Living With Roommates: Part Three
Tuesday, March 3rd, 2009Kristin Foster, 23, is a Tennessee/Texas transplant working and chasing the dream in the Chicagoland area as an editor on several different magazines. But a little less than a year ago, things were much different. Fresh out of school and ready for a change, she packed her bags and moved 1200 miles to
āDespite living and going to college in different places, me in
Almost as a throwback to a bygone era, the duo found a place the old-fashioned way.
āWe ended up having the best luck just driving around and looking for āfor rentā signs,ā says Foster. āThatās actually how she found the place weāre in now.ā
But like many Echo Boomers, the two split furniture and decoration responsibilities with a couch from eBay, and a kitchen set, end table and chairs from IKEA.
Kristin chalks up a lot of their success as roommates to giving each other space and not worrying about some of the little things. The two didnāt see much need to put responsibilities in writing, either. Sometimes roommates are lucky enough to just plain get along.
āIāve always maintained that thereās a distinct difference between being messy [or] cluttered and being dirty,ā says Foster. āIāve never been the neatest person, but I do keep my clutter mostly to my room, though, and she does the same. We both clean the communal spaces pretty evenly, Iād say. And neither of us is the designated cooker. We buy our own groceries and cook for ourselves since we both have different jobs and different schedules.ā
For social gatherings, a friendly heads-up is all that is requiredāunlike some roommates who feel hanging a sock on the door will suffice as an announcement of company.
āNeither of us minds having people over, nor do we require permission or anything like that,ā says Foster. āHowever, I always like to tell her if a friendās coming in from out of town just as a heads up. Itās just kind of a common courtesy thing to do.ā
Itās that even balance of shared costs and similar personalities that keeps the household humming.
āWe read each other well enough to know when we need space and the like,ā says Foster. āItās basically good and functional all around, so I couldnāt have asked for a better situation when I came here. Weāre friends and have no desire to screw the other over money-wise, so it tends to work out pretty well. I mean, sheās basically the sister I never had. We have a lot of fun together.ā








