I have commented over the past few years how traditional
modes of residence have come back into style as work in the UK has become more
geographically concentrated, pay has fallen in real terms and the cost of
accommodation has risen particularly rapidly.
I guess I am wrong to have ever thought that I should perceive what I
think of as ‘old fashioned’ modes of living as such. It is clear that they are, in fact, part of
lifestyles of the 2010s and completely bury the myth of a ‘property-owning democracy’
that was once peddled in this country.
Thus, I guess it is unsurprising that as a man in my forties, I have
lived with my parents: http://rooksmoor.blogspot.co.uk/2012/12/never-as-bad-as-we-had-it.html
; in a guest house: http://rooksmoor.blogspot.co.uk/2009/12/living-in-guesthouse.html and as a lodger: http://rooksmoor.blogspot.co.uk/2011/02/living-withas-lodger.html Working in London I am again looking for
accommodation, a process which is fraught with difficulty. I am more alert to the hazards of 419 scammers
in the market place for renting rooms: http://rooksmoor.blogspot.co.uk/2011/08/419-scams-connected-with-renting-room.html and so far, this time round seem to have only
encountered one. This was a very low-key
one without all the grandeur and fake photos of those I ran into back in 2013.
One lesson I learnt back in 2009 is that there is no point
in me responding to advertisements for rooms.
There are a number of characteristics which rule me out. First is my age. I am now in my mid-40s and for some reason
people letting rooms seem to feel that there is something sinister about a man
my age renting a room. Even when they
say in emails that they are happy to have me, meeting me they change their
minds and I suddenly find the room has been ‘allocated to someone else’. I accept I am overweight and unattractive,
but I am clean and tidy and do domestic chores.
However, I clearly do not fit the image that people have of a young, dynamic
businessman. If I did, then presumably I
would not have to rent a room.
I think part of the problem is that they think that I will
not tolerate poor things about the room.
I certainly think that if I am paying rent for a room, I should get all
that is advertised. Perhaps I am overly
demanding in expecting cooking facilities and heating. If you have a cooker and a heater, then they
should work. However, maybe this is too
demanding and is what rules me out when there are others who will accept no
heating or no cooking facility. For me
it is rather selfish because I know it is far more costly if I eat out every
meal and I find I cannot stomach living on sandwiches constantly.
The other key factor is that I am a man. Around 75% of the advertisements I see
specify that only women can rent the room.
At least people say this now up front, whereas in the past you had to
ring or go there to find out ‘well, we’re actually looking for a woman’. Yes, it is prejudicial, but I would rather
see the prejudice before I waste my time.
Of course, no-one is allowed to specify ethnicity. I am a very pale Caucasian. I find that other people in that category do
not want to rent to people like me because of the concerns about. I get on far better with landlords/ladies who
are South or East Asian. However, not
being from that background myself I am sometimes jumped over by someone ‘from
the home country’. This happens even
when I have said I like a room and want to rent it. Of course, in some cases it is just because
they have met me and now the other negative aspects kick in.
One key negative aspect for me is the company that employs
me and the fact that I now do administrative work. For some reason there is a prejudice against
people who do not work in making earnings.
Strangely I was told that people prefer a salesman on commission to
someone who does a solid administrative job day-in/day-out. Again, I think this comes down to the sense
that an administrator renting a room must be a serial killer. However, ironically, I am actually a better
lodger as my income does not fluctuate and I certainly do not have alcoholic
lunches and noisy celebrations the way some people in sales still do. However, it is clear that it is better for me
to lie about where I work and the nature of my work or run up against this
prejudice.
The other thing is people’s sense of geography. If I say that I want a room in North London,
then clearly I will consider places in North-West London or North-East London
and having a car and a parking space at work, I am not tied to bus, tube or
train lines the way that many people are.
However, somewhere in South London or East London are of no use to me and
it wastes my time to have to deal with these people contacting me. Conversely, when I put an advertisement about
being in a certain radius of work, I found I got no responses. When I took this criterion off, I then had
loads of people contacting me with properties precisely within that circle. It is clear that, certainly in London, that
people have little idea where their house is in relationship to other areas or
even points of the compass. I suppose if
you travel just from home to work you do not gather this information.
I accept rent by the week.
However, there is now this common thing of accepting weekly rent and
then after a period of time requesting the ‘make-up’ rent for the months which
have passed. This is because, aside from
February in non-leap years, months have 2-3 days more than 4 x 7 days = 28
days. Rent by calendar month appears to
have disappeared and rental weeks that go over months also appear to be too
difficult for landlords/ladies to work out, so you have this cluster of days,
which add up to 29 days in a normal year, 30 days in a leap year. Thus, you can suddenly be charged with an
additional four weeks’ rent. Storage
places pull off this trick as well. A
key problem is that some charge you for it even when only four or six months
have passed, so you have only tallied up a fraction of this additional month.
I have now tried to rent three rooms only to have my
application rejected or reneged on at the last moment. I know the competition for renting a room is
very high in London, but it is clear that my optimism that as when living in
Exeter and Uxbridge that I would be able to find a place within a few weeks,
has been entirely misplaced. Though my
income has fallen I did think I could rent somewhere at the same kind of level,
with a 25% leeway, as I did last year. It is clear that I need to accept that I am
not going to find somewhere even within those parameters now and will have to
put up with an unheated room or one with no access to cooking facilities if I
want to rent for £4-500 per month.
Saying that, at this moment, I cannot even afford that. I am not clear how I can go any lower in
terms of finding somewhere to rent. A
job outside London or with higher pay is clearly necessary but is as difficult
to conjure up than an affordable room as a lodger.
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