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SequoiaStudies

@sequoia-studies / sequoia-studies.tumblr.com

hello out there
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diarygirls

love languages

  • cut up fruit on a plate
  • doing work at the same table
  • adjusting someone’s collar, brushing off lint on their shoulder, fixing their hair
  • bringing home leftovers
  • double commenting on ig
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reblogged

Looking for studyblrs to follow 💐

Please reblog if you‘re an active studyblr and/or tag your favorite ones! 💕

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eponis

Everything Is Awful and I’m Not Okay: questions to ask before giving up

Are you hydrated?  If not, have a glass of water.

Have you eaten in the past three hours?  If not, get some food — something with protein, not just simple carbs.  Perhaps some nuts or hummus?

Have you showered in the past day?  If not, take a shower right now.

If daytime: are you dressed?  If not, put on clean clothes that aren’t pajamas.  Give yourself permission to wear something special, whether it’s a funny t-shirt or a pretty dress.

If nighttime: are you sleepy and fatigued but resisting going to sleep?  Put on pajamas, make yourself cozy in bed with a teddy bear and the sound of falling rain, and close your eyes for fifteen minutes — no electronic screens allowed.  If you’re still awake after that, you can get up again; no pressure.

Have you stretched your legs in the past day?  If not, do so right now.  If you don’t have the spoons for a run or trip to the gym, just walk around the block, then keep walking as long as you please.  If the weather’s crap, drive to a big box store (e.g. Target) and go on a brisk walk through the aisles you normally skip.

Have you said something nice to someone in the past day?  Do so, whether online or in person.  Make it genuine; wait until you see something really wonderful about someone, and tell them about it.

Have you moved your body to music in the past day?  If not, do so — jog for the length of an EDM song at your favorite BPM, or just dance around the room for the length of an upbeat song.

Have you cuddled a living being in the past two days?  If not, do so.  Don’t be afraid to ask for hugs from friends or friends’ pets.  Most of them will enjoy the cuddles too; you’re not imposing on them.

Do you feel ineffective?  Pause right now and get something small completed, whether it’s responding to an e-mail, loading up the dishwasher, or packing your gym bag for your next trip.  Good job!

Do you feel unattractive?  Take a goddamn selfie.  Your friends will remind you how great you look, and you’ll fight society’s restrictions on what beauty can look like.

Do you feel paralyzed by indecision?  Give yourself ten minutes to sit back and figure out a game plan for the day.  If a particular decision or problem is still being a roadblock, simply set it aside for now, and pick something else that seems doable.  Right now, the important part is to break through that stasis, even if it means doing something trivial.

Have you seen a therapist in the past few days?  If not, hang on until your next therapy visit and talk through things then.

Have you been over-exerting yourself lately — physically, emotionally, socially, or intellectually?  That can take a toll that lingers for days. Give yourself a break in that area, whether it’s physical rest, taking time alone, or relaxing with some silly entertainment.

Have you changed any of your medications in the past couple of weeks, including skipped doses or a change in generic prescription brand?  That may be screwing with your head.  Give things a few days, then talk to your doctor if it doesn’t settle down.

Have you waited a week?  Sometimes our perception of life is skewed, and we can’t even tell that we’re not thinking clearly, and there’s no obvious external cause.  It happens.  Keep yourself going for a full week, whatever it takes, and see if you still feel the same way then.

You’ve made it this far, and you will make it through.  You are stronger than you think.

