Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - your child missing out on being near the window is so less important than the damage you are doing by being this involved
Who's paying the room and board fees?
NP. I pay room and board, and yet I don't feel the need to help my kid decide on bed placement, or how to kindly respond to a very typical roommate email. Stupid, this isn't a college question.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP - your child missing out on being near the window is so less important than the damage you are doing by being this involved
Who's paying the room and board fees?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Without a doubt the roommate (and her obnoxious pushy conniving mom, who groomed who to be this way) have already cyber-stalked your daughter and your family and deemed you all to be undesirable and below them socially. I assure you Malia Obama would not get an email like this.
The bitchy passive-aggressive kid is not entitle to the prime location all year. She already got it the first semester. Enjoy the non-windowed wall, sweetie.
What you've just said is one of the most insanely idiotic things I have ever heard. At no point in your rambling, incoherent response were you even close to anything that could be considered a rational thought. Everyone reading this is now dumber for having read it.
Nah, this is probably just the PP who wrote the two satirical “Dear Roommate“ letters yesterday, which were both hilarious. You have to admit that this topic, while there is a tiny nugget of a life lesson involved, is a bit ridiculous.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Without a doubt the roommate (and her obnoxious pushy conniving mom, who groomed who to be this way) have already cyber-stalked your daughter and your family and deemed you all to be undesirable and below them socially. I assure you Malia Obama would not get an email like this.
The bitchy passive-aggressive kid is not entitle to the prime location all year. She already got it the first semester. Enjoy the non-windowed wall, sweetie.
What you've just said is one of the most insanely idiotic things I have ever heard. At no point in your rambling, incoherent response were you even close to anything that could be considered a rational thought. Everyone reading this is now dumber for having read it.
Anonymous wrote:Without a doubt the roommate (and her obnoxious pushy conniving mom, who groomed who to be this way) have already cyber-stalked your daughter and your family and deemed you all to be undesirable and below them socially. I assure you Malia Obama would not get an email like this.
The bitchy passive-aggressive kid is not entitle to the prime location all year. She already got it the first semester. Enjoy the non-windowed wall, sweetie.
Anonymous wrote:OP - your child missing out on being near the window is so less important than the damage you are doing by being this involved
Anonymous wrote:OP here. Enjoying both the diversity of thought and the recurring themes. For clarity; mom is only an observer. In this situation I myself would have replied “really looking forward to rooming together, no worries about the desk/bed -consider the window ones yours!” and I am widely recognized as a pushover by my circle. DD is not like me and shared the email saying this further raises her concerns about the assignment roommate after she went through her Instagram account and found no photos with same age friends (DD feels what she saw on future roommates Insta suggests an obsessive personality and a life void of friendships). DD imagined herself doing what sounds rude to me (ignoring request and deciding which bed/desk to occupy when she gets to the room). DD said if future roommate asked she would just claim to have no knowledge of email request. To (pushover and very accommodating) me DD’s plan sounds awful and I am genuinely curious what others would elect to do in this situation.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Somebody pardon me because I don’t know. Is there a new reset every semester? If so then the window bed is up for grabs. Either way I think the bed is up for grabs since she moved out. Flip a coin for it.
Former RA here, and I agree with this completely. Flip for it, or bargain for it. Nothing is free.
“Nothing is free” if you live in a dog eat dog world.
Setting a generous tone might start this new relationship off on the right foot .
I suppose - but if the room mate ends up being a taker, OP's DC does not want to have to find out the hard way. Takers depend on other people being nicer than them.
OP's DC was already judging this person she doesn't know as a friendless loser based on trawling her Instagram account, before she got an email. I don't think the she's in any danger of being too nice.
NP. Based on what’s been shared here, I disagree. OP’s DD was the recipient of an email that raises at least some questions. Normally an introductory email from a roomie would be friendly - why the businesslike tone? Why start the relationship by asking for something of value and not offering one darn thing, including friendship, in return? Maybe this is a case of poor email etiquette. But at the end of the day, the DD is rightfully wondering “who is this person that I have to share my personal space with?“ I would check it out too. The DD sounds intelligent enough to draw some conclusions based on it. Roommate’s move to prove her wrong.
She didn't check it out because she got the email. She already had trawled her Insta and decided she had "an obsessive personality and a life void of friendships" because she didn't have enough group photos. Then she got the email. Then she told her mom that the email "further raises her concerns" about being assigned this girl as a roommate. This is all straight from her mom in this thread.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Somebody pardon me because I don’t know. Is there a new reset every semester? If so then the window bed is up for grabs. Either way I think the bed is up for grabs since she moved out. Flip a coin for it.
Former RA here, and I agree with this completely. Flip for it, or bargain for it. Nothing is free.
“Nothing is free” if you live in a dog eat dog world.
Setting a generous tone might start this new relationship off on the right foot .
I suppose - but if the room mate ends up being a taker, OP's DC does not want to have to find out the hard way. Takers depend on other people being nicer than them.
OP's DC was already judging this person she doesn't know as a friendless loser based on trawling her Instagram account, before she got an email. I don't think the she's in any danger of being too nice.
NP. Based on what’s been shared here, I disagree. OP’s DD was the recipient of an email that raises at least some questions. Normally an introductory email from a roomie would be friendly - why the businesslike tone? Why start the relationship by asking for something of value and not offering one darn thing, including friendship, in return? Maybe this is a case of poor email etiquette. But at the end of the day, the DD is rightfully wondering “who is this person that I have to share my personal space with?“ I would check it out too. The DD sounds intelligent enough to draw some conclusions based on it. Roommate’s move to prove her wrong.