I have a history

I recently had to come to grips with the fact that my living expenses are higher than they should be.  I have been told for years to never rent a apartment or apartment if the bi-weekly cost of rent is more than a third of your income—command that I have since disregarded.  I was stubborn about wanting a apartment despite it seeming care about more section than what was practical for my needs. After a few cutbacks at job pushed my fourths down, I just couldn’t afford to rent that apartment anymore.  It felt daunting downsizing to an apartment, especially while in the initial internet search. I found a nice 1 bedroom apartment with a master’s suite plus separate study room plus family room closed off from the study room. So although I no longer have a spacious apartment to lounge around in, I didn’t have to scale back so much that I had to cram myself into a tiny studio apartment.  But potentially best of all, my energy costs are amazingly affordable in my new site. I was told that the adjacent units, recognizably the 1s in the floors above plus below me, act as natural insulation from heat or cold air loss. I don’t have an attic for my ductwork to leak into either since my ventilation plan runs along a single wall that each room shares simply out of convenience plus simplicity.  All of the adjacent units complete this effect by acting as thermal barriers from the elements. When I gained my first electric bill, I couldn’t suppose the difference from my old house. To feel of the sheer quantities of cash plus income I wasted over the years just to have a detached apartment to go beach apartment to every night is a miserable thought

climate control