T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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903.1 | No problem... | HPSRAD::KIRK | Matt Kirk -- 297-6370 | Wed Nov 15 1989 12:11 | 28 |
|
Two of my roommates are in the process of getting married (to each other).
One (the owner of the house) I've lived with for 1� years, and the other
moved in three months ago (about the time they got engaged). We've had
no real problems of any sort.
Pros (as I see them):
Another roommate means the bills go five ways instead of four.
The housework gets divided five ways instead of four (this is not
to say that much housework ever got done to begin with, or that it
gets done now).
She's an interesting person. Another roommate to talk to at
dinner time (the house frequently eats together).
Cons:
We have less common space per person than we did. Since the
house is quite large, this has less impact than if it were a
800 sf condo.
One of the things that seems really important is that the person moving
in is flexible enough to fit into the existing social structure. We would
have had problems if, for example, suddenly we all had to keep kosher or
start cleaning the house regularly.
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903.2 | | BSS::VANFLEET | Living my Possibilities | Wed Nov 15 1989 13:25 | 17 |
| When I was married, my ex and I always had a roomate. From the
feedback that I've gotton from the roomates it was no problem for them
to live with a married couple. However, if I were your roomates I
would seriously reconsider this choice. I found that the relationship
between myself and my spouse suffered a great deal due to the
restrictions of having another person's energy to deal with in the
living situation. There was never a chance to really deal with just
each other's energy and develop one-on-one communication lines, etc.
without always taking into account the other person we were co-habiting
with. I think that this was a large factor in our split-up. Perhaps
if we'd had the time and _freedom_ to develop a living relationship
between the two of us other problems would not have occurred or could
have been overcome.
FWIW
Nanci
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903.3 | privacy is an issue | YODA::BARANSKI | Happiness is a warm rock in the sun | Wed Nov 15 1989 16:03 | 5 |
| It depends greatly on how much privacy the couple and the roomate need. If they
don't feel overly inhibited by your presence, and you don't mind a few PDA's,
and an occasional heated argument, it should go as well as roomates normally go.
Jim.
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903.4 | so far, so good | ULTRA::WITTENBERG | So Many Women, So Little Time. | Wed Nov 15 1989 17:14 | 26 |
| I've been on both sides of this. The first place I lived in off
campus had a soon to be married couple as two of the 6?
housemates. I didn't have anything to compare that to. In another
house that I lived in, one man was married, but his wife had a job
2 hours away, so she only lived with us on weekends. Eventually,
she got a closer job, and moved in. That worked quite well,
partially because both of them were their own person, and you
could relate to them seperately. Eventually my (then) girlfriend
moved in as well, and that worked a little less well because we
spent too much time together. That was the best house I've ever
lived in, partially because Larry (part of the married couple)
made it work in lots of little ways.
I'm the owner of the house mentioned in .1, so I'm now seeing the
other side of it. There is a little less privacy and freedom
involved in having housemates. If we want to have a candlelight
dinner, we have to let people know in advance. Luckily, the house
is big enough so that we can go in the living room, and still
leave room for everyone else in the kitchen and dining rooms. The
advantages are that there are more people to pay the bills and
it's handy to have other people around to share cooking, and so
forth.
--David
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903.5 | | USCTR1::KGALLANT | Light the fuse of temptation... | Fri Nov 17 1989 10:01 | 25 |
|
My two pennies...
I lived with my ex-boyfriend and my best friend for six
months. Granted, we weren't married, but it still provided
for a great deal of tension.
I would have MUCH preferred either living with JUST her or
JUST him. I always felt that he and I couldn't argue, talk,
yell, or have any kind of privacy because we had to consider
her feelings (her name was on the lease) and respect her
privacy and right to live in a harmonious environment.
SO! If I WERE to be the roommate living in a married couple
situation, I think I would feel like a third wheel and would
move out. Only because newlyweds need time to get to know
each other in every sense of the word, and I would find it
hard for them to do that with another person in the house.
It doesn't allow you the freedom to do as you choose because
you're constantly aware of another person's presence.
(I guess I'm ditto on .2)
Tigga~~~
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903.6 | | DZIGN::STHILAIRE | Food, Shelter & Diamonds | Tue Nov 21 1989 16:31 | 24 |
| I think any roommate situation depends on the individuals involved
and not on their relationships to each other. My boyfriend and
I had a third female roommate for over a year and a half, and while
there were some problems, I think they were because of the
personalities involved and not because two of us were a live-in
couple.
I think the increasing high cost of living is going to result in
a lot of unusual living situations in the coming years. It's not
going to be as easy as it used to be for couples to always have
their own place.
My boyfriend and I have recently, to the amazement of friends and
acquaintances (to say nothing of parents!), become roommates with my
ex-husband and our daughter. So far, it seems to be working out okay.
The only real problem that I can see for a single person rooming
with a couple, if the couple owns the house, is that when differences
occur the couple have more reason to put up with each other than
with the single person. This might create a two against one situation
but it shouldn't have to be that way.
Lorna
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903.7 | who wants to room with newlyweds?! | TARKIN::VAILLANCOURT | | Fri Mar 29 1991 16:22 | 10 |
| I would certainly think newlyweds would want their own place
to live! IMO, if a room mate was to get married and he didn't
own the place, I think he should make arrangements for a new
place for he and his new wife to live. (or, if he does own the
place, give the roomate(s) ample notice of the privacy he's
going to need,, i.e., time for the roommate to move out)
I can't imagine a newlywed couple sharing their living quarters
with someone else in any capacity!
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