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“1. push yourself to get up before the rest of the world - start with 7am, then 6am, then 5:30am. go to the nearest hill with a big coat and a scarf and watch the sun rise. 2. push yourself to fall asleep earlier - start with 11pm, then 10pm, then 9pm. wake up in the morning feeling re-energized and comfortable. 3. get into the habit of cooking yourself a beautiful breakfast. fry tomatoes and mushrooms in real butter and garlic, fry an egg, slice up a fresh avocado and squirt way too much lemon on it. sit and eat it and do nothing else. 4. stretch. start by reaching for the sky as hard as you can, then trying to touch your toes. roll your head. stretch your fingers. stretch everything. 5. buy a 1L water bottle. start with pushing yourself to drink the whole thing in a day, then try drinking it twice. 6. buy a beautiful diary and a beautiful black pen. write down everything you do, including dinner dates, appointments, assignments, coffees, what you need to do that day. no detail is too small. 7. strip your bed of your sheets and empty your underwear draw into the washing machine. put a massive scoop of scented fabric softener in there and wash. make your bed in full. 8. organise your room. fold all your clothes (and bag what you don’t want), clean your mirror, your laptop, vacuum the floor. light a beautiful candle. 9. have a luxurious shower with your favourite music playing. wash your hair, scrub your body, brush your teeth. lather your whole body in moisturiser, get familiar with the part between your toes, your inner thighs, the back of your neck. 10. push yourself to go for a walk. take your headphones, go to the beach and walk. smile at strangers walking the other way and be surprised how many smile back. bring your dog and observe the dog’s behaviour. realise you can learn from your dog. 11. message old friends with personal jokes. reminisce. suggest a catch up soon, even if you don’t follow through. push yourself to follow through. 13. think long and hard about what interests you. crime? sex? boarding school? long-forgotten romance etiquette? find a book about it and read it. there is a book about literally everything. 14. become the person you would ideally fall in love with. let cars merge into your lane when driving. pay double for parking tickets and leave a second one in the machine. stick your tongue out at babies. compliment people on their cute clothes. challenge yourself to not ridicule anyone for a whole day. then two. then a week. walk with a straight posture. look people in the eye. ask people about their story. talk to acquaintances so they become friends. 15. lie in the sunshine. daydream about the life you would lead if failure wasn’t a thing. open your eyes. take small steps to make it happen for you.”

(via elauxe)

A self care list. I’ve been working on this. I promise it’s worth it.

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A Stash of Tiny Study Tips

STAYING MOTIVATED

  • Create realistic goals: get ___ grade on next ____
  • Manageable let down; get back on track
  • Keep track of grades: focused, know where stand, no surprises
  • Start small
  • Low risk confidence builders
  • Take time to relax/give self rewards
  • Days off, breaks, rewards
  • All work & no play =/= living
  • Little organization goes a long way
  • Reward achievements!
  • Keep balance with exercise, clubs, friends
  • 2h/d: friends and exercise
  • Remember that hard work pays off
  • Isn’t a breeze to try to get a 4.0 GPA; but it’s possible
  • You’re smart enough and can achieve it
  • 90% there with these tips, 10% is just pure hard work
  • Only chill on weekends
  • Monday-Friday: school mode
  • Have time for some fun
  • If work as hard as should during week, will need weekends to blow off steam
  • Be self-motivated
  • Grades can matter, not everything, but follow through on what needs to be done
  • Not most important part of college but underperform? You will regret it
  • GPA cutoffs exist and matter to employers
  • College is full of distractions and opportunities
  • Nobody will hold hand and the work will suck but all the prouder of yourself to be
  • Suck it up, buckle down, get it done
  • If think need break, probably don’t
  • Turn off the little voice
  • Realize not alone in questioning ability
  • Avoid people who tend to burst bubbles no matter what 
  • Physical triggers to stop
  • Incentive to get something done when know have something else during the day
  • Don’t have a gaping abyss of study time
  • Work has to get done, in the end
  • Books, examiners, and especially your future self isn’t going to care about your excuses for not doing the work
  • Take the first step
  • It will almost be fictional how hard you thought the task was going to be
  • Just keep going because you simply can’t afford NOT to do anything today, nonzero days
  • Leeway, don’t give your perfectionism control over your life

