Dear Tiny House Hunters:
Boy howdy, those tiny houses sure do look cool. I’m with you on this. They’re like dollhouses that you get to live in. Everything is so neat, so compact, so pragmatic. Looking at your existing home or apartment, you start to think, LOOK AT ALL THIS WASTEFULNESS. Do I really need all that floor near my bed? What am I doing with it except walking on it in order to get into bed? Do I really need that much counter space? Yes, I have a bowl of fruit on the counter, but surely that’s an improper and extravagant misapplication of three-dimensional space. What if I could just store my fruit under the sink, or in a secret ceiling cubby hole, or in a quaintly hollow tree stump outside? Are hallways anything but just the middleman of architecture? Do I truly require this much oxygen? My own house suddenly feels bloated, like a gassy belly. It’s cluttered and chaotic and — I mean, is this a house, or is it the airless infinity of outer space? Right? Am I right?
The tiny house is like a diet.
You look at it, and you think: I can do that. I can get healthy. I will juice cleanse and then eat asparagus and chia seeds for the rest of my life, and sweet hot fuck, I’ll be healthy as a horse. A robot horse. A robot horse who will live forever and be the handsomest robot horse ever. I’ll lose this weight. People will admire my lean frame and my culinary judiciousness. I’ll eat like a rabbit. I will defy gluten and cast sugar into the sea and JUST SAY NO to pizzas and ice creams and tacos and all I will eat are these rods of asparagus and these spoonfuls of chia seeds and once a week for dessert I will treat myself with these delicious crackers made from ancient grains (amaranth, motherfuckers!). For sweetness, I will mist them with agave syrup the way the lady at the fragrance counter mists you with perfume as you walk past.
I will diet, and I will be good.
I will tiny house, and I will be good.
* * *
I started watching your show at my wife’s behest.
We used to watch House Hunters until we learned the whole thing was a crass, reality show lie, and then we watched House Hunters International because even if it was a lie you got to see how they took showers in Iceland or what atrocity they called a “kitchen” in Hungarian apartments and of course we’d occasionally wiggle our toes in other shows, like that horrible one where people who are way too rich actually try to buy entire fucking islands because sure, why not, buy a whole fucking island, assholes, but if you’re not turning it into a villainous fortress then I just don’t understand you.
One day my wife said, “You need to watch this new show.”
And I said, what is it, and does it star Guy Fieri, and will he milk the donkey sauce from his pubic beard into a chicken stock in order to make the soup that takes us all down to the FLAVORPOCALYPSE. And she said, no, no, “It’s a new House Hunters show,” and I thought, well, where else can they go? Maybe House Hunters New York Apartments where we follow a broke single person trying to fight rat-swarms in order to find a rent-controlled outhouse-sized apartment for less than the cost of a mansion in Minnesota.
“It’s not that,” she said. But it was close. It was very close.
Enter you people. Hunters of tiny houses. Cave-humans once stalked lions on the veldt, but you intrepid hunters track itty-bitty homes — houses compressed down like coal until they become the shining diamonds of Spartan living.
You are the tiny house hunters. Er, not that you yourselves are tiny — far from it, as some of you are quite large-sized, like many of us humans! No, no, the tininess is embodied in the houses you seek. These homes are magnificently small. Many are 200, 300 square feet — 400 max. You get a bedroom, a kitchen, a bathroom, maybe a living room or sitting area, but all those rooms are smooshed together, stacked on top of one another, or are merged into mutant aberrations (“WELCOME TO THE KITCHEN WHERE THE SINK IS YOUR SHOWER AND THE OVEN IS YOUR CLOTHES DRYER.”) It’s not an apartment. It’s like a regular house hit with a shrink ray.
The normal house made Lilliputian.
Some look like little cabins! Others like chic trailers! Others still are shipping containers, or hobbit houses, or weird Transformers that expand and contract like a breathing lung.
I find that there exist two overall categories of tiny house hunters.
One group of you is the lone individual. You’re maybe young, an artist, with lots of student loan debt, and you tell us all the lie that you’re going to buy the tiny home and buy some property with it, except the truth is, your tiny home will forever haunt the yard of one of your siblings because that’s where you plant it. Or maybe you’re older — a musician gone to pasture or an aging hipster or a yarn lady — and you’re divorced or your spouse has perished in the usual way and now you just want to pare down your life. I understand that.
Another group of you are the couples.
Oh, the couples.
Two people who think they can co-habitate in a space roughly the size of the Keebler Elf Tree. Some of you are also older: you’re retiring and you are embracing austerity in your later years. One of you is perhaps way more on board than the other with living in this adorable little tomb, and that’s fine. Maybe you’re a younger couple instead, and if that’s the case, you probably have like, four kids and two dogs and you think ha ha ha that this is going to be good for your family, don’t you? Because sure, kids and animals like nothing more than being crammed together in a piano crate, forced to share their limited oxygen while Mommy and Daddy make clumsy, grunting love in the casket-sized open-air loft above everybody’s heads, and the dogs are barking, and the kids are fighting, and Mommy and Daddy are rutting like wild boars and yay, family.
I watch this show, though, and no matter who you are, I’m always a little amazed at your reactions. As if you don’t actually know what a tiny house is? You start out by saying, “We want to simplify and downsize,” or “We want our family to be closer,” and then you get into these tiny houses and start changing your tune. You say things like, “This is cramped,” or “Where’s the shower?” or “What is a composting toilet?” You then say, “This is cute,” but you say it in the way someone says it when they’re looking at someone wearing a homemade sweater. You don’t mean it. You look terrified, like an otter trapped in a cardboard tube.
