My ears were ringing pretty steadily for some months before we visited you the first time, but as the dosage has increased, so is the ringing. The ringing sound in my ears is louder and more persistent.If I happen to see myself in a mirror at those times, I don't recognize myself and think there's a stranger in the room. The confusion and disorientation when waking up after dawn in the mornings is much worse than when taking 10mg, and that was much worse than not taking anything.So, those higher up in the building get more benefits for less money, get better views, more quiet as they're farther away from the parking, and to top it all off (pun intended) they get to throw their trash down on our balconies.
If the building was lower we wouldn't need to pump the water so high. Similarly, it costs more to pump the water higher up, so again, the distance the water has to go is based on giving water to the higher up apartments and doesn't do much for those of us lower in the building. Those of us lower down in the building, especially the family on the ground floor, benefit less from the elevator than those higher up. Two of the major expenses are the elevator and pumping water. However, thinking about it differently, I can see one alternative formula that would most likely be more fair, basing the monthly payment on the floor of the apartment, the higher up you go, the more expensive. That means, of course, those of us lower in the building have the highest monthly payments.
The architecture of the building is that the largest apartments are lower down and they taper to smaller sizes as the building gets higher, this way everyone gets an uncovered balcony. The standard formula is one based on the size of the apartment, which at first glance might sound fair.
Our apartment building here has monthly maintenance fees that everyone pays into every month to handle the common, shared expenses.