MUNDANE HABITS

  • Sleep! Think and function, mind & body
  • CAN sleep if keep up with coursework instead of procrastinating
  • Will miss out on some fun stuff
  • Need to stay awake in class
  • Figure out what need for full speed
  • Stay relaxed
  • Stay physically healthy
  • Diet and exercise
  • 1 hour exercise during week
  • Weekends off
  • Traditional breakfast not necessary if value extra sleep
  • Systematic habits: neat, prepared
  • Master material
  • Look for real world applications
  • Learning is a process: be patient, don’t expect to master off the bat
  • Designate study area and study times
  • Do trial runs
  • Practice tests
  • Ask a TA to listen to your oral performance
  • Study groups
  • Don’t copy other people’s psets and solutions

BEFORE SEMESTER

  • Spiral bound notebook, can color code with folders/etc if need be
  • Lecture notes: front to back
  • Reading notes: back to front (if fall behind on)
  • Seminar notes: mixed in with lecture notes, different pen color/labeled
  • Outline format
  • Bullet points for everything
  • Same NB for one set of class notes, separate notebooks for all classes
  • 5-subject notebook
  • Midterm and exam material in it
  • Mesh sources, study guide
  • All study material from week/month in one place
  • Pick the right major
  • Indulge in favorite hobby feeling
  • Pick professors & classes wisely
  • Take a small class
  • Pick classes that interest you so studying doesn’t feel torturous
  • Want to learn

GRADES SPECIFIC

  • Prioritize class by how can affect GPA
  • More credits: more weight
  • Work enough to get an A in your easy classes: take something good at
  • Don’t settle, don’t slack off, don’t put in minimal effort to get that B/C. Just put in a tiny bit more effort to ensure A
  • Will have harder classes and need to counteract
  • Take electives can ace
  • Anything but an A in an elective is kinda mean and an unnecessary hit for your GPA

FIRST DAY/WEEK/HALF OF CLASSES

  • Get to know teaching style: focus most on, lecture/notes
  • Pick and follow a specific note taking format
  • Outline
  • Date each entry
  • Capture everything on board
  • Decide productivity system
  • Google Cal
  • Todoist
  • Agenda: remind meetings, class schedule, important dates/midterms/quizzes/tests, no homework 
  • Always wanted to be prepared
  • Rarely last minute
  • Have plan, stay focused
  • Homework notebook
  • Good redundancy
  • Study syllabus
  • Know it thoroughly
  • Plot all due dates after class
  • Penalize if fail to abide by
  • Study the hardest for the first exam
  • Seems counterintuitive
  • Hardest/most important test
  • Pay attention to content and formatLess pressure: just need ___ on final to keep my A 
  • Easy to start high and keep high
  • Go into crunch mode at the beginning
  • End softly
  • Get plenty of sleep, exercise, and good food in the finals days before the exam

DURING SEMESTER: PEOPLE

  • Get to know professors: go to office hours, care about grades/course/them
  • Easier ask for help, rec letter
  • Get to know interests and what they think is important
  • Figure out their research interests, 60% of their job is research
  • Learning is dynamic
  • Discussion helps
  • Get feedback early when not sure what doing
  • Take comments constructively
  • Consistent class participation: ask questions, give answers, comment when appropriate
  • Understand material
  • Find a study buddy in each class: don’t have to study with
  • Somebody can compare notes with, safety net
  • Pick somebody who attends, participates, and take notes regularly
  • Make some friends
  • Participate as fully as can in group activities
  • Be involved
  • Learn – not be taught
  • Be punctual
  • Good impression, on human professors
  • DON’T BE LATE
  • Skipping class =/= option: It’s “cool” to get attendance award
  • Make all the classes: it’s hard to feel confident when missing key pieces
  • Get full scope of class, everything will make a lot more sense and save a lot of time in long run
  • Mandatory class: higher graduating cumulative GPA
  • Go to class when no one else does/want to show up, reward
  • Get to know professor, what’s on test, notice, r/s build, material not in reading
  • Unless optional and super confusing professor
  • Sit in one of the first rows
  • Don’t fall asleep
  • Fake interest if you have to
  • Tutors

