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Pick a roommate

Someone asked you to room with them, or you’re scrolling a housing group trying to size up strangers from a photo and a short bio. It’s a real decision about people you barely know, and the stakes are higher than they look.

It can be tempting to say yes to whoever seems nicest right now and figure out the rest later.

The truth is the boring details you skip today are the exact ones you’ll be fighting over by November.

What matters most is being honest about how you actually live.

You don’t have to interview them like it’s a job. You do need real answers to a few things before you say yes. Ask straight out. Anyone who gets cagey about basic questions just handed you your answer.

Roommate relationships rarely end over one big blowup. It’s the small stuff, piled up over months. The dishes that sit in the sink long enough to start paying rent.

So deal with the ordinary things before you move in, while you both still like each other. Agree on what clean means. Talk about overnight guests early, because “my partner just stays over sometimes” has a way of becoming a third roommate who pays nothing.

Set quiet hours. Pick a thermostat range you can both live with. These talks feel a little silly in August. They feel very smart in February.

A roommate agreement sounds intense until the day you need one. It’s just a short written list of who does what and who pays what, written while you’re both still calm. People rarely remember a verbal deal the same way six months in, especially the one who owes you money.

Keep it where you can both find it. When a disagreement shows up, and it will, you point at the list instead of arguing about who said what.

Living with your best friend can be great. It can also cost you the apartment and the friendship at once. Being close doesn’t mean you’ll live well together. Some people you’d take a bullet for still shouldn’t share your kitchen.

So treat it like rooming with anyone else. Have the money, cleaning, and guest conversation up front, not after the first fight. If one honest talk about dish duty would end the friendship, moving in together would’ve ended it harder.

Sometimes you don’t get to choose. Housing pairs you with a stranger based on a form you filled out at midnight half asleep. That’s okay. The same rules still work, you just run them after you meet instead of before.


Message them before move-in and sort the basics early, like who’s bringing the mini fridge and what time you each go to bed. You don’t have to become best friends. You’re building something that works with a person you didn’t pick, which turns out to be decent practice for the rest of adulthood.

Some answers are just a no. If someone dodges your direct questions or already has a story about how their last three roommates were all impossible, believe them. The one thing all those stories have in common is standing right in front of you.

 

Walking away before you commit costs you one uncomfortable conversation. Living with the wrong person costs you a year. An awkward five minutes now beats twelve months of pretending it’s fine.

The people you let close

Shape your days more than you’d guess.
Not the big dramatic ones.
The ordinary ones.
The one across the room.
The one who shares your space.
You’re allowed to want peace.
You’re allowed to say what you need
Before you need it.
That isn’t asking for too much.
It’s how you keep the small things
From growing into the big ones.
Choose on purpose.
The quiet parts of your life
Are still your life.

The small thing you swallow

Doesn’t leave.

It sinks, and waits, and grows teeth.
A hard word said gently today

Weighs almost nothing.

Saved for months, the same word

Gets heavy enough to break

What you were trying to protect.
Silence feels like kindness.

It rarely is.

The people who can love you

Can hear you too.
So say it while it’s still light.

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