So, I’ve seen a number of these episodes now, and I’d like to walk you through some of the realities you are likely to face upon procuring and dwelling within one of these tiny houses.
First, the toilet. We just need to get this out of the way right now. It’s very possibly a composting toilet. Now, if you’re a hipster like me, you think, HEY COMPOSTING IS GOOD, but I do want you to understand, you’re basically keeping your poop. I mean, we all keep our poop somewhere. Mine is underneath my backyard. But yours will be closer. More intimate. It will be mixed with sawdust or coconut hulls or, I dunno, the ashes of your parents, but you’ll keep it close and it will turn into dirt that conceivably you can use to grow flowers. That’s very nice. But make no mistake, whereas right now you poop into a bowl and pull a lever and the poop is whisked away by forces unknown, in a composting toilet you mostly just poop and then kinda… get up and walk away. I say this only because many of you seem quite surprised. As long as you don’t mind pooping like you’re living at a Lilith Fair, you should be fine.
Second, the toilet. Nobody has brought this up on the show, but I’m going to now: if you live with other humans, eventually one of you is going to take the kind of deuce-evacuation that could conceivably destroy a marriage. Normally you’d be fine, because normally you’d be living in a normal-sized human house where you have a door to close and a fan and several rooms or even floors of separation. But now you dwell in an elf-house and now you and all the other elves are going to share in that dump you just took. You’re going to live with it for a while. Everyone is going to become intimately familiar with one another’s bathroom peccadilloes, okay?
Third, okay, actually, it’s also possible that the toilet is an outhouse. Which is great and fine but please be aware that spiders love outhouses. That’s all I’m gonna say.
Fourth, your bed is going to be a claustrophobic morgue-drawer nightmare. The ceiling will be three feet above your head and that’s only if the mattress is of the same material they make diapers out of. If it is a proper mattress, your nose is probably going to be pressed against the top margins of your tiny house. Beds, actual human beds, are fucking huge. Perhaps extravagantly so, I dunno, but we have left the era where we could comfortably sleep on a pile of reeds on the hard rocky earth and now we sleep on giant mattress configurations that are basically as big as half of a tiny house. If you want to practice what it’s like sleeping in a tiny house, sleep in one of your drawers, or in the crawlspace under your existing normal-sized home.
Fifth, many bathrooms do not have sinks. So, what this means is, if you want to shave, you will shave in the kitchen sink. That’s face and legs and pits and crotch or whatever you shave, if you shave it. Also, that means if you take one of those aforementioned Herculean/Sisyphean dumps, to wash your hands will require leaving that room. Also sometimes the toilet is in the shower. And sometimes there isn’t a shower. Other times there is a bathtub outside because sure why the fuck not, go bathe with the raccoons and scrub your body with dry leaves, cave-person.
Sixth, yes, that is a tiny closet, and it will hold no more than the suit or dress in which they will bury you. Did you believe that a tiny house would give you a huge closet? The only way your tiny house has a huge closet is if you use your tiny house as a closet. Which I’m sure some people do.
Seventh, no, of course you’re not going to get full-size appliances. That’s an EZ-Bake oven you’re looking at. The sink accommodates a single coffee mug. The washing machine washes Barbie clothes. You need to stop asking about full-size appliances. Actually, if someone ever makes a bingo card for Tiny House Hunters, that’ll be one of the things that goes on it.
Eighth, okay, listen, people with kids and dogs. You want “family bonding time,” but what your kids see is “hostage-taking time.” This is like, “cult bunker time.” Your kids do not want to live that close to you. Or to each other. Your dogs want to run and jump and — I mean, they’re not hamsters, you understand that, right? They’re not hamsters, and you’re not diminutive little fairy creatures, and tiny houses are not houses, they’re GI Joe playsets, they’re hipster sepulchers, they’re absurdist shoebox dioramas. I admire your desire to lean into austerity and trim the fat from your life, but unless you have a huge property, shoving a family of 6 into one of these turtle terrariums is something some people have to do, but they wouldn’t choose to do it, y’know? I lived with my mother and father and a dog and imagining growing up in one of those things is giving me retroactive trauma — my bowels are clenching, turning my innards to ice water.
Ninth, a lot of those tiny houses are pretty dang expensive for what you get. You think they’re cheap but seriously you could probably rent a hella nice apartment or even buy a couple of cool wizard vans to live in for that price. Just an FYI!
* * *
What I’m saying is —
I worry about you, tiny house hunter people.
I worry that this is all some kind of pyramid scheme, that it’s like Amway or alpacas, that there’s some unseen Ponzi scheme at play here.
I worry that after a year living in one of those tiny houses, you’ll need to buy another tiny house, and then another, and another, until you’re just stacking tiny house atop tiny house in a teetering Jenga tower of hobbit homes and shipping containers and then one day it falls and crushes your whole hipster family.
I worry that in two years HGTV will air a follow-up WHERE ARE THEY NOW special and 75% of you will have died in murder-suicide schemes, having gone mad not in the labyrinthine expanse of The Shining hotel but rather gone cuckoo bananapants inside the claustrophobic MRI machine you decided to call home.
Like I said, buying a tiny house is like a diet.
Or, rather, it’s like going on a fad diet.
