Tuesday, May 19, 2020
Avoid Being the Neighbour from Hell at Uni
Avoid Being the Neighbour from Hell at Uni When youâve moved out of halls after your first year at university youâll be sure to look back at it with a curious mixture of nostalgia and utter relief. If youâre lucky, halls can provide a pre-packaged group of friends that will provide a much-needed support network when youâve come back from a bad seminar or got a lower mark in an essay than youâd hoped. However, being thrust together with a group of equally clueless and nervous strangers makes for a very intense environment. Make sure you follow these simple rules so you donât become a nightmare housemate: Keep it Down Thereâs a time and a place to be blaring out dubstep/practicing your clarinet/singing along to the latest episode of Glee. You would have thought it would be obvious that 3.30am is not this time. However, in first year especially, people often get caught up in the flurry of late nights and parties and completely forget any notions of time. Remember that your flatmates will have very different schedules so just because you donât have to get up at 8am doesnât mean that your neighbour doesnât. [ALSO READ: Food Shopping On A Budget As A Student] Be Respectful Chances are that your flatmates will be an eclectic bunch of different personalities, backgrounds and viewpoints. Revel in the opportunity to meet people so different from those back home. However, always remember to respect your flatmatesâ different views. If you have conservative neighbours, itâs probably best not to bring back a group of moshers from a night out for a drug and debauchery-fuelled after party (although we clearly wouldnât suggest you do this anyway). You donât want to make anyone feel uncomfortable in their own home. Similarly, itâs polite to ask people beforehand whether they mind someone staying over for a few days. Clinger boyfriends/girlfriends need not apply. Donât Be Messy People have very different ideas of what is an acceptable level of filth. When youâre living in your own place, you very quickly come to realise why your mum got so angry when you left dirty plates in your room all those years ago. Whilst establishing cleaning rules might seem a little dull and parent-y, it will save a lot of resentment building up over the long term. [ALSO READ: 6 Top Tips for Minimising Your Student Debt Whilst Still at University] Thou Shalt not Steal So we all know that being a student isnât going to be the most flush time of our lives (hopefully!). However, this is no excuse for nicking other peopleâs food. A little milk for tea is fine but happily munching on their lovingly prepared packed lunch for the next day isnât so acceptable. In addition, donât be stingy with buying communal things like washing up liquid. After all, a couple of pounds is hardly going to make a huge dent in your bank account and no one wants to get a reputation for being a scrooge. Donât Be a Stranger There always seems to be the token ghost flatmate who you never see. The only sign of life from inside their room is an occasional chortle along to an episode of Futurama . Donât be this housemate. You donât have to be best buds with your halls neighbours but it makes the experience a lot more pleasant for everyone if you make a bit of an effort. Just saying âheyâ and asking people how their day has been if you bump into them in the kitchen makes a huge difference to the overall environment of the accommodation.
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