Anonymous wrote:I would be very curious about how he envisions his future: group living with spouse? I wouldn’t move in. From the way you describe him and yourself, it’s hard to see you guys as compatible in the long term, regardless of living arrangement. You sound like more of a homebody or maybe just typical, with a preference for normal privacy and he sounds unusually...social? restless? Unconventional? Not sure if the word but he doesn’t seem like a guy looking for nuclear family/marriage.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Or it could mean they’re not high earners despite being gainfully employed and can’t afford the outrageous rents. Or it could mean they enjoy a family type setting. It could mean a lot of things that aren’t necessarily negative.Anonymous wrote:I lived with my husband for nearly 5 years and we bought a home together before marrying so obviously I have no issue with cohabitation.
But no way would I ever, EVER, under any circumstances barring financial ruin, agree to move into a room in group house situation with multiple housemates as a 32 year old. To me that's a sign they are still in college mode.
I think it sounds amazing. I lived with a married couple and their sister after college. I was able to save so much money because they gave me a very inexpensive rent, I was helping them afford a nicer house (they owened). We had family meals a few times a week (less cooking) and it was really fun. I would love to do something similar now if I had the right house and right friends. And we are all high-earners, this wouldn’t be our ornament necessity.
That said, different people like different things. I wouldn’t give up your apartment, OP. And I wouldn’t move in without being engaged.
Anonymous wrote:Or it could mean they’re not high earners despite being gainfully employed and can’t afford the outrageous rents. Or it could mean they enjoy a family type setting. It could mean a lot of things that aren’t necessarily negative.Anonymous wrote:I lived with my husband for nearly 5 years and we bought a home together before marrying so obviously I have no issue with cohabitation.
But no way would I ever, EVER, under any circumstances barring financial ruin, agree to move into a room in group house situation with multiple housemates as a 32 year old. To me that's a sign they are still in college mode.
Anonymous wrote:Get a new place together. I would not move into a shared place.
Or it could mean they’re not high earners despite being gainfully employed and can’t afford the outrageous rents. Or it could mean they enjoy a family type setting. It could mean a lot of things that aren’t necessarily negative.Anonymous wrote:I lived with my husband for nearly 5 years and we bought a home together before marrying so obviously I have no issue with cohabitation.
But no way would I ever, EVER, under any circumstances barring financial ruin, agree to move into a room in group house situation with multiple housemates as a 32 year old. To me that's a sign they are still in college mode.
Anonymous wrote:There is no way in hell I would move into his group house.
But I wouldn’t be in this situation to begin with because I wouldn’t date a 32 year old who has roommates.
Sounds like you guys don’t communicate well.
I have moved in with a boyfriend twice in the past and honestly I think it’s a bad idea if you aren’t engaged. It can lead to relationship intertia, like not getting engaged or not breaking up because the idea of moving is daunting.
It doesn’t mean you are set in your ways because you don’t want to move into a group house with your boyfriend. It means you are smart. Tell him you’d rather live separately until you are engaged, and when you are engaged and married, you want to live with just him.
Do you think he would expect you to live in a group house as a married couple? For most women that would be a hard no.
Anonymous wrote:You’re not compatible. Move on.
Anonymous wrote:I would be very curious about how he envisions his future: group living with spouse? I wouldn’t move in. From the way you describe him and yourself, it’s hard to see you guys as compatible in the long term, regardless of living arrangement. You sound like more of a homebody or maybe just typical, with a preference for normal privacy and he sounds unusually...social? restless? Unconventional? Not sure if the word but he doesn’t seem like a guy looking for nuclear family/marriage.