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The_little_didgee
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Default Apr 29, 2021 at 08:49 AM
  #1
Here are a few things I learned about living with roommates:

1. When you are sharing a place with another person you must let them know that a guest will be spending the night and for how long.

2. Don't leave dishes in the sink.

3. Respect the routines of others.

4. Keep the common areas clean.

5. Discuss who does what chores and when.

6. Don't touch things and food that doesn't belong to you.

7. Wipe pee dribble off the toilet seat.

8. Don't be excessively noisy. Don't do things that disturb others late at night.

9. This is the most important tip. Communicate, it can prevent nasty arguments.

These ones are specifically for guests:

1. You must keep the common areas clean and free of your stuff. It isn't your home.

2. Don't come expecting to do batch cooking. That is just rude and interferes with the routines of others living in the house.

3. Don't cook meals in the middle of the night. (Yes, a guest really did this).

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Default Apr 29, 2021 at 09:34 AM
  #2
There are no universal rules for every person in the world. Communicate. Everyone's different.
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Default Apr 29, 2021 at 09:54 AM
  #3
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Originally Posted by MisterPaul View Post
There are no universal rules for every person in the world. Communicate. Everyone's different.

No they are not. These ones worked for me. There are definitely others that I didn't include on my list. If you have any, please include them. I would appreciate that a lot more than being reminded that they are not universal.

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Default Apr 29, 2021 at 10:15 AM
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Admit your situation when you f*** up. Apologize.

Also, try to befriend people you share the apt with. It smooths things out by A LOT.
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Default Apr 29, 2021 at 10:21 AM
  #5
Those seem like pretty good rules to me although i don't think i have ever been with a roommate outside of my Family i think. i think that rule is particularly important as Well. Sending many safe, warm hugs to BOTH you, @The_little_didgee, your Family, your Friends and ALL of your Loved Ones! Keep fighting and keep rocking NO MATTER WHAT HAPPENS, OK?!
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Default Apr 29, 2021 at 11:21 AM
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Originally Posted by The_little_didgee View Post
No they are not. These ones worked for me. There are definitely others that I didn't include on my list. If you have any, please include them. I would appreciate that a lot more than being reminded that they are not universal.
The key, that you identified, is this is how you prefer the etiquette and so clearly communicating this with a roommate, and compromising where possible, is essential.

I think one or two dishes in the sink (As long as cleaned or loaded in dishwasher by end of day) is fine. But what's a deal breaker for me is passive aggressive behavior. If someone can't come to me openly and discuss something bothering them and expects me to either tiptoe or hound them to tell me what's bothering them because they are behaving passively hostile, no way. Grow the **** up.

Also respect that your roommate may have a different lifestyle or limitations. I had a roommate once and I was on medication that made me extraordinarily fatigued. She was visibly angry all the time at me for sleeping as much as I did, like it had any impact on her? She knew I was on these meds, and disabled, and she was a total jerk. But she was just a total jerk anyhow.

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Default Apr 29, 2021 at 11:59 AM
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Those seem like pretty good rules to me although i don't think i have ever been with a roommate outside of my Family i think. i think that rule is particularly important as Well. Sending many safe, warm hugs to BOTH you, @The_little_didgee, your Family, your Friends and ALL of your Loved Ones! Keep fighting and keep rocking NO MATTER WHAT HAPPENS, OK?!

You are fortunate . Not everyone is so fortunate.

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Default Apr 29, 2021 at 12:13 PM
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2. Don't come expecting to do batch cooking. That is just rude and interferes with the routines of others living in the house.
If one is living with a roommate, chances are they can't afford living on their own. Batch cooking saves money in the long run (and you don't have to be poor to cook in batches).

This rule I disagree with. It's a personal opinion to see it as rude. Having said that, it's all in the communication that can be sorted out. I used to batch cook once per week so if I had a roommate, I'd explain this and compromise on a schedule that works for everyone.
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Default Apr 29, 2021 at 04:55 PM
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If one is living with a roommate, chances are they can't afford living on their own. Batch cooking saves money in the long run (and you don't have to be poor to cook in batches).

This rule I disagree with. It's a personal opinion to see it as rude. Having said that, it's all in the communication that can be sorted out. I used to batch cook once per week so if I had a roommate, I'd explain this and compromise on a schedule that works for everyone.

The batch cooking rule was for guests and I agree with it. When I had roommates I had conflicts with them over the kitchen, specifically one roommate left the kitchen a complete mess. That particular roommate ended up moving out as the prior roommates didn’t care so I changed things when I protested the mess.

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Default Apr 29, 2021 at 06:03 PM
  #10
I am confused on guest situations. Guests are cooking in your houses?

The only guests occasionally cooking in my home are our adult kids when come to visit. Particularly my daughter loves to cook and it’s good with me. But even then it wouldn’t be batches. My stepdaughters aren’t big on cooking, they might make something small when visiting, they sure wouldn’t make big meals in my kitchen. But OK it’s family.