Austerity sounds virtuous. And for some people, it is the thing that motivates them, it is a part of who they are. For the rest of us, not so much. Fad diets often ask you to sacrifice things to which you’ve grown accustomed — and often things your body actually needs — under the auspices of getting healthy. I WILL CLEANSE MY BODY WITH JUICE AND SPROUTED GRAIN you think, and then someone walks by you eating a hamburger and some precious thing inside you snaps and next thing you know you’re on the city bus killing and eating people.
Tiny house living will be like this. It’s good for some. Single people in particular — I mean, hey, they do it in New York (usually because they have to, though, not because they want to). But for the rest of us, while we may find some value in paring down and cutting the wheat from the chaff, a tiny house may be a bridge too far. No, we don’t need to live in 3,000 square feet, but we also don’t need to live in an airless, soul-crushing box. Many of us will find joy in having a little leg room when we’re sitting on a toilet, or having a place to put our stuff, or having a table at which we dine instead of standing around holding plates and staring at each other. Many of us like having separate rooms instead of BATHROOM-KITCHENS. It isn’t that romantic having a refrigerator that’s also a toilet, or a bed that’s also a bathtub.
Maybe a tiny house is for you.
But watching this show and hearing your comments and looking at the terrified countenances plastered to your skulls, I’m thinking — nnnyeah, maybe not so much.
Be well, tiny house hunters.
And remember: you don’t actually have to live in a tiny house.
Love,
Me
P.S. most people are trying to move into bigger houses what the fuck is wrong with you most people only live in tiny houses because they have to, you privileged turd-necks
P.P.S. but I mean hey you do you
Heather Lawver Sewell says:
You know what else always baffles me about these shows? Health issues. I’ve only ever watched these tiny house shows while in a doctor’s office waiting room, surrounded by people with broken legs, infections, arthritis, chronic pain conditions, etc. I have a vivid memory of watching one decently-sized hipster lady in a cheesy retro outfit talking about how cute it was that she had to climb an itty-bitty ladder to get up to her itty-bitty bed above an itty-bitty bathroom. All I could think was, yeah, and when you break your not-so-itty-bitty leg, I’d love to hear how cute you think it is.
But then again, I live with chronic health issues, so that sort of stuff is always at the forefront of my mind. I’d love to see how any of these people feel when they catch a mild cold, let alone what murderous rampage they’d go on if they or their partner had to deal with something more serious while cramped in a leprechaun’s closet. See how cute that itty-bitty ladder is when you have a broken ankle, hipster lady. Not so adorable anymore, is it?
Thankfully I live with at least a little bit of common sense and forethought, realizing that yes, sometimes bad stuff will happen in the future. Thus I’d like to live in a house that can accommodate me and my small family when the shit hits the fan (preferably not spewing forth from a composting toilet, thankyouverymuch).
April 6, 2016 — 11:56 AM
Kat Berkey says:
Ooooh my goood I’ve thought the same thing! What if I have the runs or have to pee in the middle of the night and have to climb OVER my husband and then stumble down some half-ass stairway without a rail or down, god forbid, a LADDER. It gives me anxiety just thinking about it. Then of course there’s menopause in like, 15 years from now, so hot flashes in a tiny house, snuggled next to my husband, crammed in a tiny loft. These people are dumb. I lived in a tent as a teenager and then an RV for a while out of necessity. NO WAY would I want to do that again, and really, these are nothing but hipster rich RV’s. If I’m going to spend 60k on something to plop on some land, I will get a manufactured HOUSE that’s like 1500 square feet with actual bedrooms and bathrooms for the SAME PRICE.
April 7, 2016 — 4:20 PM
cinderellenk says:
I’m fascinated by tiny houses but in reality they are not for me. Composting toilet? No thanks. My ladder climbing days will be over some day, and maybe sooner rather than later. I have a dog, books, etc. in a cold climate my winter coat alone would fill one of those puny closets. And I wonder if the attractive hipster couples investing boatloads of money in their stylish houses will enjoy living in a trailer park with those living small because they have no choice. I’d love to have one in my yard as a granny pod, though.
April 6, 2016 — 12:00 PM
banafsheh ehtemam says:
America’s problem is beyond this ” funny ” stuff written here in the blog ! I can give a ” haha” and get it over it ! But the truth is about consumerism-hoarding -mental illness- fear of loss – minimum wages and wanting or owning more than we can afford- creating a mess around to hide and not to face the real problem..blah blah- Anyway – whatever truly and yeah here is your ” haha”
April 6, 2016 — 12:10 PM
Deborah G says:
This is the most laugh out loud hilarious article I have read in ages. Genius writing and all of it is spot-on. Thanks for the hearty laughter today!
April 6, 2016 — 12:49 PM
Liz Larson says:
We already have small and yet practical homes that actual fit humans. They are called Manufactured Homes. I live in one and I love it! It’s small and cozy with full size appliances and two full bathrooms with real plumbing. Haven’t you all learned that if it sounds too good to be true, it IS.
April 6, 2016 — 1:56 PM
Nissa says:
I can’t stop laughing! It’s funny cuz its true! Except, dude hasn’t seen MY tiny house: my actual house is jealous out my tiny house bathroom.
April 6, 2016 — 2:19 PM
Laura K. Curtis (@laurakcurtis) says:
I look at those tiny house things and go “that would be a nice office.” Because I’d happily put one in my back yard and go to it every day to work, but there’s no way I am living there, especially with my husband and two terriers. Nope.
April 6, 2016 — 2:42 PM
Allen Müller says:
Adderal™
April 6, 2016 — 3:10 PM
Maggie Kelley says:
LOL!
