestions about how to avoid
some potential roomate difficulties:
A good INTERVIEW can save you a lot of problems. All roomates should be
there to interview any potential new person. You need at least an
hour for the interview; if it's a no-go you may be done in 10 minutes
but if talk comes easy you really need time to expore possibilities.
And QUALIFY potential roommates over the phone before setting up a
meeting ... such things as children, pets, allergies to pets, and such
may mean it's a waste of time to arrange a visit.
A good type question is "what do you feel you're looking for in a place
to live?" It's pretty open ended and you'll get some feeling as to if
you even want to meet this person. And how well they communicate.
And how realistic they are about acknowledging and talking about their needs.
As another noter wisely observed, people in their 30's and 40's often don't
seem to be able to tolerate as much chaos as those in their early 20's; this is
REALLY(!) true, and if you're "mixing years" I think you need to have a
straightforward understanding about lifestyles in terms of noise, standards
for cleanliness of common living areas, "overnight guests", and the food trip.
And parties.
Another problem other people have mentioned: the SUPRISE EXTRA ROOMMATE
who moves in (boyfriend or girlfriend). In most of the situations that
I've been in we've agreed on a maximum number of nights per week that
anyone could have "overnight guests" without the consent of everyone
else (typically 2 nights). Everybody then feels reasonably protected
against the "uninvited roommate"; and there never was a problem when
we did have the exta person move in ... invariably they had come
to understand that their welcome to stay was based on their ability
to get along with ALL the roommates ... and people who wanted to move in were
thus accomodating, and I don't every remember saying "No" when anyone
wanted a full-time friend living with them. Usually people got around
to saying, "Oh, yeah, if you want Julie/Jim to spend more time here,
that's fine with me" before any official census had to be taken.
Potential major hassle .... MONEY. From my experience, for things
to work smoothly, everyone's budget has to easily handle the cost of living
(rent/utilities/shared food/etc). Othewise you get into uncomfortable
feelings and tension about such major issues as spending too much on
the toilet paper; and you start wondering how your "quality of life"
could have gone so downhill on such an issue. A little, just a little,
extra money greases the relationships real well. Too little, even from
one person, puts a lot of strain on the whole situation pretty quickly.
Attitudes about money are important. The financial situation should be
very explicitly discussed (even put in writing if it's complex or if
someone is under financial pressure) so there's no misunderstandings
X months's down the line. About now you realize I'm well past my
"early 20's" when I gave very little thought to such issues
(of course I often didn't know where I'd be sleeping next week, but
everything worked out ok.)
FOOD! I eventually came around to a policy of "start out relatively
independent and let it come together as much as possible". The
more "cooperative" the food thing gets, the better the whole situation
is. When you get to the point that people are picking up responsibility
it gets good ... you know when you come home totally wiped out and need to lie
down that someone else will be sensitive to your situation and they'll
cook dinner and just give you a call when it's ready. And in turn
you'll probably clean up everything and do the same for them when can
use a little taking-care-of. About this point in roommate situations
we would seem to stop keeping track of how much we were spending on food ...
people would just buy what's needed, with a feeling for what is their
fair share. But it doesn't have to work out as a group event to get
along as roommates. Mealtime is the best time, 'tho, to keep in touch
with everyone's lives and concerns. Better than "house meetings" which
can get political pretty easily.
DRUGS! ya gotta talk about this one beforehand too ... and that
shouldn't be big deal, but I sometimes feel funny "interviewing"
people about drug habits ... but one time when I didn't I
wound up with an out-of-control violent alcoholic and it was real bad ...
one of the few bad roommate things I've had to deal with. Different drug
habits are fine as long as everybody can respect the other peoples'
feelings (hey, we even had rules in Haight-Ashbury: no intravenous
drug use, permission from chief drug supervisor person ...
that often turned out to be me, but there wasn't really a title to
the role ... before doing any "heavy drugs" ...
so that there would be a support network there if someone needed help...
I mean, ya know, we had some seriously emotionally disturbed kids from time to
time who needed some structure...and some careing)...ya know? ... and with
twenty-some people in three rooms...anyway...
I don't think it's vitally necessary to have a lot of common interests or
activities, as long as people find the other roommates interesting as people...
it's nice, but not critical.
Just consideration/communication/good intent/honesty/responsibility
(at least occasionally responsible!).
Hey, you might become friends for life. Or not.
Dennis
|
577.25 | just like I remember... | SMURF::HOFFMAN | anywhere in the universe | Tue Sep 27 1988 21:33 | 11 |
| re .24
I enjoyed all of it and wish that I'd thought of all those things
in my note, or even in my search for housemates over the years.
I don't remember ever staying at your place during my hitch-hiking
years, but it must have been like some of those other safe places
I found when they were needed most.
Thanks, Dennis!
John
|
577.26 | YET ANOTHER "BIRD" STORY (From note .19) | LEADIN::THEIL | It's All in the Cards | Wed Sep 28 1988 16:49 | 15 |
| re .24
You mentioned a sudden "extra roomie." Bird decided to have a
"boyfriend" stay over one night. Hah! It turned out to be over
a week! That wasn't the worst. She didn't tell me the first night
that he was staying over. I got up the next morning, like I always
did, in my T-shirt and underwear, opened my bedroom door and the
first thing I saw was this guy who I didn't even know, walk past
me and say, "Morning." I almost died!!!
Needless to say, remember to set some ground rules, even if it's
a note put under your door saying, "BEWARE, MAN IN APARTMENT!"
Denise
|
577.27 | think Xmas | MEMORY::FRECHETTE | Use your imagination... | Wed Sep 28 1988 17:02 | 4 |
|
When you're home without your boyfriend, start making Xmas gifts.
Cross-stitch, knitting, sewing... usually less expensive than buying
gifts and much more personal.
|
577.28 | roommates from birth | SALEM::SAWYER | Alien. On MY planet we reason! | Wed Sep 28 1988 17:26 | 19 |
|
my youngest daughter is about 30% roommate, 30% daughter and 40%
friend
my oldest daughter is about 25% roommate, 20% daughter, 35% friend
and 20% pain in the....
:-)
her boyfriend is 40%roommate and 40%visitor and 20% friend
their friend, andrea (animal!) is 80% roommate and 20% friend
but i still do most of the dishes...:-(
i've been conditioning/brainwashing/developing my daughters to
think of themselves more and more like my friend and roommate
and less and less like my daughters...
my goal is to have no daughters and 2 friends for life...
it keeps getting easier
|
577.29 | | MEMORY::FRECHETTE | Use your imagination... | Thu Sep 29 1988 11:59 | 3 |
|
RE: .27 should be elsewhere...
|