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Thetiny housemovement is growing, but it’s not a new idea.
Here are the best and worst things about tiny living.

It may seem unfathomable to purposely live in such a small space, butlivingtiny can havebigimpacts on the environment.
This means he can, for a limited time, live sustainably without needing external electricity or water.
“My partner plays a video game for his alone time,” she explained.

Even freely using the bathroom can be a challenge.
Don’t say we didn’t warn you.
Before moving into their tiny home, Meg and her husband, Dan, pared down their wardrobe.

“There’s none of this ‘black belt, brown shoes’ nonsense.
I wear black and gray, and everything matches with that,” she told the publication.
“It’s so easy.”

“I just throw them all in a basket,” he divulged.
Tiny house owner Jenna Spesard also revealed that composting toilets can lead to some awkward conversations with guests.
“Funny thing I’ve learned: adults do not enjoy being potty-trained,” she divulged onher site.

Compare that to your traditional30-year mortgage, and, yes, tiny house living is easy on the wallet.
This way, the house will essentially grow with you.
Tiny houses, on the other hand, aren’t exactly known for having extra space.

She continued, writing, “In a regular foundation home, you could potentially expand.
My house is limited by the size of my trailer.”
But what if you were to shrink the house to, say, 250 square feet?

Obviously, the time spent cleaning would be drastically reduced.
Sounds like total cleaning goals.
And it’s not just city officials who fight the tiny house movement.

For those who have tiny houses on wheels, it can be equally difficult.
“We weren’t spending time cleaning.
We weren’t spending time maintaining the yard.

Tempest and her husband share a tiny home of sorts a 492-square-foot apartment.
She recalled caramelizing three pounds ofonionsfor a recipe inside her “micro” apartment.
“The eau de onion spread to everything,” she wrote.

“It clung especially to the moist bathroom towels, and to the laundry drying in the bedroom.
We were never clean again.”
Tempest claimed that for weeks her and her husband’s clothes and home smelled of the pungent vegetable.

Tiny home owner Bob Kangol revealed his own similar experience on hisYouTubechannel.
“All of our clothes smell like whatever we eat,” he revealed.
For tiny house owners, “you are what you eat” takes on a whole new meaning.