April 6, 2016 — 3:32 PM
Maggie Kelley says:
Yes. Freaking totally hilarious. I immediately emailed it to my brother whose girlfriend wants a tiny house.
April 6, 2016 — 3:30 PM
Katie says:
This article is disgraceful and reeks of first world privilege and entitlement. I happily live in a tiny cob house which my husband and I built with our own two hands and it is incredibly rewarding. Our two small children live in it too. We are on acreage which makes it feel more manageable and we have an outdoor kitchen in development. There are ways to do it well and I would argue that this is not a trend, actually very far from it. Tiny house living will one day become necessity, the norm, when our resources begin dwindling.
April 6, 2016 — 4:33 PM
Levedi says:
Okay no. You live on a large acreage – that’s privilege. Living in a tiny house because you have freedom to choose the lifestyle you like best – that’s privilege. Living in a beautifully crafted cottage with the latest in high tech efficiency appliances that make the space comfy – that’s privilege. As Chuck points out in his PS this movement is all about privilege in most cases. People who live in less space because they must usually don’t enjoy it and they usually don’t have the added amenities, like outdoor space and mobility, that make Tiny House Hunters cute and attractive. There’s a lot of money and privilege in most American versions of minimalism.
April 6, 2016 — 10:17 PM
Charlotte Grubbs (@literary_lottie) says:
“Living in a beautifully crafted cottage with the latest in high tech efficiency appliances that make the space comfy”
Except that’s not what Katie said.
Granted, I don’t know what Katie’s house looks like, but the cob houses I have seen tend towards the “rustic” side.
Re: the “privileged” argument: isn’t choosing to live in a large house just because you can (and not because you have a large family that needs the space) also a mark of privilege? Why is one so sneer-worthy, but the other socially acceptable and even encouraged?
April 8, 2016 — 2:34 AM
Ness says:
The best comment on here
December 1, 2016 — 1:24 AM
Crisy mcmillan says:
first world privilege…haha. Come on, this man is hysterical and I want to read more! I don’t think he was attacking you personally, wait, maybe he was… Haaaaaaaaaaaaheeeeeee
April 7, 2016 — 10:44 AM
Kate Martin says:
“We live on acreage…” Okay, so then you’re actually taking up more space in your tiny house on your large lot than I do in my small-but-normal-sized home on a city lot. Whatever, do what works for your family, and I’m glad you’re happy with the choice, but land is a resource too.
April 7, 2016 — 12:15 PM
Diane Raetz says:
If your kitchen and diving room need to be outside of your tiny house, your home is too small
April 7, 2016 — 2:17 PM
Mari says:
Ma’am, tiny house living is already the necessity for many people. The only appreciable differences between a tiny house and a double-wide are location and interior design. But I’m sure you’d be happy to move into an actual trailer park if someone called you on your privilege, right? Or at least set foot in one? For twenty minutes?
April 9, 2016 — 7:04 PM
Ztez Maxim says:
Where did you get it past building codes? Or how did you hide house from inspectors?
April 19, 2016 — 7:10 PM
Jess Amule says:
I live in a tiny house and or barn. For me (just me) it works. 300sqft give or take a loft. I did it because I needed room in a hurry and on a budget. I bought a prefab shell and built it my way with a goal of being under 10,000 which so far I have met. In hind sight it would have been cheaper/easier to buy a camper but I am stubborn and like things my way. I did however watch the tiny house shows and seeing people spend over 6 figures (which would get you a hundred acres and a full size house around here) for something smaller than this? Yeah your article had me laughing so hard I could not breathe.. because its true. Throwing newly weds or two adults and 4 kids into 200sqft is just asking for at best a divorce and years of therapy. Theres no way I could live even in this space with another person.
April 6, 2016 — 4:33 PM
Shelley Adrienne Mimi Belsky says:
One word: “Climbing” as in “I can’t”…disabled.
I have yet to see any tiny house that addresses this problem.
April 6, 2016 — 4:45 PM
Archer says:
And you won’t. “Tiny houses” make up for their diminutive footprint by “building up”, the way apartment developers cram 50-100 homes on less than one acre (or the way city townhouses can claim 1,200 square feet, despite being built on a 15×30 plot). The ONLY way to have enough room for even a TWIN bed is to make a half-loft or two, and with no “extra” space for stairs, that means ladders or dual-purpose stair-shelves, which means “climbing into bed” is a phrase to be interpreted literally.
April 7, 2016 — 1:47 PM
Maggie Jo East says:
There is a company in Tulsa,OK that makes an ADA compliant tiny home. Big enough for wheel chairs. Even has a shower specifically made to be wheel chair accessible.
April 7, 2016 — 6:41 PM
Charlotte Grubbs (@literary_lottie) says:
Not true. There are tiny houses that don’t have lofts; this is becoming more popular, actually, due to retirees looking to downsize (or people who just don’t want to risk breaking a leg to use the john). Some tiny houses have murphy beds, or beds that slide under platforms during the day; some are just in partitioned off “rooms.” Don’t know if there’s ever been one shown on ‘Tiny House Hunters,’ because I don’t watch that show, but ‘Tiny House Nation,’ has had a couple of examples. Tumbleweed’s Mica is another example.
April 8, 2016 — 2:27 AM
Rosemary Lyndall-Wemm says:
Pulling down and pushing up a Murphy bed is somewhere between difficult and impossible for most elderly and disabled people. I could not do it any more. It used to be difficult enough when I was 25. Now I’m 68. Tiny houses should be reserved for the birds, and those who think they are.