DURING SEMESTER: THINGS TO DO

  • Take notes! Provided is bare minimum, accessed by students who aren’t attending lecture
  • Based on lecture and what read –> test; it’ll be worth it
  • Write it down
  • By hand
  • Bored? Doodle instead of going online
  • Read all assigned–even if need to skim
  • Seems cumbersome and maybe impossible
  • Figure out what’s important
  • Look at the logical progression of the argument/what’s important/what trying to prove
  • Understand everything that you do read–even if don’t read everything
  • PIck 2 examples from text per topic
  • Complete course material on time
  • DO NOT WAIT UNTIL DAY BEFORE IT IS DUE
  • Begin as soon as possible
  • Sometimes it’s just straight up impossible
  • Have it look attractive
  • Library doesn’t just mean = study
  • Social media in the library is still social media
  • Confusion is terrible
  • Read other textbooks, review course material @ another uni/by another professor, google the shit out of it
  • Review
  • Do not wait, do throughout semester
  • Exam prep
  • Ask for model papers, look at style & structure, thesis, how cite
  • Get old tests
  • Look at type of questions (detail level and structure)
  • Can solve old exams cold
  • If give out paper exams in class: probs won’t repeat questions, focus more on concepts but still learn the questions
  • Have class notes and psets down cold
  • Do all the practice problems
  • Read through notes a few times; rewrite into a revision notebook
  • Highlight major topics and subtopics
  • Different highlighter for vocab terms
  • Overall picture, go from concept to detail
  • Look at overall context and how specific idea fit into whole course
  • Ideas, don’t memorize all your notes
  • Better understand = more able to use and manipulate info and remember it. Understand = manipulation.
  • Charts, diagrams, graphs
  • Lists
  • Practice drawing labeled structures
  • Flash cards for memorization
  • Every school requires some degree of grunt memorization
  • Say it aloud, write it down
  • Get friends to quiz you
  • Self-test: severely challenge self, have a running collection of exam questions
  • Explain difficult concepts to your friends; force yourself to articulate the concept
  • Never pull an all-nighter
  • Do not spend every hour studying up to the exam
  • Eat, shower, sleep
  • Don’t wait until night before exam to study
  • Prep takes time even if reviewed throughout semester
  • Ask about format–don’t ask the professor to change it for you
  • Law of College: it will be on the exam if you don’t understand it
  • Ask professor, internet, textbooks
  • Night before exam
  • Jot what want to remember/have fresh
  • Read through in morning/before exam
  • Physical prep
  • Sleep, have test materials
  • Day of exam
  • Don’t cram every single spare minute
  • Go to bathroom before exam
  • Never miss an exam/lie to get more time
  • You won’t be any more ready 2-3 days after when supposed to have taken it
  • Slay exam. Get A. 

WEEKLY 

  • Friday morning: go through each syllabus, write down in HW notebook
  • All hw during weekend; study/reading assignments during week
  • Save everything
  • Divide big tasks into small pieces to help propel self
  • Standard study schedule: block off lectures, labs, regular commitments
  • Note the weeks that have assignments and tests that will require extra studying
  • Don’t oscillate too heavily every day with study times (i.e. don’t study 2-3 hours for weeks and then 10-12 hour days right before an exam)
  • Eat and sleep to make more extended work periods liveable and enjoyable

