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Monday, June 15
The Indiana Daily Student

Graduating couples face challenges

Living together

As the housing fair approaches, many students are looking for places to call home next fall. Choosing a residence can mean making a lot of choices one never thought about before.

And for many students, deciding whether to live with a significant other can play a large part in the apartment hunting season.

Two years ago my boyfriend and I decided to move in together. We were ecstatic about the idea and quickly found a cute and cozy apartment together. Unfortunately, my boyfriend’s parents promptly shattered our naïve game of house with the news that we would not be allowed to live together.

Their reason was a valid one: We’d been together for only three months.

At the time, I had the stereotypical teenage response. I felt that my boyfriend, being a mature 19 years old, had the right to make his own decisions. I felt that they didn’t understand. We were in love, and we were going to be together forever.

Looking back, I know I wasn’t as wise as I thought. I’ve learned of many challenges a couple faces living together, and of many that couples face living apart when they are ready to make the step to domestic harmony. College students in particular can have a tough time. Here are some college-specific reasons both for and against the idea.

Reasons not to live together
1. College life is full of new responsibilities, and moving in with a significant other can add a whole new world of concerns to deal with. Getting good grades while remembering to feed yourself and clean up enough to keep mold from taking over your kitchen can be challenging enough.

2. People change during college; it’s part of what is so great about it. Graduates leave wiser and worldlier than when they started. With all the new challenges one faces throughout college, it’s hard for anyone to leave as the same person. And in the end, changing can mean that a match that used to feel perfect isn’t anymore.

3. A college campus is not a welcoming place to break up three months into a live-in relationship. You face the ask of finding an apartment in the middle of year, especially one that won’t land you a lease that ends six months after you graduate.

Reasons to live together
1. If you spend a lot of time with each other, odds are your belongings will end up strewn across two residences. This can be particularly frustrating when trying to study.

2. Money can become a huge issue. Unless you have a meticulous schedule to plan out visits and sleepovers, someone will end up paying more than the other. Showers and snacks can add up. If he’s always turning up the heater and she’s always using all the toilet paper, tension can arise in an otherwise peaceful relationship.

3. Roommates can be another issue. Problems can arise if a roommate isn’t OK with the amount of time your significant other spends at your place. Disagreements may also come from differing opinions on how to deal with a bad roommate.

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