conuly: (Default)
conuly ([personal profile] conuly) wrote in [community profile] agonyaunt2023-11-13 02:40 pm

Two more letters from one more column

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1. DEAR HARRIETTE: I am 22, and I am dating a 30-year-old man who is a residence life coordinator at a dormitory for a large Midwestern university. A part of his benefits is that he has an apartment attached to the dorm, so if the residence assistants need him, he is there. This apartment does not have any rent attached to it.

I was about to move in with him when he told me that I needed to pay $1,000 a month to him as "rent." I was shocked when he told me this. I have full knowledge of the fact that he doesn't pay rent and that he is just planning on taking $1,000 from me every month. This has made me rethink not only moving in with him, but dating him in general. What do you think I should do? I thought that he was going to be the one, but unfortunately, this event has shaken my confidence in him. -- Not a Good Fit


DEAR NOT A GOOD FIT: If there ever was a red flag, this is it. You could simply walk away, but if you are curious, ask him why he thinks it's a good idea to charge you for rent when he is paying none. Perhaps he has bills he needs to pay. Maybe that extra grand will help pay for something essential in his life. If that's the case, he should state it up front. But that kind of need is best worked out through a transactional relationship -- a roommate with no benefits. Since you two are in a relationship, one would presume that you wouldn't be expected to fund his dreams. Find out why he thinks it's a good idea to charge you. Hear him out, but if I were you, I would move somewhere else. Oh, and be sure to take your heart with you!

*******


2. DEAR HARRIETTE: My fiance and I moved in together at the beginning of October, and he is terrible at cleaning up after himself. I have OCD, which he is very aware of, yet he still doesn't see the importance of putting away the dishes or picking up after himself. He does take out the trash and the dogs, but other than that, I am constantly cleaning up behind him. While dating, I never knew it was this bad. How can I tell him that he needs to be more intentional about keeping a clean house without sounding like a parent? -- Clean Home

DEAR CLEAN HOME: Perhaps you can allocate an area of your home that can be his to treat however he likes: his man cave, so to speak. In that space, he can throw his socks around and be as untidy as he wants. You don't have to ever go in there. That is his space. Outside of that, ask him to follow some basic home hygiene rules. Make a list of what you want him to do to keep tidy. Invite him to work at establishing a routine that will help him to honor his agreement. Know that he won't always be successful, but if and when he tries, thank him. This will reinforce the good habit.
princessofgeeks: (Default)

[personal profile] princessofgeeks 2023-11-13 10:23 pm (UTC)(link)
The differing cleaning standards for the second letter could definitely become a deal breaker. If they can afford it, my advice would be to hire a cleaner. They will never agree on this and it will just get worse and worse as time goes on. I have lived this, although I do not have OCD. People have different standards and in general they do not change. You can not make a person who is comfortable in a dirty house into a cleaning-aware person. Not gonna happen. Frankly I am delighted he takes out the trash given everything else in the letter.
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[personal profile] princessofgeeks 2023-11-13 10:35 pm (UTC)(link)
I think it's possible they can work something out with a cleaner that they can tolerate, but as unfair as it is, I don't think the letter writer is going to be able to get the roommate to change at all. It will be arguing and lip service and go downhill fast.
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[personal profile] dissectionist 2023-11-13 11:38 pm (UTC)(link)
I am a naturally messy person and always have been. I’ve struggled to learn and force myself to keep hygiene-necessary spaces tidy (kitchens, bathrooms) but find that so draining that there’s little energy left for other spaces. You’re correct that cleaners don’t tidy, but having them come once a week forces us messy people to tidy up once a week so the cleaners can do their work, and being able to leave the heavy cleaning to the cleaners (who do it about twice as well and four times as fast as I can) leaves us with more energy to cope with tidying. So it actually does help in a couple different ways, and doesn’t need to be a daily thing.
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[personal profile] althea_valara 2023-11-13 11:53 pm (UTC)(link)
Thank you for this comment!

I am also a naturally messy person. Right now it doesn't matter much because there are other people who can handle the hygiene places (and I tend not to make a mess in those areas anyway) but when I get a place of my own again, I'm hoping to be able to afford a cleaner because yes, having SOMEONE in my house from time to time *will* force me to tidy up.

(I've often wished I was less untidy, but I honestly think it has something to do with my particular brand of brain weasels - it's like the untidiness just disappears when I'm not looking at it. Thus, I have a VERY high tolerance for clutter. And since a lot of my spoons go towards handling said brain weasels, that leaves not much left for what most consider to be necessary chores.)
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[personal profile] dissectionist 2023-11-14 12:06 am (UTC)(link)
Yep, this is a big neurodiversity and/or chronic illness issue for a lot of us. Having clutter can be comforting, or we get overwhelmed by the executive functioning required to clean, or we have depression or other illnesses that increase fatigue or decrease motivation and then cleaning becomes too much, etc.

I’ve constantly wished my brain were otherwise as well; cleaning is a life necessity for most of us and I wish it wasn’t so intensely draining and often upsetting. But despite years and years of reading books about how to get okay with cleaning and putting their advice into practice, I’ve had to accept that it’s never going to come naturally to me, it will never be a pleasant activity I feel satisfied by afterward, I find clean spaces somewhat existentially stressful, and cleaning is just a Swamp of Sadness I have to slog through as much as possible.
princessofgeeks: (Default)

[personal profile] princessofgeeks 2023-11-14 03:43 pm (UTC)(link)
I am not making any moral judgments about it at all. No one way of operating is necessarily better. There are many many reasons for the vast differences we see in how people keep their living spaces. But something this fundamental can really cause enormous stress in the relationship and IMHO the solution is not going to be for the letter writer to try to make or teach the roommate how to be a neat person.

And the standards people set are so individual. I am fairly neat person and don't have clutter and keep up with the kitchen. But I hate dusting and really should sweep the other floors more often. But my mother dusts twice a week and you can eat off the floor in her house. The bathroom floor!!! She thinks I am a terrible slob.
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[personal profile] dissectionist 2023-11-14 03:54 pm (UTC)(link)
Oh yeah, there’s zero way to force others to change. If someone isn’t motivated to do so for themselves, and then capable of making that change (which is a very different matter from having the motivation), nothing is going to happen. If they want to make this relationship work, compromise from both parties is going to be essential. A cleaner once or twice a week is a reasonable compromise *if* they can afford it, he’s willing to tidy in advance of the cleaner, and LW can cope with it being messier the rest of the time. Those are three big ifs. But a cleaner can be a godsend if those three things are doable.
princessofgeeks: (Default)

[personal profile] princessofgeeks 2023-11-14 05:53 pm (UTC)(link)
My feelings exactly. Any "solution" that hinges on the LW making the roommate do their share independently and in the way the LW wants, all the time, may be literally impossible to implement.
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[personal profile] ethelmay 2023-11-14 02:26 am (UTC)(link)
There's a huge spectrum of possible tidiness and possible personalities, though, and I think some people actually just haven't learned. I am a lot better at keeping up with housework and decluttering than I used to be. I am definitely somewhere in the ADHD range, but I have learned to work with the brain I have. I am never going to be systematic about most stuff, and when I thought I needed a system I never really got started.
princessofgeeks: (Default)

[personal profile] princessofgeeks 2023-11-14 02:23 pm (UTC)(link)
No doubt I am letting my personal experience color my opinions here. I have cohabitated with a total of four people who were comfortable letting the trash and dirty dishes pile up, etc., for various personal reasons and it never really got any better at all.

But of course this is just an anecdote and others' experiences are different.