DAILY

  • Set an amount of time would like to study every day
  • Try to study most days
  • Avoid vague/zoned out studying –> waste of time
  • Do a little bit daily but don’t let studying be your whole day
  • Review notes: 30mins/day, each class from that day
  • Look at important ideas/vocab
  • Prioritize new vocab because language is most fundamental and important tool in any subject
  • Circle abbreviations and make yourself a key somewhere so you don’t forget what the hell that abbreviations meant
  • Check spelling
  • Rewrite/reorganize notes if necessary
  • Format of ideas is just as important as the concepts themselves, esp. when it comes time for exam review
  • This helps you retain the material so you’ll be ahead next time you walk into class
  • Chance to ID any knowledge gaps that you can ask about for next class
  • Keep up with reading
  • Skim text before lecture or at least main topic sentences
  • Jot down anything don’t understand; if lecture doesn’t clarify, ask the professor
  • After lecture: skim again, outline chapter, make vocab flashcards
  • Highlight similar class and lecture notes
  • will definitely be tested on
  • Review and make study questions
  • Study
  • Disconnect from anything irrelevant to study material: help focus and your GPA
  • Don’t limit studying to the night
  • Study whenever, wherever between classes
  • Variety helps focus and motivation
  • Especially if tired at night and can’t transition between subjects
  • Try to study for a specific subject right before/after the class
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21 Tips to Become the Most Productive Person You Know

I wanted to help you create explosive productivity so you get big things done (and make your life matter). Here are 21 tips to get you to your best productivity.

#1. Check email in the afternoon so you protect the peak energy hours of your mornings for your best work. 

#2. Stop waiting for perfect conditions to launch a great project. Immediate action fuels a positive feedback loop that drives even more action. 

#3. Remember that big, brave goals release energy. So set them clearly and then revisit them every morning for 5 minutes. 

#4. Mess creates stress (I learned this from tennis icon Andre Agassi who said he wouldn’t let anyone touch his tennis bag because if it got disorganized, he’d get distracted). So clean out the clutter in your office to get more done. 

#5. Sell your TV. You’re just watching other people get successful versus doing the things that will get you to your dreams. 

#6. Say goodbye to the energy vampires in your life (the negative souls who steal your enthusiasm). 

#7. Run routines. When I studied the creative lives of massively productive people like Stephen King, John Grisham and Thomas Edison, I discovered they follow strict daily routines. (i.e., when they would get up, when they would start work, when they would exercise and when they would relax). Peak productivity’s not about luck. It’s about devotion. 

#8. Get up at 5 am. Win the battle of the bed. Put mind over mattress. This habit alone will strengthen your willpower so it serves you more dutifully in the key areas of your life. 

#9. Don’t do so many meetings. (I’ve trained the employees of our FORTUNE 500 clients on exactly how to do this – including having the few meetings they now do standing up – and it’s created breakthrough results for them). 

#10. Don’t say yes to every request. Most of us have a deep need to be liked. That translates into us saying yes to everything – which is the end of your elite productivity. 

#11. Outsource everything you can’t be BIW (Best in the World) at. Focus only on activities within what I call “Your Picasso Zone”. 

#12. Stop multi-tasking. New research confirms that all the distractions invading our lives are rewiring the way our brains work (and drop our IQ by 5 points!). Be one of the rare-air few who develops the mental and physical discipline to have a mono-maniacal focus on one thing for many hours. (It’s all about practice). 

#13. Get fit like Madonna. Getting to your absolute best physical condition will create explosive energy, renew your focus and multiply your creativity. 

#14. Workout 2X a day. This is just one of the little-known productivity tactics that I’ll walk you through in my new online training program YOUR PRODUCTIVITY UNLEASHED (details at the end of this post) but here’s the key: exercise is one of the greatest productivity tools in the world. So do 20 minutes first thing in the morning and then another workout around 6 or 7 pm to set you up for wow in the evening. 

#15. Drink more water. When you’re dehydrated, you’ll have far less energy. And get less done. 

#16. Work in 90 minute blocks with 10 minute intervals to recover and refuel (another game-changing move I personally use to do my best work).