I never had other house guests cooking anything major. Especially in batches. I mean make cup of coffee and fry an egg. Do you have house guests cooking lots in your houses? In batches?

Your roommates rules are reasonable. For me excessive noise is unacceptable and of course smoking inside. And I am clean freak so no mess is tolerated.
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Default Apr 29, 2021 at 09:19 PM
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I am confused on guest situations. Guests are cooking in your houses? .
Ya, I'm not understanding this, either.
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Default Apr 30, 2021 at 08:03 AM
  #12
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I am confused on guest situations. Guests are cooking in your houses?


Yes, I was specifically referring to guests, not roommates. I don't have issues with roommates doing batch cooking at all.

Quote:
Originally Posted by divine1966 View Post
The only guests occasionally cooking in my home are our adult kids when come to visit. Particularly my daughter loves to cook and it’s good with me. But even then it wouldn’t be batches. My stepdaughters aren’t big on cooking, they might make something small when visiting, they sure wouldn’t make big meals in my kitchen. But OK it’s family.

I never had other house guests cooking anything major. Especially in batches. I mean make cup of coffee and fry an egg. Do you have house guests cooking lots in your houses? In batches?

Your roommates rules are reasonable. For me excessive noise is unacceptable and of course smoking inside. And I am clean freak so no mess is tolerated.
One roommate had his girlfriend over for the week. She decided to cook enormous amounts of food to take home with her. This certainly wasn't dinner or any other small meal. If it was I wouldn't have cared. This was hardcore cooking that involved use of the entire kitchen and went on for 4 or 5 hours a day.

The guest seemed unaware that she was in the way and disruptive to others who needed to use the kitchen. Plus she packed the entire fridge and freezer with her groceries and plastic food containers with no respect for the other tenant. She even filled two big 45 L garbage bags with her garbage in 3 days. The two tenants normally filled one bag in 7 days.

The lady had her own place. Why couldn't she have done this at her place? I don't know. Maybe there was a conflict with her roommate about kitchen use.

Kitchens and cooking seem to cause a lot of conflict.

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Default Apr 30, 2021 at 08:12 AM
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Originally Posted by The_little_didgee View Post

Yes, I was specifically referring to guests, not roommates. I don't have issues with roommates doing batch cooking at all.


One roommate had his girlfriend over for the week. She decided to cook enormous amounts of food to take home with her. This certainly wasn't dinner or any other small meal. If it was I wouldn't have cared. This was hardcore cooking that involved use of the entire kitchen and went on for 4 or 5 hours a day.

The guest seemed unaware that she was in the way and disruptive to others who needed to use the kitchen. Plus she packed the entire fridge and freezer with her groceries and plastic food containers with no respect for the other tenant. She even filled two big 45 L garbage bags with her garbage in 3 days. The two tenants normally filled one bag in 7 days.

The lady had her own place. Why couldn't she have done this at her place? I don't know. Maybe there was a conflict with her roommate about kitchen use.

Kitchens and cooking seem to cause a lot of conflict.
Wow. That sounds crazy inconsiderate. Batch cooking in someone else’s kitchen.
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Default Apr 30, 2021 at 08:59 AM
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Thats too much! She stole a week's utilities (gas, water, electric, sewage) from your landlord! Thats not just etiquette.
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Default Apr 30, 2021 at 09:54 AM
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Originally Posted by The_little_didgee View Post

Yes, I was specifically referring to guests, not roommates. I don't have issues with roommates doing batch cooking at all.


One roommate had his girlfriend over for the week. She decided to cook enormous amounts of food to take home with her. This certainly wasn't dinner or any other small meal. If it was I wouldn't have cared. This was hardcore cooking that involved use of the entire kitchen and went on for 4 or 5 hours a day.

The guest seemed unaware that she was in the way and disruptive to others who needed to use the kitchen. Plus she packed the entire fridge and freezer with her groceries and plastic food containers with no respect for the other tenant. She even filled two big 45 L garbage bags with her garbage in 3 days. The two tenants normally filled one bag in 7 days.

The lady had her own place. Why couldn't she have done this at her place? I don't know. Maybe there was a conflict with her roommate about kitchen use.

Kitchens and cooking seem to cause a lot of conflict.

Yeah not cool

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Default Apr 30, 2021 at 10:25 AM
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Yeah not cool

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100% agree with everyone commenting about this guest cooking business. Not cool at all.

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Primary Dx: C-PTSD and Severe Chronic Treatment Resistant Major Depressive Disorder
Secondary Dx: Generalized Anxiety Disorder with mild Agoraphobia.

Meds I've tried: Prozac, Zoloft, Celexa, Effexor, Remeron, Elavil, Wellbutrin, Risperidone, Abilify, Prazosin, Paxil, Trazadone, Tramadol, Topomax, Xanax, Propranolol, Valium, Visteril, Vraylar, Selinor, Clonopin, Ambien

Treatments I've done: CBT, DBT, Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS), Talk therapy, psychotherapy, exercise, diet, sleeping more, sleeping less...
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