It can be actually taxing living with roommates.
- I am sure that the same thing can be true for living with your family members, but at least you can be blunt when it’s your own kin driving you wild.
When you’re sharing a home with other grown adults, it’s a much more sensitive situation if something is not going right. That’s why, I am trying to keep my mouth shut while slowly going completely silly in my own home right now; A few months ago, I moved in with my best neighbor as my newest roommate. We had never lived together before, and I thought that it would be easy breezy cohabitating in one site, however, I was mistaken, but shortly after my friend and I moved in together, she started seeing somebody new and bringing him over all the time. That would be fine, except he happens to be a well-known heating, cooling, and ventilation specialist in the area. Normally, this would be a great perk for our central heating and cooling system and I would adore the air quality expertise, but right now I am unhappy with his social occupation. In this new viral environment, we are supposed to be limiting our human contact. That means, my friend and I shouldn’t be roaming into random people’s houses to repair their central heating and cooling systems. We shouldn’t be touching their air filters and picking up all of the airborne contaminants that they’ve been breathing out. We shouldn’t be putting our hands on temperature controls where other grimy fingers have been. Following this logic, my friend and I definitely shouldn’t be sending a tied up heating and cooling professional out into the infected world and then bringing him back into our wash home every afternoon. I’m terribly worried over this Heating, Ventilation, and A/C intruder in our site, and I’m waiting for the afternoon that we’re all sick.