Our (my partner and i) lease is up in a month and we are planning on moving to a town 30 minutes north of us. we’re in a small college town surrounded by cornfields currently, and would be moving to a more suburban area. my main reasons for moving are that I’ve been in this town for about 5 years and honestly its got some of the blandest selection of shops, restaurants, activities, etc. its not totally devoid of cool people and small businesses, but a majority of its commerce is through chains. in the new town, there would be local grocers to shop at, a wider variety of cultural foods, and more… extracurriculars (i like to take dance, art, etc. classes). however, the apartment we have a deposit down for is kinda shit. we cant really afford anything better at this size, though. we’ll also lose out on being in a walkable area. also, my partner would have to commute to school ~3x a week for classes and i feel kinda bad abt dragging him away from being able to walk to campus, but something in me feels ready for a change. though as the title says, im facing indecision. thoughts?

  • jet@hackertalks.com
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    25 days ago

    Minimize the required daily commute and your life will be better overall.

    Commuting to extracurriculars is fine, because you set your own schedule.

  • Robsadaisy@lemmy.world
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    25 days ago

    If it’s only 30 minutes north of you why aren’t you spending more time there anyway?

    My thinking is if in doubt, don’t.

  • bionicjoey@lemmy.ca
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    24 days ago

    Moving to a non walkable suburb is the worst decision you can make for your physical and mental health.

  • rockSlayer@lemmy.world
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    25 days ago

    Well, what do you prioritize the most? You mentioned a few different things; a desire to get away, balancing cohabitation, walkability, local culture, etc. If you don’t like the walkability of the area but it’s not the worst and active community, maybe that’s ok sacrificing for the first apartment in the new city. I moved 3 times before I stayed in the same apartment for more than a year, and it wasn’t until my most recent move a few months ago before I felt I found a long term apartment

  • Eyedust@lemmy.world
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    25 days ago

    I’m in the same boat. My partner and I are extremely excited for a new start and can’t wait to get away from some things here, but the apartment we have lined up is fairly smaller than what we have now.

    To top it off, there’s another apartment with a beautiful screen in porch on the same floor, but it’s a tiny efficiency apartment. The worst part is that that tenant will have to walk through our part of the porch to get to the stairs. I’ve rented long enough to know that you don’t always get great neighbors, so not looking forward to that.

    My new landlord is my brother in law and he wanted to combine the apartments and just charge us a bit more, but my sister didn’t want to lose the money of having two apartments up there. I understand that, but it’s such a nice one bedroom apartment and the two bedroom feels like a bunch of tiny boxes nailed together.

    The area is extremely rural and my gf will have to commute a bit longer to get to her transferred job, but we think it’s well worth it despite all that. I’d say give it a try and see what you think. If it doesn’t work great, view your other options from there. It sounds like you’re both looking for a change either way.

  • Varyk@sh.itjust.works
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    25 days ago

    This is pretty good advice. Ever since college I’ve tried to live near where I studied or worked.

    Does your partner feel the same way about a change?