April 10, 2016 — 10:45 PM
Brian G says:
If you work 40 hours per week and pay 1/3rd of your income for 40 years for a home, that means you spent almost 28,000 hours working to get that home. The average DIY tiny home builder takes 480 hours to build their house.
April 6, 2016 — 5:00 PM
John says:
Pretty sure the average person doesn’t spend 1/3 of their income on a home for 40 years. Even better you don’t even factor in home equity or total household income. A person making $30,000 / yr 40 hrs a week is buying a home that costs $300,000? An individual on an income of $30,000 should be looking at homes in the sub 100,000 range. I’m not saying it’s not cheaper to live in the tiny house, but your numbers are horribly off.
April 7, 2016 — 12:27 AM
Plined says:
Where we live, a $100k home is dilapidated or very small. So, the person making that amount could buy bigger and pay longer (take home improvements and repairs into consideration) or could buy much smaller and be done with it. The numbers aren’t off every place, sadly.
April 7, 2016 — 9:11 AM
Arlene says:
Yeah, John is applying local prices to everyone. Where I live, $300,000 is a starter home. And yeah, we had mortgages as long as 40 years for a while. Pre-approval is usually based on 30% of gross income (which equates to 50% of net income). So Brian G. isn’t off with his numbers.
April 7, 2016 — 6:46 PM
Heidi says:
You know that you have to pay interest on that house loan, right? The total amount that you pay does not equal the original amount of the loan.
April 7, 2016 — 4:01 PM
Diane Raetz says:
I bought a real size house in a nice neighborhood an hour outside of nyc on foreclose for 70k and put 30k into making it livable. It’s taken me much less than 1/3 of my income for 30 years to have 75% equity. Is called baron hunting
April 7, 2016 — 2:21 PM
Charlotte Grubbs (@literary_lottie) says:
Do you commute into NYC, or work locally?
Lots of people buy more house than they can afford, because it’s where they work, and they don’t fancy hours of commute. Where I live, a 100k house would either A) be in a very, very bad neighborhood, or B) be a two hour commute into the city. Neither of those options are particularly appealing.
And many people rent, which can be even more expensive in the long run. I was advised when I was looking for apartments that 1/4 of my paycheck was the bare minimum I should expect to pay. (It ended up being closer to 1/2, because that’s the rental market where I live.)
April 8, 2016 — 2:21 AM
Kristi Bugajski says:
This is absolutely hilarious! My husband and I live in and built a tiny house that is 38′ long and has full size appliances, queen size bed and stairs! I have a sink in my bathroom because of the shaving/hygiene issues brought up! I had breast cancer and know about health issues and potential problems I could encounter. I live in a big, fancy tiny house because I agree with many of the points in this article! Will I live in it forever? Who knows?! Things change in everyone’s life. I’m open to change and being flexible. It’s sad that so many people are jumping on the tiny house bandwagon only to jump off a few months in because they didn’t do their research. It’s not a lifestyle for everyone but for some of us, it’s about the adventure and realizing what’s really important in life. Thanks for a great read!
April 6, 2016 — 5:02 PM
Jenny says:
How is 38′ long considered a tiny house? How wide is it?
April 7, 2016 — 2:38 PM
Mackenzie says:
Yeah, my perfectly ordinary post-war house is 27×24. That’s “small house” not “tiny house.”
April 9, 2016 — 11:11 AM
Leenah says:
I think there’s a lot being missed here. Myself and my fiance are going to build a tiny house, but pretty much everything as described by the article doesn’t match. The only thing that does is the composting toilet, and we’re doing that for dirt and to prepare the place for off-grid living if need be. Otherwise, we have a full bathroom with a 48″ japanese soaking tub, a decently sized bedroom with closet, a kitchen with normal house-sized appliances, and a cool lofted living area with 7′ tall ceilings minimum. We’re never planning to have kids, and we need to be mobile because we’re an international couple. Our house is going to be a max of 40′ long by 8’6 wide, and it will contain literally everything a home needs to be comfortable – including a home office.
April 6, 2016 — 5:27 PM
Debbie B says:
40′ x 8’6″ is not a tiny home. Mobile homes (trailers) are 40 x 8.6. You’re building a mobile home.
April 10, 2016 — 10:30 PM
Am says:
That’s the length of a bus…..in this programme most if owe tiny homes are not 40 feet long.
August 16, 2016 — 7:16 AM
Saoki says:
As a person that lives in a 322 square feet house with a husband, a step-son and 4 cats (my husband is the crazy cat person, I like cats but would have stopped at 2) because *I don’t have another choice*, I get very, very bitter about rich people inflationing the small apartment/house market because of this fad (people that need it, that can only afford this, those I don’t consider hipsters buying into a fad, they’re just brothers in suffering).
Do you have any idea how expensive the tiny furniture and appliances you need in a small house have become because of these tourists? Thankfully, I can use apartment sized appliances, so I didn’t had to sink my meager earnings into the expensive hell of barbie appliances.
Still, we endure, are mostly happy and the cats get along fine. But I damn sure keep a google docs document where I write down everything our future *real* house must have, like an indoors laundry (just try running through constantly pouring rain in order to get your only clean clothes, so you can actually go to work in the morning), a decent kitchen with counters and a pantry, a bathroom where the shower isn’t almost on top of the toilet, someplace quiet to write… Space is a precious thing.
April 6, 2016 — 5:29 PM
Kathy Walker says:
Perfect, I found it on facebook, shared it twice.
