I don't care what commies think of me. |
Instagram the amount of expensive self-care and materialism and plastic surgery or Botox and expensive procedures so young…have to have the brands. We didn’t give a crap about that. Give me 99s grunge any day |
| ^ 90s |
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Used to be years ago you could lie about how much money you had in the bank. You could give them a doctored PDF of your bank statement and be good to go. Or some would take 3 months of paycheck stubs, which you could also doctor up.
Most complexes only wanted 2 months of rent in the bank but now these same places want you to prove you have 5x, 8x, 10x the rent in your bank account. Like bish, if I had $25k laying around, you think I'd be trying to secure an apartment at Merrill House or Mayfair House?? Hell no, I'd be going for a place that doesn't have the washer/dryer right in the gotdamn kitchen! But the same thing happened that always happened. People went online sharing their great hacks of how they easily doctored their documents so now leasing offices require your bank to fax over your bank statement. Or they make you bring OG paystubs, not copies, or log into your pay portal in their office so they can verify in-person the actual amounts. |
Apartments in America have Showers so that takes up room. |
| Please watch that Netflix series called Worst Roommate Ever. |
Because it sucks. Splitting everything. One's filthy; one is not. One person inevitably bails. It's "fine" for a few years in your 20s but after that? Nope. |
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I’m 50.
When I was in college and grad school, everyone piled into apartments or group homes. People converted dining rooms or basements into bedrooms. We drove dumpy cars. We waited tables, etc. to make money while going to school. We didn’t have pets. (ICYMI: dogs are expensive.) We didn’t go on lavish vacations. Bachelorette parties were a drunken night out—they didn’t involve an airplane or hotel. We ate pizza or ramen. We also coupled up, lived with our BF, and got married younger. I’ve worked in DC for decades and noticed the shift in young people. I’m shocked by all the recent grads/early career young adults living alone in fancy rentals (or even with a roommate in fancy 2 bedrooms that cost more than the mortgage on my suburban colonial). Maybe 15 years ago the same cohort of young people were still cramming into dumpy row houses on the Hill or converting studio apartments into a 2 bedroom with clever dividers. But not anymore. I’m hoping my kids either come home after college/grad school to sock away money or couple up and live frugally someplace fun and cheap. Honestly, some of the best years of my life were when I shacked up with my BF and another couple in a dumpy apartment during grad school. We slept on a mattress on the floor. No real worries other than getting the degree and finding time to party. |
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I would have been embarrassed to have Mommy & Daddy support me, in any way, after I graduated from college. I've softened that stance a bit, now that I'm the parent. Short-term financial help, I can/would not mind giving.
Providing, in any way, a lifestyle they have not earned -- no. |
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Some of you all are so miserable. Why do want young people to eat ramen & pizza, live with 10 people in a 3 bedroom apt, and work 50 hours per week? That lifestyle is not noble or worthy of bragging. A bunch of weirdos angry the young people have healthy standards and create boundaries to maintain their mental health.
Oh but most of you are right on the dog thing. Dogs shouldn’t be cramped up in small apartments and they are expensive. |
You are missing the point. We did those things to save money. We lived within our means and didn’t expect our parents to support us. Moreover, we didn’t feel entitled to a lifestyle. And we weren’t miserable. Quite the opposite. In short: we seemed to make far better financial decisions…and continue to do so. |
He should be paying for his own apartment. |
| Having roommates after a few years post college and most certainly after grad school is a big “failure to launch” scenario. It is absolutely reasonable to expect to be able to have a job and afford a place to live without roommates. |
Why do you care what other people do? |
| It's called living within your budget. And as an adult, that means putting some savings aside. Whatever that looks like, roommates or not. Whatever makes that happen. |