#17. Write a Stop Doing List. Every productive person obsessively sets To Do Lists. But those who play at world-class also record what they commit to stop doing. Steve Jobs said that what made Apple Apple was not so much what they chose to build but all the projects they chose to ignore. #18. Use your commute time. If you’re commuting 30 minutes each way every day – get this: at the end of a year, you’ve spent 6 weeks of 8 hour days in your car. I encourage you to use that time to listen to fantastic books on audio + excellent podcasts and valuable learning programs. Remember, the fastest way to double your income is to triple your rate of learning. 

#19. Be a contrarian. Why buy your groceries at the time the store is busiest? Why go to movies on the most popular nights? Why hit the gym when the gym’s completely full? Do things at off-peak hours and you’ll save so many of them. 

#20. Get things right the first time. Most people are wildly distracted these days. And so they make mistakes. To unleash your productivity, become one of the special performers who have the mindset of doing what it takes to get it flawless first. This saves you days of having to fix problems. 

#21. Get lost. Don’t be so available to everyone. I often spend hours at a time in the cafeteria of a university close to our headquarters. I turn off my devices and think, create, plan and write. Zero interruptions. Pure focus. Massive results. I truly hope these 21 productivity tips have been valuable to you. And that I’ve been of service. Your productivity is your life made visible. Please protect it. Stay productive.

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college advice from someone who’s been on both sides of it

So I’m finishing up my Ph.D. and preparing to depart for the real world (no, just kidding, I’m going to be in school forever, only in a different capacity) and I thought I’d put together a list of some college tips to share with you all. I graduated with my B.A. in 2012, magna cum laude, with 2 majors, 1 honours thesis, 2 on-campus jobs, and 3 music things. Since then, I’ve gone to grad school and also taught six semesters of first-year seminars. Now I’m going on the job market for teaching positions. All of this means that I’ve seen both sides of the college experience, as a student and as an instructor. There are a lot of great & useful college advice posts going around studyblr this time of here, and I wanted to add my own. I hope it’s useful. So here we go, with a “read more” because it’s long (sorry if you’re on mobile):

academics

  • find your classrooms ahead of time (profs’ offices too)
  • figure out how long it will take you to walk between places
  • figure out where your best seat will be & claim it
  • say hi to the people next to you, learn their names
  • take notes in class
  • take advantage of extra credit
  • try your best not to fall asleep in class (and if you do fall asleep, apologise to the prof afterwards)
  • bring your glasses if you need them, don’t be stubborn about it
  • check out the library, wander in the stacks, talk to the librarians
  • figure out how & where to print
  • buy used books/textbooks, or rent them, but be careful with ebooks (some profs don’t allow them)
  • plan breaks into your class schedule, or block everything together, whichever works best for you
  • work out the pros & cons of 8am classes and/or night classes
  • plan ahead – have a planner, put things in it, do them
  • fake deadlines are a thing (write down earlier deadlines, trick yourself into meeting them, bask in satisfaction)
  • grades won’t be what they were in high school
  • keep in mind GPA values: a 3.5 will see you graduating with honours
  • be nice to the departmental administrative staff, thank them for helping you (even with small things)
  • office hours versus emailing profs: both will get your questions answered (probably) but if you can go and talk in person, do it
  • profs & TAs are people too, they have lives, they have bad days
  • if something comes up, talk to your prof, be honest but don’t overshare, just show them you’re trying
  • on that note, try
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the smell of Home Depot is cathartic

fairies live in the lights & chandeliers section, gnomes live in the outdoor gardening department

Stop romanticizing home depot

pixies live in the paint aisle. fuck you

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When you guys have visited potential apartments, what kind of questions did you ask besides the basics like what rent and utilities include?

Here are questions I didn’t ask but should have: what does the basement look like?

What measures are taken to secure the building ?

Are the walls thin? Brief info of who lives in the building. Are they college kids? People that work through the day? Elderly? Is it a mix? Where does the garbage go?