April 6, 2016 — 5:57 PM
Karen Anderson says:
Funny, but not so. Landlords get tired of their tiny house tenants and moving those things is not easy, especially if the entitled tiny house owner doesn’t want to move. A friend of mine rented land to a tiny house lady and the tiny house lady turned out to be just a tiny bit out of her tiny mind. Now lawyers are involved…
April 6, 2016 — 6:44 PM
Tami Unangst says:
A tiny house is not for everyone. But, I fancy that when I retire and no longer have children living with me, that perhaps a tiny house in one of my children’s back yard would be fun. As in – fun to live in when I visit. Then again, so would a tree house, or a yurt, or even a tent. 🙂 It’s fun for a short time, a vacation. But not for a lifetime.
April 6, 2016 — 9:13 PM
Liz Aguerre says:
I not only watch the shows…I have them all set to record. I am obsessed with the tiny house concept. But only in the way that I’m watching the shows. There is no fucking way i’m going to make my bed with hospital corners every single morning and hide my pillows in some compartment in order to slide my bed underneath the platform that holds my kitchen bathroom. This little essay of yours…more perfect than stairs that double as storage.
April 6, 2016 — 9:20 PM
Mike kelley says:
And how about the cities like DC hosting tiny house collectives so you can essentially live forever in a KOA campground, except there are no camp masters to keep things clean and tidy.
April 6, 2016 — 9:44 PM
Aggie O. says:
i could not stop laughing, and I only skimmed this. I can’t wait to go back and read the rest.right now my sides hurt from laughing so hard. Thank you! Although familiar with the tiny house concep, I’ve not even seen one episode of this show. Now I have to watch, but i am sure echos of your essay will linger and I will be laughing at the TV.
April 6, 2016 — 9:55 PM
kimkasl says:
OhMan. I live in a tiny house with my family and I loved your article. Laughed until tears rolled. Thank you for the hilarity! I could respond to your questions with truth from our experience but naaahhhh. Not this time. It would take the joy out of it.
We’re going on 2 years and are enjoying the financial freedoms, road trips, adventures, and lovely little home we rest in that makes it all possible. http://www.BlessThisTinyHouse.com
April 7, 2016 — 1:33 AM
Jenny says:
Curious to hear what you’re planning on doing when your two tiny people become big people and will no longer fit, or be happy in their tiny loft?
April 7, 2016 — 8:54 PM
Debbie B says:
Not to mention that children need privacy especially when they are different genders in the same sleeping space. Are they about 6 and 7, 5 and 6? Those days are coming very soon.
April 10, 2016 — 10:35 PM
Robin Barber says:
When my husband and I first got married, we lived in a 12’x30′ mobile home. The first 3 months or so, I loved it…after that it was like living in a cracker box with a kitchen…a drafty, under-insulated, sulfur-water smelling cracker box. And we lived there for 3 years. Never again…although we joke that our retirement home will be so small that there won’t be room for the kids to visit…but our cat has to have her own “room”, probably the size of a walk-in closet…and it has to be so far south (we are in central NY now) that the only snow we will see will be on the weather channel….lol. Seriously. I love the idea of a tiny house, but only to vacation in.
April 7, 2016 — 2:27 AM
Allison says:
I will concuss myself slamming my head on the ceiling that’s lying in wait inches above my head in my tiny house loft. This will happen on Night 1. But there will not be a Night 2, because I will torch my tiny house after I fracture my ankle because I’ve woken up, concussed and having to pee, and there’s a ladder to climb down a in order to get to my shower/toilet. Except I’ve forgotten that and crash to the floor 9′ below me. Yet the tiny house realtors never mention this.
April 7, 2016 — 8:31 AM
Jen R. says:
The first part is exactly what happened to me when I rented a tiny house recently for a few days in the redwoods. Didn’t think of what it would be like to climb a ladder half asleep at 3 am – my head didn’t just hit the ceiling it slammed into it so hard I landed on the floor very close to falling through the gigantic hole in the floor to which I would have then fallen at least 12 to 15 feet. Fun times. I then tried to fall back to sleep feeling like I had a concussion. Sleep did not come easily after that. 🙁
May 11, 2016 — 5:37 AM
Helen McKinney says:
1. i would kill myself trying to get a fitted sheet on the bed! 2. Where would I sleep? Obviously my 110 pound and 70 pound Dobermans would get the bed. 3. It would be impossible to keep it clean ( I am a bit OCD about a clean house…my husband? Not so much ). 4. i would have to go outside every time he made his way to the bathroom! 5. And speaking of bathrooms, I can’t see cleaning out my pipes… Septics and sewers rock! 6 and perhaps the biggest reason NOT to buy a tiny house….I couldn’t gain any weight and would have to be on a continuous diet. Have you ever seen an overweight person buy one of them? Hmmmmm
April 7, 2016 — 10:23 AM
J- says:
Tiny house people (I know a few) are house vegans. They don’t get enjoyment from their home. They get enjoyment from feeling morally superior about their home. If a mansion is about conspicuous consumption, than a tiny house is conspicuous under-consumptuon. “Hey. Look at how special I am because my home consumes so few resources.”
April 7, 2016 — 11:38 AM
Arlene says:
This was hilarious! Love your writing style and wit. Brilliant piece 🙂
April 7, 2016 — 12:06 PM
Lindsey says:
Do people really try to live in tiny houses with their children? Can you imagine what that would do for a couple’s sex life? Kill it. It would kill it dead.
April 7, 2016 — 12:28 PM
kddomingue says:
Housing and birth control all rolled into one!
