Well… no progress to report in the apartment hunting realm
of my life. I have been scouring Craigslist fruitlessly all week since the
adorable, gay-man –filled, apartment of my dreams went to another guy. I’ve now
sent out something between 20-25 emails, and recently got a raise at work so I
can look in a higher bracket of apartment expenses, yet the only responses I
can get are from a girl who will not give me her phone number (and who I
suspect may not have excellent command of the English language) and a Hungarian
couple in Queens who work for the circus or something. How cliché Craigslist of
them.
Potential Future Roommates |
It seems unbelievable to me that myself, a full-time
employed, clean, considerate, girl of nearly 25 cannot find a ROOM in an
apartment for under $900 a month in New York City with anyone who does not seem
unbearably sketchy. I’m normal! Well, I wouldn’t send them a link to this blog
necessarily, but my shenanigans are endearingly awkward for the most part. It
doesn’t have much effect on my home life. (Save for the last post where I began
crying all over my roommate about my first world problems… perhaps I will not
list him as a reference.)
I’m trying to think of some good alternatives, in case I am
not successful in finding an apartment in a week. Here is what I’ve come up
with so far, in order of likelihood:
2. Summer Sublets. There is always the option of finding a less permanent arrangement for a month or two while I continue to look. And I can tolerate anyone, even the Hungarian trapeze couple, for two months.
3. Youth Hostels. Hotel alternative for poor people. I feel like the ones in Europe are safer and a bit more mainstream. I’ve seen the hostel situation in NYC. Not cute.
4. Couch surfing. Friends in NYC who would put me up for a few days include:
·
A nearly 50 year old gay fashion designer from
Portland
·
A Broadway marketing girl in Queens who went to
highschool with my sister
·
A 45-year-old former stripper who carries a
knife in her bra and used to work at my restaurant. She also has a rabbit, two
mice, a turtle, two cats, and a 30 lb dog freely roaming her apartment.
·
A jewelry designer who lives in California and
keeps an apartment in the city, but creepily has requested that I share the bed
with him when he’s in town visiting (says he’s just kidding, but I doubt it)
·
The early-thirties Jewish nephew of another guy
in the diamond district who never fails to attempt to molest me when he drinks.
He has a studio, which he generously offered to share.
5.
Sleeping under my desk. Our office is under
construction (ie covered in dust) and I don’t know what I would do with my
stuff. Also, I don’t think my boss would go for this plan.
Clearly, none of my existing choices are optimal.
Apparently, all the normal, clean, responsible, non-creepy roommates are
unavailable in the NYC area.
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