Can I pay rent bi-weekly? What kind of fuses does the apartment use? (My fuse box is in the basement. If I blow a fuse I have to replace it myself. They screw until the box. All of which I didn’t know until it happend and I was sitting in the dark suddenly)

Who do I call for repairs? (If it’s a private rental) Am I allowed to paint the walls? Is there any additional storage? Do you do regular pest control?

count the outlets, ask about recycling policies, ask if there’s a noise restriction (nothing loud after midnight, everything goes on the weekend, etc)

LAUNDRY FACILITIES Definitely ask about security Whether subletting is allowed (esp if you’re in college and might want to sublet for the summer) If you have a car, whether there’s parking/how much it costs What kind of heating/AC there is Procedure/response time for any maintenance How mail/packages are received/protected from theft (seriously people stealing your packages can be a huge problem) What kind of verification of your salary will they want, and in what circumstances will they accept a guarantor instead? Whether the apartment is furnished

Assuming you are in the middle of looking at/choosing between places: When does the lease start? Are you going to give preference to people based on when they can move in? Whether groups of a certain number of people get preference Really anything about who they prioritize for applications, it can save you a lot of trouble in trying to apply to places you’ll never get into

not something for asking the realtors, necessarily, but important rights you should be aware of as a tenant:

when and for what reasons are your landlords allowed to enter your home? how much of a notice should they give you before entering?

can the landlord make modifications to your home or apartment without your approval? to what extent?

what are the options and conditions for breaking your lease early if there’s an emergency? (this is ESPECIALLY important for anyone moving to a new state/considerable distance where you are not able to visit the apartment/home before you rent – students get taken advantage of ALL THE TIME with this shit)

if your first or last month at the property is a partial stay (i.e. you move in on july 15th, and rent is typically due on the first) make sure you don’t pay the full first month’s rent before you know the area laws! in many states, you are only legally required to pay for the time you are occupying the property

is renter’s insurance necessary? many apartments want at least 30k coverage, which can run a couple hundred dollars extra per year

are the landlords/property management liable for crimes on the property? for example, if your car was broken into. if not GET RENTER’S INSURANCE

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lmaodies

-ask if there’s any property upkeep you can do to get a bit off the rent (aka, can they take 100$ off the monthly rent if you maintain the lawns/garden, etc.) 

-ask if there’s been any consistent/frequent trouble with electricity/internet connectivity/cable if you have it

-what KIND of electricity? 

-what kind of heating (hot water/electric)

-how secure is the neighborhood (if you don’t know) 

-ANY PLUMBING ISSUES? check ALL the fucking taps, the showers, EVERYTHING WITH WATER to make sure it all works right. 

-ANY PLUMBING ISSUES? check ALL the fucking taps, the showers, EVERYTHING WITH WATER to make sure it all works right. 

I CANNOT SECOND THIS ENOUGH.

ALSO

- who last lived here? why did they leave?

- Do they charge an “amenities fee” (Around here you can’t avoid them at all now, but some places you might still be able to)

- Do they have a policy on rent increases? (Also check if there’s a legal limit to rent increases in the area).

- Are utilities paid in a separate check or with the rent?

- Are utilities metered or pro-rated (in older buildings it’s common to be charged by square footage and/or number of occupants, which can leave you subsidizing the people who turn the a/c down to 60 in the summer or the heat up to 80 in the winter - you may not be able to avoid this but it’s worth trying).

- Are there any switched circuits in the apartment. Buildings built in the late sixties through the early eighties often have switched circuits. If they do, then with the number of devices used these days you will probably have to have something important on the switched circuit - tape the switch in the on position! (Trust me).

- What are the rules on hanging pictures?

- Who is responsible for paying for and replacing bulbs in permanent fixtures? If it’s you and there’s a fixture with weird/unusual bulbs (globe style, chandelier style, etc) ask where you can buy the bulbs.

- What are the rules about pets? Do they have breed specific restrictions on dogs? Size restrictions on fish tanks? (Believe it or not that’s not uncommon).

This will be so useful once my lease is up thanks tumblr ☺️🙏🏾

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