April 7, 2016 — 7:38 PM
Jenny says:
Good thing, as they wouldn’t have room for any more tiny people in their tiny houses.
April 7, 2016 — 8:55 PM
nuke_road_warrior says:
When I was a kid our family of three had a small 14′ trailer we used for “camping.” It was comfortable (for three) and fun, mostly because we would spend as much time as possible of outside and were inside only for sleeping, eating and occasional bad weather. Bathroom breaks were taken in the campground outhouse (brief as possible due to the smell). One weekend dad’s parents joined us and the weather was awful. Fortunately, it was only a coupe of days, with all of us crammed inside the trailer it was not pleasant, Any longer and blood may have been spilled.
I simply can’t imagine living that way full time.
April 7, 2016 — 12:30 PM
Mark says:
I also see it as giving someone a true space of their own and a sense of stability that you can’t get as renter. There are those who will do it because it is trendy, or for boasting rights like being a vegan or marathoner. There are also those that it will give a real sense of security, hope and joy, that they couldn’t get through other means. A tiny home may keep them from making choices that will have serious implications. I made some extremely bad choices in my 20s to stay in an abusive relationship, because I didn’t think I had another option. A tiny house would have been the option for me to get clear of that relationship, as it would have lowered the housing bar to something I could manage.
April 7, 2016 — 1:29 PM
Scottford says:
My cousin in the early 70s went off to live in the woods in a tiny cabin. She said she was going back to the simple life. About two years later she told me, “Life would sure be simple if I just had a refrigerator and washing machine.” Every year she would say the same sort of thing, adding more amenities to her list of desires.
April 7, 2016 — 4:09 PM
Suzanne says:
I totally see having a tiny house. In my back yard. It is called a SHED.
April 7, 2016 — 5:20 PM
Nancy Allen says:
Laughing…so much laughing…this is awesome.
April 7, 2016 — 5:46 PM
Maggie Jo East says:
Well. Im a 5’7 125lbs single 30yrld woman with no kids and two cats. I already live in 600sqf apartment. Might as well have a home just as big and actually own it. And I found a KOA that is happily willing to let me buy a plot for my tiny home. The one I’m looking at is essentially “Plug and play” with a real bathroom and will have an acrylic clawfoot tub with shower attachment and even a sink. Normal apartment sized appliances with a stacked washer and dryer.
But, for other people, the ones mentioned in the article. I totally agree. Really. Who the hell wants a composting toilet?
April 7, 2016 — 6:38 PM
Georgia Beaverson says:
Okay, you had me snorting in my beer. Thank you, thank you for expressing the disbelief 99.99999% of Tiny House Hunters’ viewers feel. These people are nuts! The ones I think are nuttiest are the ones who tow their itty bitty houses around with them all over the country. They all act like they’re environmentally aware and sensitive but hey, how much gasoline are you people wasting lugging your living quarters everywhere you go?
Get a grip, tiny wannabe house dwellers. Get. A. Grip.
April 7, 2016 — 7:39 PM
ce says:
And how do bbc you make the bed? You have to pull that mistress outside to get the sheet on it.
April 7, 2016 — 9:43 PM
Charlotte Grubbs (@literary_lottie) says:
Man, is there something in the air right now that’s causing everyone to shit on tiny houses? First Steve Harvey, you, various other blogger backlash…it is fascinating to me, how personally some people take this.
Not everyone has this mentality that, as they go through life and accumulate money, they need to move up and into progressively larger houses because shit, that’s just what “most people” do. Some people really do enjoy living simply. Me, I find too much stuff stressful. I don’t want to be responsible for a large structure, and the cleaning and upkeep of such. (Both of these attitudes were heavily influenced by my parents’ endless chasing of The Bigger, Nicer House, including four moves in the space of five years. Now I balk at owning anything more than I could fit into the smallest U Haul truck).
Even if I could afford a larger home, I still wouldn’t buy or live in one because I think it would be wasteful. I’m opting out of the bigger = better mentality. This seems to genuinely puzzle or even annoy others. Or they judge me as “privileged” which, HAHAHAHA, that is too funny, hold on while I dry my tears of mirth on my unemployment checks and overdue health insurance bills.
Anyway, I don’t get it, why some people are so bothered by others’ exercising their free choice of where and how they want to live. Is it because the idea of purposely wanting to live small flies in the face of the capitalist dogma we’ve been taught is the American Dream? Hey, I think people wanting bigger houses than they strictly need is crazy, but I’m not going to shame someone for buying that McMansion. Even if it is an ecological nightmare.
Granted, the people on this show sound particularly clueless, but that’s definitely not the norm when it comes to tiny houses. I’ve been following the tiny house movement for a few years now, and I’ve never met anyone who didn’t know exactly what they were getting into, and were 100% on board with it. Maybe now that tiny houses are the new industrial lofts, we’re going to see a bunch of yahoos who only vaguely know what tiny living consists of buying $60,000 houses, just to freak out the first time they have to change the compost toilet. Maybe they will sell me their tiny house for cheap.
The only thing that I dislike about tiny houses is, as you point out, if you buy them from a builder (versus DIYing one, which plenty of people do), then they are expensive. That is the only thing that is stopping me from building one right now; I’m barely managing rent and bills and such, and I do not have thousands of dollars to put into a superfluous structure. It is a valid point that many of the people who would most benefit from a tiny house can’t actually afford to live in one.
But, geez, I should would like to.
