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My roomate of many years has without thinking and while drunk, extended an invitation to a person that he barely knows but has met and spoken with once or twice a year, for that person to travel cross country and stay with us so that they could get a fresh start, and when I heard about it I told him that he needed to call this person back and uninvite them to stay with us.( I am the one who cleans the house and does most of the work) and I was told that I was being mean and not helpful. truth of the matter is that I have met this person and some of the people he is friends with and I do not trust him and do not want him camping out in my house! any ideas? and I will not pay for a hotel for him either.

2006-12-22 09:05:49 · 20 answers · asked by Anonymous in Society & Culture Cultures & Groups Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender

I thought it was just me.....I do have this twerp's phone# and was thinking that I should call personally and put my foot down on the whole situation.

2006-12-22 09:36:21 · update #1

20 answers

Prez say sorry for this. Prez say this part of having roommates. Prez say if your roommate not respect you enough, you need your own place. Prez say just relax. Prez say this the holidays. Prez say be on loves side. Prez say if you could have fresh start with someone you were in love with would you want to not have the opportunity because roommate wasnt ok with that love to visit? Prez say take it easy. Prez say stay out of house for few days. PRez say come back to mess and leave it for few days. Prez say roommie will get tired of mess and clean himself. Prez say not fight with roommate because of this. Prez say allow possibility that maybe you love roommate and dont want him with this past love? Prez better know.

2006-12-22 09:10:34 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 5

As a roommate, you pay a portion of the bills due on the place as a whole. Therefore, before ANYONE is invited to stay there for an extended period, it is required that all roommates are in agreement of the situation.

Gut feelings are typically a good indicator. If you distrust the individual and are uncomfortable allowing them access to the place, then you should inform them that the previous arrangements are not going to work and they should seek other arrangements prior to moving cross-country.

2006-12-22 09:50:39 · answer #2 · answered by Spectraguy 3 · 1 0

Well being roommates I'm guessing that you also pay a portion of the finances involved with your place. You have a say. If you aren't both in agreement than it shouldn't happen. Talk it over and see if you can come up with some agreement like at a time when you will not be there or in some set parameter of time so it won't be too long at the least...

2006-12-22 09:10:20 · answer #3 · answered by laydlo 5 · 2 0

No.

As roommates, each of you has an equal say in what goes on in your household. You need to reach consensus before either one of you makes an important change to the way you live. A new person staying with you--especially one who probably won't be contributing to your finances for a while after he moves--is a HUGE change.

Two of my friends were in this situation. One invited his loser boyfriend to live with them. He didn't contribute to rent, cleaning, or anything else. The other roommate eventually left.

2006-12-22 09:16:37 · answer #4 · answered by Iris 4 · 2 0

I'd explain to your roommate why you feel the way you do. Since you've known him (your roommate) for years, you should be honest with him. And as far as cleaning the house and doing the work, I'd tell him that he has to start helping out. Like it or not, you two are in a relationship (however platonic it might be) and a relationship is a two-way street.

2006-12-22 09:11:10 · answer #5 · answered by barrych209 5 · 2 0

Your not being unreasonable,your exercising your rights as a tenant stand your ground. What you should do is invite Prez over and send the unwanted dude home with Prez.

2006-12-22 10:24:06 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Trust or no trust..but being unreasonable of your actions or decission depends where the whole story is?
Maybe their is a secret Mootives?
Just tell him straight that whatever he decided to do for himself is his own responsibility. But be firm to tell him that your not there to babysit his so called friends.!
be TACTFUL and FIRM. You can handle the truth.!!

2006-12-22 09:46:20 · answer #7 · answered by MJ2 2 · 1 0

in my opinion i do no longer think of she has any maximum surprising to tell you no thank you to something! it is your baby! You have been being extra suitable than existence % to objective to handle her once you probably did no longer would desire to and he or she does not % to compromise so placed him in daycare for that day and Grandma will would desire to recover from it. this is a intense high quality furnish yet no longer somewhat. She is doing it for selfish reasons to no longer furnish help to out for the reason that she is conscious it is going to fee you additional money then daycare to tension there and back two times the day she watches him. Plus gas is going up so that's in basic terms going to get extra high priced. i could say thank you for the furnish yet we will adhere along with his daycare. that's much less high priced for us maximum surprising now. clarify that that's an hour around holiday and back so 2 hours of utilising once you could in basic terms drop him off a jiffy away and presently fee the comparable as his daycare for gas plus there is not any assure that the fee of gas won't flow up mutually as your daycare will stay the comparable.

2016-12-11 14:27:16 · answer #8 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

Prez need change of style. Prez need change of style real bad. Or nobody ever listen to Prez. Prez say good words. But Prez come across as some kind of moron. So nobody want listen to Prez. Too bad for Prez.

2006-12-22 10:16:04 · answer #9 · answered by juditurc 2 · 0 0

You are not being unreasonable. Your roommate is. If he can not see your point and respect your wishes, it may be time to seek a new roommate or get a place of your own.

2006-12-22 09:19:46 · answer #10 · answered by Seeker 4 · 1 0

Hey it's your house too! Your roommate should have asked before he invited this person. If you truly don't trust and want this person around then stand your ground and tell your roommate no.

2006-12-22 09:10:42 · answer #11 · answered by harmony moon 3 · 3 0

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