April 8, 2016 — 2:10 AM
Kate Martin says:
I’ve seen a lot recently both supportive and critical of the Tiny House movement. I don’t have a problem with it, myself, but I think some of the arguments around it are a bit disingenuous. First, they assume (as you suggest above) that everyone not in a tiny house is aiming for a McMansion. I live in a small bungalow. 2 bedrooms, 1 bathroom. I have no aspirations to go bigger. And I’m on a city lot in an affordable neighborhood. My home cost LESS than some of these tiny homes. (Granted, many years ago.) But that’s because I was willing to move into what some considered a “not-great” neighborhood.
Which is another question I have — it seems that many in the tiny house movement are not just trying to simplify (which is awesome and I admire it) but are also looking to live in very expensive neighborhoods rather than moving to the neighborhood they can afford. Part of this is jobs availability and the housing market, to be sure, and I don’t blame anyone for trying to solve the housing problem creatively, sustainably, and affordably. I applaud it, in fact. But part of it starts to smell like privilege/entitlement, (“but I don’t want to live *there*”) and I wonder if that’s what some folks respond to.
Finally, for those able to put their tiny house on a nice chunk of land: then they’re actually taking up more physical space than my home on a city lot. So then for those folks to suggest that I’m the one being wasteful in my small home? Yeah, kinda rubs me the wrong way. I know that’s not everyone, and I have friends who are getting involved in this movement, so I know there are good people within it. But you asked why some people are hostile toward it, and that’s my take.
April 8, 2016 — 11:39 AM
Kate Martin says:
Just wanted to add that I also understand that some areas (San Francisco, for example) have gotten so expensive that only the wealthiest of the wealthy can live there. Which is ridiculous, and I hope the tiny house movement will help shed light on the need for affordable housing in general.
April 8, 2016 — 11:53 AM
Holly Frost says:
In Southern California, mobile home parks charge about $900.00 per month for space rental, which includes water and sewer, likely a swimming pool and club house (for a rental fee), and a communal laundry room with coin machines. The price drops to around $700.00 per month if you go inland twenty plus miles; however, you will likely spend the difference on heating and a/c because the weather is not as temperate.
I suspect space rentals are less expensive in other parts of the country. Here, zoning laws will generally prohibit parking a tiny home on someone else’s property. But, again, in other parts of the country that may be easier.
April 8, 2016 — 5:52 AM
Luke A says:
I think tiny houses are a fine and noble thing. I think smug, self-righteous tiny-house-owners are the worst.
April 8, 2016 — 12:43 PM
D says:
Laughing and laughing and laughing some more! Thank you, author, for bringing some sunshine to my day!
I love the idea of Tiny houses, but this has brought a tiny bit of insight.
I DO think that if you could get a Tiny house into a sturdy tree, it would make for one heck of treehouse or a deer stand during hunting season!
🙂
April 8, 2016 — 5:18 PM
kddomingue says:
Lol! Nailed it!
April 8, 2016 — 6:04 PM
Addie Burrows says:
Still laughing! Thank heaven I found this.
April 8, 2016 — 4:54 PM
Sandy says:
“Yarn lady”. You must not know any true knitters, because believe you me, no yarn lady could fit their yarn stash in a tiny house!
April 8, 2016 — 7:36 PM
kddomingue says:
Geez, now you’ve got me imagining trying to fit my yarn stash, my fabric stash, my paints and canvases stash, the pattern stash…….whereas before I was only thinking about the book stash! I don’t suppose it counts if, in addition to the tiny house, you have an 800 square foot storage building?
April 9, 2016 — 12:09 AM
Green Girl says:
Wow, comical, yes. But is the author truly concerned with condemning others “space” needs? I wish I had a picture of him, maybe he needs his portion sizes reduced. I don’t care whether a person wants a 1ft x 1ft bathroom or a 16ft x 16ft bathroom! I don’t care how close to the ceiling you want your nose when you sleep. Why would anyone care as long as they have the option to distance themselves accordingly to their family’s poop? So many other things in life we should be insisting on…and house size, or lack thereof should not be one of them! And you know, no one on any tiny house forum has mentioned the advantage for men…..that your penis probably looks a lot bigger in a tiny house!
April 8, 2016 — 9:27 PM
Jen says:
This was THE funniest thing I have ever ever read. Thank you!!!!
April 8, 2016 — 11:34 PM
Sumack Loft says:
YES. Thank you!!!
April 9, 2016 — 12:10 AM
Paul says:
Hilarious article. Not much truth in it but an A+ for creative writing for sure.
April 9, 2016 — 3:11 PM
Paul says:
If you really want a good laugh, attend a big RV show and have a look at a few that are in $40 – 50K price range which is in the ball park of some on the prices paid on “Tiny House Hunters”. They have copious amounts of storage, beds you don’t have to climb ladders to sleep in, full-size kitchen appliances and comfortable furniture. Some even have a bath and a half. The biggest practical advantage in some of the tiny houses I’ve seen on this show is that you can sit on the compost toilet while you cook. I latest one had a large trap door in the floor for storage which would be very convenient if you never put furniture in the “tiny house”. Tiny houses are adorable. Disclaimer: I do not intend to criticize people that choose tiny houses. If it makes you happy, that’s awesome.
April 9, 2016 — 4:29 PM
Jambo says:
Isn’t a “tiny house” just another word for camping trailer that is harder to move? People have been happily living ( and properly camping) in 35 foot trailers for years. Companies have gotten really good at building in quality and design into them. I wonder why Tiny Housers don’t utilize a trailer more? Or at least, use them as a practice home, before building something.
April 9, 2016 — 4:37 PM